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OpenAI president forced to read his personal diary entries to jury
Tech/AI

OpenAI president forced to read his personal diary entries to jury

by admin May 5, 2026
written by admin

The entries cited during the trial were written between 2015, when OpenAI was founded, and 2023, when Brockman and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman were briefly ousted as leaders over the OpenAI board’s alleged safety concerns.

Musk hopes the diary entries paint Brockman as a money-hungry executive who, early on, cared little about OpenAI’s mission.

To overcome that characterization of his mindset in OpenAI’s early days, Brockman has the challenging task of convincing the court that, instead, they show the opposite: displaying the careful musings of the person who is perhaps most committed to OpenAI’s mission.

Brockman likened to “bank robber”

Musk’s attorney, Steven Molo, spent the first day of Brockman’s testimony isolating passages and demanding that Brockman answer for the apparent greed that his journal entries revealed.

For example, Brockman drafted a journal in 2017, around the same time he testified that Musk had delivered an ultimatum: Either Musk would have full control over a for-profit arm of OpenAI, or OpenAI would remain a nonprofit.

In that entry, Brockman appears greedy, writing that “we’ve been thinking that maybe we should just flip to a for-profit. Making the money for us sounds great and all.”

And Brockman, of course, did make a lot of money after OpenAI created a for-profit arm in 2018, with his stake today worth about $30 billion. More than a dozen times, NBC News reported, Molo asked Brockman to justify his stake, while repeatedly pointing to the journal entry in which the OpenAI president also said that $1 billion was all he wanted for his career goal.

“Financially, what will take me to $1B?” Brockman wrote in 2017, while mulling whether Musk was the “glorious leader” he wanted to run OpenAI or if he should back Altman.

At a contentious point, Molo asked whether Brockman would consider giving $29 billion back to the nonprofit arm. But Brockman said no, pointing out that he received the stake well before ChatGPT’s release spiked OpenAI’s value. He also emphasized that he helped grow the best-funded nonprofit in the world. According to The Information, Molo then likened Brockman to a “bank robber” who downplays the theft of only $1 million because there’s much more money left in the bank.

May 5, 2026 0 comments
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Facebook and Instagram are using AI bone structure analysis to identify photos of kids
Tech/AI

Facebook and Instagram are using AI bone structure analysis to identify photos of kids

by admin May 5, 2026
written by admin

‘We want to be clear: this is not facial recognition,’ Facebook says.

‘We want to be clear: this is not facial recognition,’ Facebook says.

May 5, 2026, 11:00 AM UTC
STK040_VRG_Illo_N_Barclay_2_facebook
STK040_VRG_Illo_N_Barclay_2_facebook
Emma Roth
Emma Roth is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

Facebook and Instagram have a new way to detect and remove users under 13: AI bone structure analysis. In a blog post on Tuesday, Meta — Facebook and Instagram’s parent company — says its AI system will scan photos and videos posted to its platforms for “general themes and visual cues,” including height and bone structure.

“We want to be clear: this is not facial recognition,” Meta says in the blog post, adding that it “does not identify the specific person in the image.” This system is part of Meta’s efforts to keep kids under 13 off its platforms, and will also analyze posts, comments, bios, and captions to search for “contextual clues” that someone might be underage.

Meta’s AI-powered facial analysis, which is only available in “select” countries including the US ahead of a wider rollout, seems similar to the face-scanning tech offered by age verification services like Yoti and k-ID. Facebook and Instagram will deactivate accounts identified as underage, and the owner will need to verify their age to prevent it from deletion.

The announcement comes just days after a New Mexico jury found that Meta violated state law by misleading customers about the safety of its platforms and failing to protect children from child predators. Meta must pay $375 million as a result, and may have to implement changes that the company has already threatened to leave the state over.

Separately, Meta is expanding the technology it uses on Instagram to automatically identify and place users between 13 and 18 into Teen Accounts. These accounts come with stricter content controls, block messages from strangers, and prevent users under 16 from livestreaming. Instagram rolled out the tech in 2024, and now Facebook will do the same for users in the US, followed by a rollout in the UK and EU in June.

In its announcement, Meta continues to advocate for age verification at the app store and operating system level, an approach that’s gaining traction in Congress and some states, including California and Colorado.

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Markets on edge as fresh U.S.-Iran attacks dent optimism over a peace deal
Economy

Markets on edge as fresh U.S.-Iran attacks dent optimism over a peace deal

by admin May 5, 2026
written by admin

Veiled pro-government supporters stand in a line under a banner depicting portraits of Iran’s late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, as they wait to receive donated meals during a state-run religious rally in downtown Tehran, Iran, on April 29, 2026.
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Up until the weekend, global markets had been betting on a fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran turning into a longer-term peace deal.

But escalatory rhetoric, action over the Strait of Hormuz, and fresh Iranian attacks on the United Arab Emirates over the past 48 hours, have led experts to warn war could be back.

Market analysts said the latest developments could mark an inflection point in the war and a critical moment for financial markets and global energy supplies, which are dwindling as the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed.

“It’s an incredibly delicate moment,” Ben Powell, chief investment strategist for APAC at BlackRock, told CNBC Tuesday.

“It’s very unsettling to have our first missile warnings here in Abu Dhabi for several weeks. We were all hoping that was behind us,” the UAE-based strategist said.

“Looking forward, I think there is a genuine complexity as to whether this escalation yesterday was just part of the negotiation — Iran showing that they’ve still got cards to play, perhaps signaling to the UAE that the UAE can leave the OPEC, but energy leaving the region is still dependent on the favor from Iran — or it could be a beginning of a more difficult moment,” he told CNBC’s “Access Middle East.”

Energy and other key parts of the global economy aren’t flowing, he said, adding that it now feels like we’re approaching a “critical moment” where inventories have been run down, and the delayed impact of the energy shock is starting to come into sharper focus.

War and peace

Global markets were edgy Tuesday morning after the latest developments in the Middle East at the weekend, which saw the U.S. try to end a stalemate over the blockaded Strait of Hormuz by launching “Project Freedom,” essentially, a bid to “free” stranded ships in the strait and to safely escort them out of the waterway, which has been blockaded by both Iran and the U.S.

Those attempts were met with Iranian resistance, with the U.S. saying it had sunk several Iranian boats as a result of skirmishes in the channel, although Iran denied any of its boats had been sunk.

Iran later attacked oil infrastructure in the UAE with missiles and drones, seemingly resuming a strategy of lashing out against its Middle East neighbors to get them to pressure the U.S. to end the war.

Women stand looking at the Dubai skyline, with the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, seen from Creek Harbour on April 3, 2026.
Fadel Senna | AFP | Getty Images

Financial markets were a mixed bag on Tuesday, with bourses lower in Asia and mixed in Europe, while U.S. stock futures moved higher ahead of the forthcoming session on Wall Street.

That apparent bounceback in the U.S. comes after the major averages suffered declines on Monday and oil prices rose amid growing concerns that the conflict in the Middle East could resume with a vengeance.

Markets are likely to remain on tenterhooks as they wait to see what happens next, with geopolitical watchers now warning that a complete collapse of the already tentative U.S.-Iran ceasefire is looking increasingly likely.

“The question of the week is whether geopolitical risks will remain messy but contained, or break through to weigh on markets and corporate earnings,” Tina Fordham, founder of Fordham Global Foresight, commented in analysis Tuesday.

“Judging by the apparent resumption today of Iranian attacks on targets in the UAE itself and on ships attempting to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, I’m currently leaning toward the latter,” she warned.

Describing the apparent resumption of Iranian drone and missile attacks against the UAE as “the biggest escalation in some weeks,” she said Tehran had shown the U.S. that it still has fight left in it, peace deal or none.

“Iran is signalling that they still have the capacity to inflict pain and won’t be forced into capitulation. The U.S. increasingly faces a choice between a long war it doesn’t want to fight, or a bad, embarrassing deal,” Fordham noted in emailed comments.

‘Project Deadlock’

The latest turn in events in the Iran war appears to have been precipitated by the U.S.’ ‘Project Freedom’ strategy, announced on Sunday, aimed at forcing a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The move came after the White House appeared to have grown frustrated at an impasse over a peace deal with Iran. Pakistan-mediated talks have stalled in recent weeks, and both sides are at odds over an agreement.

U.S. President Donald Trump told Fox News Monday that Iran would be “blown off the face of the earth” if it targeted U.S. ships that are protecting commercial vessels transiting the strait.

Motorists make their way past an anti-U.S. billboard referring to President Donald Trump and the Strait of Hormuz, installed on a building at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on May 2, 2026. A senior Iranian military officer said on May 2 that renewed fighting between the U.S. and Iran was “likely,” hours after President Donald Trump said he was “not satisfied” with a new Iranian negotiating proposal.
– | Afp | Getty Images

Tehran signaled overnight that it is still interested in Pakistan-mediated peace talks with the U.S. and warned that a political solution was the only way to break the deadlock over a deal.

“As talks are making progress with Pakistan’s gracious effort, the U.S. should be wary of being dragged back into quagmire by ill-wishers. So should the UAE. Project Freedom is Project Deadlock,” Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi commented on X overnight.

He said the latest developments in the war “make clear that there’s no military solution to a political crisis.”

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May 5, 2026 0 comments
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A blueprint for using AI to strengthen democracy
Tech/AI

A blueprint for using AI to strengthen democracy

by admin May 5, 2026
written by admin

Every few centuries, changes in how information moves reshape how societies govern themselves. The printing press spread vernacular literacy, helping give rise to the Reformation and, eventually, representative government. The telegraph made it possible to administer vast nations like the US, accelerating the growth of the modern bureaucratic state. Broadcast media created shared national audiences, which in turn fueled mass democracy.

We are now in the early stages of another such shift. Faster than many realize, AI is becoming the primary interface through which we form beliefs and participate in democratic self-governance. If left unchecked, this shift could further strain America’s already fragile institutions. But it could also help address long-standing problems, like lagging civic engagement and deepening polarization. What happens next depends on design choices that are already being made, whether we know it or not.

Start with what might be called the epistemic layer—how we come to know things. People are increasingly relying on AI to know what is true, what is happening, and whom to trust. Search is already substantially AI-mediated. The next generation of AI assistants will synthesize information, frame it, and present it with authority. For a growing number of people, asking an AI will become the default way to form views on a candidate, a policy, or a public figure. Whoever controls what these models say therefore has increasing influence over what people believe. 

Technology has always shaped the way citizens interact with information. But a new problem will soon arise in the form of personal AI agents, which can change not only how people receive information but how they act on it. These systems will conduct research, draft communications, highlight causes, and lobby on a user’s behalf. They will inform decisions such as how to vote on a ballot measure, which organizations are worth supporting, or how to respond to a government notice. They will, in a meaningful sense, begin to mediate the relationship between individuals and the institutions that govern them.

We’ve already seen with social media what happens when algorithms optimize for engagement over understanding. Platforms do not need to have an explicit political agenda to produce polarization and radicalization. An agent that knows your preferences and your anxieties—one shaped to keep you engaged—poses the same risks. And in this case the risks may be even more difficult to detect, because an agent presents itself as your advocate. It speaks for you, acts on your behalf, and may earn trust precisely through that intimacy.

Now zoom out to the collective. AI agents and humans could soon participate in the same forums, where it may be impossible to tell them apart. Even if every individual AI agent were well-designed and aligned with its user’s interests, the interactions of millions of agents could produce outcomes that no individual wanted or chose. For example, research shows that agents displaying no individual bias can still generate collective biases at scale. And setting aside what agents do to each other, there is what they do for their users. A public sphere in which everyone has a personalized agent attuned to their existing views is not, in aggregate, a public sphere at all. It is a collection of private worlds, each internally coherent but collectively inhospitable to the kind of shared deliberation that democracy requires.

Taken together, these three transformations—in how we know, how we act, and how we engage in collective governance—amount to a fundamental change in the texture of citizenship. In the near future, people will form their political views through AI filters, exercise their civic agency through AI agents, and participate in institutions and public discussions that are themselves shaped by the interactions of millions of such agents.

Today’s democracy is not ready for this. Our institutions were designed for a world in which power was exercised visibly, information traveled slowly enough to be contested, and reality felt more shared, if imperfectly. All of this was already fraying long before generative AI arrived. And yet this need not be a story of decline. Avoiding that outcome requires us to design for something better.

On the informational layer, AI companies must ramp up existing efforts to ensure that models’ outputs are truthful. They should also explore some promising early findings that AI models can help reduce polarization. A recent field evaluation of AI-generated fact checks on X found that people with a variety of political viewpoints deemed AI-written notes more helpful than human-written ones. The paper is yet to be peer-reviewed, but that is a potentially revolutionary finding: AI-assisted fact-checking may be able to achieve the kind of cross-partisan credibility that has eluded most manual human efforts. Greater understanding of and transparency about how models make these assertions and prioritize sources in the process could help build further public trust.

On the agentic layer, we need ways to evaluate whether AI agents faithfully represent their users. An agent must never have an agenda of its own or misrepresent its user’s views—a technically daunting requirement in domains where users may have not explicitly stated any preferences. But faithful representation also cannot become an accessory to motivated reasoning. An agent that refuses to present uncomfortable information, that shields its user from ever questioning prior beliefs or fails to adjust to a change of heart, is not acting in the person’s best interest.

Finally, on the institutional level, policymakers should hurry to harness AI’s potential to make governance more responsive and legitimate. Several states and localities are already using AI-mediated platforms to conduct democratic deliberation at scale, building on research showing that AI mediators can help citizens find common ground. As agents become increasingly common participants in public input processes—and there is already evidence that bots are skewing those processes—identity verification for both humans and their agentic proxies must be built in from the start.

What is needed is a new generation of democratic infrastructure, technological and institutional, built for the world that is actually here. Failing to design for democratic outcomes, in a domain this consequential, means designing for something else. And the history of unaccountable power does not leave much room for optimism about what that something else tends to be.

Andrew Sorota and Josh Hendler lead work on AI and democracy at the Office of Eric Schmidt.

May 5, 2026 0 comments
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A 'fun' superstar stuns rivals and reshapes politics in an Indian state
Global

A ‘fun’ superstar stuns rivals and reshapes politics in an Indian state

by admin May 5, 2026
written by admin

Analysts say he is entering a landscape still dominated by the DMK and the AIADMK – a duopoly that mostly appears stable on paper, yet shows signs of fatigue on the ground. That, they argue, is opening space for new political experiments – and for figures like Vijay to test how far star power can translate into durable political authority.

May 5, 2026 0 comments
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"Notepad++ for Mac" release is disavowed by the creator of the original
Tech/AI

“Notepad++ for Mac” release is disavowed by the creator of the original

by admin May 4, 2026
written by admin

As its name implies, the venerable Notepad++ text editor began as a more capable version of the classic Windows Notepad, with features such as line numbering and syntax highlighting. It was created in 2003 by Don Ho, who continues to be its primary author and maintainer, and it has been a Windows-exclusive app throughout its existence (older Notepad++ versions support OSes as old as Windows 95; the current version officially supports everything going back to Windows 7).

I’m not a devoted user of the app, but I was aware of its history, which is why I was surprised to see news of a “Notepad++ for Mac” port making the rounds last week, as though it were a port of the original available from the Notepad++ website.

Apparently, this news surprised Ho as well, who claims that the Mac version and its author, Andrey Letov, are “using the Notepad++ trademark (the name) without permission.”

“This is misleading, inappropriate, and frankly disrespectful to both the project and its users,” Ho wrote. “It has already fooled people—including tech media—into believing this is an official release. To be crystal clear: Notepad++ has never released a macOS version. Anyone claiming otherwise is simply riding on the Notepad++ name.”

An escalating back-and-forth

Further communication between Ho and Letov can be found in a Notepad++ GitHub thread, where Ho said he had been contacted by Letov before the Notepad++ for Mac app had launched, but that he hadn’t had time to reply.

“The problem is that using the official name Notepad++ and its logo gives the impression that your project is an official macOS version maintained or endorsed by the Notepad++ team, which is not the case,” wrote Ho in an email to Letov that he reposted to GitHub. “This create [sic] confusion for users and exposes both you and the project to trademark issues.”

May 4, 2026 0 comments
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AI chipmaker Cerebras targets $3.5 billion raise in IPO
Economy

AI chipmaker Cerebras targets $3.5 billion raise in IPO

by admin May 4, 2026
written by admin

Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Artificial intelligence chipmaker Cerebras aims to raise as much as $3.5 billion by going public on the Nasdaq.

The company is looking to sell 28 million shares, for $115 to $125 each, according to an updated prospectus it filed on Monday.

At that range, Cerebras could be worth up to $26.6 billion in the initial public offering, based on shares outstanding. In February, the company announced a venture round that gave it a $23 billion valuation, with Advanced Micro Devices among its investors.

Relatively few technology companies have gone public since central banks raised interest rates in 2022 to fight rising prices, making investors less interested in unprofitable names.

But with the ascent of generative AI products such as OpenAI‘s ChatGPT, investors have become rabid about betting on companies that benefit from the trend. Money-losing Cerebras competitor CoreWeave, which rents out Nvidia graphics processing units as a cloud service, raised $1.5 billion in an IPO last year. Cerebras’ chips are an alternative to Nvidia’s popular GPUs.

Cerebras sought to go public in 2024 but later withdrew the paperwork, as its business model was shifting away from selling hardware and toward operating a cloud service based on its own chips. In April, Cerebras filed for an IPO for a second time.

In January, Cerebras said it would provide up to 750 megawatts of AI computing power to OpenAI through 2028 in a transaction worth over $20 billion.

The company’s fourth-quarter revenue grew about 76% year over year to $510 million, and it showed $87.9 million in net income for the period.

Andrew Feldman, Cerebras’ co-founder and CEO, is not selling shares in the IPO. He will own 10.3 million shares after the IPO that would be worth up to $1.28 billion at the high end of the range, according to the filing.

The company has an option to sell an additional 4.2 million shares to underwriters after the IPO that would yield another $525 million in proceeds at the high end of the range.

WATCH: OpenAI unveils first AI model running on Cerebras chips

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Police officer lowered into crocodile-infested river to recover human remains
Global

Police officer lowered into crocodile-infested river to recover human remains

by admin May 3, 2026
written by admin

His car had become stranded attempting to cross a low bridge in the flooded river last week. By the time the police got to the scene, it was empty, leading them to suspect he had been swept away by the water, Mpumalanga provincial police spokesperson Colonel Mavela Masondo told the national broadcaster, SABC.

May 3, 2026 0 comments
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Reggie Fils-Aimé says Amazon once asked Nintendo to break the law
Tech/AI

Reggie Fils-Aimé says Amazon once asked Nintendo to break the law

by admin May 3, 2026
written by admin

Amazon wanted ‘obscene’ financial support to undercut Walmart.

Amazon wanted ‘obscene’ financial support to undercut Walmart.

May 3, 2026, 3:24 PM UTC
A photo of the late Nintendo president Satoru Iwata and Reggie Fils-Aimé, former president of Nintendo of America, at E3 in 2004
A photo of the late Nintendo president Satoru Iwata and Reggie Fils-Aimé, former president of Nintendo of America, at E3 in 2004
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O’Brien is the Verge’s weekend editor. He has over 18 years of experience, including 10 years as managing editor at Engadget.

Way back in the DS days, Nintendo decided to stop selling to Amazon. During a recent lecture at NYU, former Nintendo of America President Reggie Fils-Aimé said it was because Amazon was seeking preferential treatment that would have hurt its relationship with other retailers, and potentially broken the law.

The two sides have since made amends, and you can buy a Switch 2 through Amazon. But for a long time, Nintendo consoles had been largely unavailable on the site. In the 2000s, Amazon aggressively expanded beyond books and tried to undercut everyone on price. According to Fils-Aimé, Amazon wanted to undercut even Walmart and was looking for an “obscene amount of support, financial support.”

While he didn’t specify what kind of financial support Amazon was looking for, Fils-Aimé says he told the Amazon executive in question, “You know that’s illegal, right? I can’t do that.” He went on to say this was part of the reason the company ended its relationship with Amazon:

“Literally, we stopped selling to Amazon, and it’s because I wasn’t going to do something illegal. I wasn’t going to do something that would put at risk the relationship we have with other retailers. But it also set the stage to say, look, you’re not going to push me around. This is the way we do business. And so that’s how, over time, you build respect.”

You can watch the full talk below:

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'Godspeed my friend': Inside the final hours of Spirit Airlines
Economy

‘Godspeed my friend’: Inside the final hours of Spirit Airlines

by admin May 2, 2026
written by admin

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Spirit Airlines kiosks at New York’s LaGuardia Airport on May 2, hours after the carrier shut down.
Leslie Josephs/CNBC

BALTIMORE/NEW YORK — Spirit Airlines was hours away from its final flights Friday afternoon. Jeremiah Burton was hours away from his first.

“It’s my first time flying,” Burton, a 45-year-old air conditioning and heating technician, told CNBC at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport on Friday, shortly before he was scheduled to depart for New Orleans to visit his daughter and her newborn twins.

“To tell you the truth, I just went online and Googled the cheapest airline ticket,” he said, adding that he paid about $500 for the trip late last month. He was scheduled to return on May 6.

While Burton waited for his flight, Spirit was making final preparations to shut down overnight, ending a three-decade run that brought discount air travel to millions across the United States and as far away as Peru. Spirit canceled international flights on Thursday, to start, so travelers, planes, and flight crews wouldn’t be stranded. The airline said it flew more than 50,000 people the day leading up to its collapse.

Spirit bondholders rejected an 11th-hour bailout proposal from the Trump administration that could have included up to $500 million to keep the ailing airline afloat. The deal would have put the government ahead of other bondholders’ claims and given it an up to 90% stake in the airline.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called Spirit CEO Dave Davis to tell him there was no deal and that bondholders and the government were far from an agreement, according to a person familiar with the matter. Bondholders sent a letter to Spirit’s board, confirming that the end was near.

Terminals go quiet

A self-check-in kiosk at Luis Munoz Marin International Airport displays an “Operational Update” message after Spirit Airlines announced it was ceasing operations early Saturday amid an impasse in talks with some creditors over a $500 million government bailout plan, in Carolina, Puerto Rico, May 2, 2026
REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo

Before dawn on Saturday, Spirit’s website and app were papered over with the message that operations had ended. “To our Guests: all flights have been cancelled, and customer service is no longer available,” it read.

By noon, LaGuardia’s Marine Air Terminal, an Art Deco facility that opened in 1940 and was home to Pan Am’s Clippers — and, most recently, home to Spirit at the New York airport — was nearly silent.

Cibo Express closed half a day early with no customers to serve. CNBC saw the last Transportation Security Administration officer who was sent home early. Screens on the arc of yellow kiosks read: “We regret to inform you that Spirit Airlines has ceased global operations.”

“It has been an honor to bring friends and families closer together for 34 years,” it said at the bottom, with a QR code with next steps.

United Airlines, Frontier Airlines, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways and others said they are capping fares to get travelers home. United said about 14,000 Spirit customers booked tickets on United on Saturday. JetBlue also announced plans to expand its schedule at Fort Lauderdale with a host of new services to destinations ranging from Cali, Colombia, to Nashville, Tennessee.

Crews scrambled to get home.

Jon Jackson, a Spirit Airlines captain, was supposed to fly his retirement flight on Saturday, but his airline shut down before he could.

He hopped on a Southwest flight to get back to Baltimore from Fort Lauderdale. While on board, “we casually mentioned it to the crew,” his son, Chris, a Southwest pilot, said in a Facebook post. Southwest staff organized a water cannon salute when the aircraft arrived and he was met with applause and a reception when he walked off the jet bridge, according to the post, which was confirmed to CNBC by Southwest.

Snowballing challenges

While things came to a head this week with access to cash drying up, Spirit’s problems were years in the making. It was profitable in the 2010s and expanded rapidly as customers filled planes. But it last made money in 2019.

The carrier has faced intense competition from richer, giant rivals like Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and American Airlines.

Spirit was also under pressure from rivals’ own bare-bones fares, soaring costs, a failed acquisition by JetBlue Airways that the Biden Justice Department successfully challenged, and an engine defect that grounded many of its jets. Airlines grew more reliant on high-spending customers who shell out thousands for plush, premium cabins. Most recently, the surge in jet fuel prices resulting from the war in Iran was a challenge the airline couldn’t overcome, it said.

Last August, Spirit filed for bankruptcy protection for the second time in less than a year, and analysts said part of the reason was that it hadn’t done enough to reconfigure the airline, slash costs, and that it had avoided hard decisions in its first filing in 2024. Weeks before it had hoped to emerge free from its bankruptcy, it faced the added challenge of expensive fuel.

A Spirit Airlines customer service area at LaGuardia Airport’s Marine Air Terminal in New York.
Leslie Josephs/CNBC

Some 17,000 direct and indirect employees lost their jobs as a result of the airline’s collapse, the carrier said.

“The pain of this decision will not be felt in boardrooms. It will be felt by pilots, flight attendants, mechanics, dispatchers, and ground crews, and by the families and communities that depend on them,” wrote Air Line Pilots Association’s international president, Jason Ambrosi, on Saturday.

Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, Spirit’s roughly 5,000 flight attendants’ union, wrote a letter to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and acting Labor Secretary Keith Sonderling, urging them to try to help ensure that flight attendants are paid and compensated for earned vacation and per diems as the case works its way through bankruptcy court. She also asked that they receive a $600 weekly supplement to state unemployment from the federal government.

“Standard unemployment coverage does not replace full wages, and this enhanced support would help stabilize households while workers secure new employment,” she said.

The airline ‘America loved to hate’

Spirit had just about 4% of the U.S. market share, according to aviation-data firm Cirium, but an outsized presence in many Americans’ minds — and on their social media feeds.

Henry Harteveldt, Atmosphere Research Group founder and former airline executive, said Spirit was a “true pioneer” of discount air travel but still was the “airline America loved to hate,” in part because of its bare-bones fares, customer service debacles, and spotty reliability in earlier years.

Spirit became a favorite punchline among comedians. “The CEO of Spirit Airlines was like, ‘With $500 million [from the Trump administration] our planes could have two wings again,” “Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon said last month.

Read more about Spirit Airlines’ recent challenges

  • Clock ticks on Spirit Airlines as bondholders weigh Trump bailout. Here’s what could happen next
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In 2017, Spirit enrolled customer-facing employees in the Disney Institute, a Disney leadership and professional training subsidiary, to improve its staff interactions with customers and had made strides in improving its on-time performance.

It still had fans and willing customers, right up until the end.

“For a two-hour flight, I could really suffer a lot,” said Kara Snyder, 30, who works in health insurance sales. She said that for a short flight from Florida to Baltimore, scarce legroom and perks don’t matter to her. Snyder said she flew Spirit to Baltimore and was flying back to Orlando on Frontier Airlines. “I tend to stick with budget airlines,” she said.

International flights to Europe or Africa are another matter, said Snyder. “I go Delta,” she said. “I’m picky on that. It has to be Delta.”

‘Good luck to you all’

Friday evening at Spirit’s headquarters in Dania Beach, Florida, near its home base of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Spirit’s executive team was huddled in a war room, watching its last flights come in.

News broke earlier that at 3 a.m. on Saturday, the clock would run out for the airline and its fleet of bright yellow jets.

“Good luck to you all,” said an American Airlines employee to a Spirit flight, according to audio posted by LiveATC.net. “Sorry to hear what happened.”

One of the pilots on the last Spirit flight, NK1833 from Detroit to Dallas Fort Worth International, shortly before touching down after midnight Saturday, asked the tower: “Is there any other Spirit flights coming in after us?” There were 175 passengers on board.

“I don’t see anything,” the controller said. “So you might be the last one.”

He later told the pilot, “Well, it was a pleasure working with you guys and I wish you the best.”

“Thank you very much,” the pilot replied, according to LiveATC.

Wes Egan, a Spirit dispatcher for roughly 23 years, told CNBC that he was working in the company’s operations center in Orlando late Friday when one of the carrier’s pilots was asking for information about the fate of the airline. Senior managers had just informed the staff there around 11:30 p.m. that operations were about to cease.

He sent a text message to the pilot via a special cockpit system for alerts and other information.

“UNOFFICIALLY WE STOP FLYING AT 0300 EST ON 05/02,” said the message. “GODSPEED MY FRIEND.”

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