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In a baffling outbreak, officials turn to cold beer, filthy ice, and ChatGPT
Tech/AI

In a baffling outbreak, officials turn to cold beer, filthy ice, and ChatGPT

by admin February 28, 2026
written by admin

An AI helping hand?

Katherine Houser, the county health official who authored the MMWR report, said beer‑tent staff were reluctant to provide specifics because they did not want to implicate fellow community members. One worker, however, mentioned that leftover food had been placed in the cooler overnight at the beginning of the fair.

Local health officials proposed that the cooler had been contaminated with Salmonella, which then transferred to beer cans that people drank from, causing infections. With the improvised cooler no longer available, that idea could only be speculative. Consequently, investigators consulted ChatGPT for confirmation.

After feeding the chatbot the outbreak details, investigators posed several questions, such as: “Will S. Agbeni proliferate in a poorly drained cooler?”; “Besides ice, are there any plausible sources if only canned drinks and no food were present at this site?”; and “What documented examples of similar outbreaks exist in the scientific literature?”

Several of those queries could be resolved without a chatbot. A quick search of PubMed, the federal scientific literature database, readily turns up instances of Salmonella being detected in ice. Nonetheless, the chatbot told officials the cooler was a “credible and likely” source, and they maintained that hypothesis.

Ultimately, officials instituted new cooler sanitation procedures and judged the AI input to be useful. “AI was effective in this rural setting for rapid situational awareness,” Houser wrote. She also noted concerns about employing AI in outbreak work: “Given the inherent limitations of generative AI tools, including potential inaccuracies and lack of source transparency, all AI-generated summaries were critically reviewed and validated against primary literature before incorporation,” she added.

All told, the case report ends ambiguously. How much the chatbot actually contributed remains uncertain. Carefully vetting AI-produced responses can consume as much time as doing the research independently. And, of course, the true events surrounding that improvised beer cooler may never be known—though the updated cooler sanitation measures appear prudent regardless.

February 28, 2026 0 comments
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At least 15 deceased following the crash of a military aircraft transporting banknotes in Bolivia.
Global

At least 15 deceased following the crash of a military aircraft transporting banknotes in Bolivia.

by admin February 28, 2026
written by admin

“I wish to emphasize to those seeking to acquire money from the aircraft related to this incident that such money holds no legal value as it has not been authorized by the Central Bank and lacks a serial number; attempting to utilize this money constitutes a crime,” stated Defence Minister Marcelo Salinas.

February 28, 2026 0 comments
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OpenAI reaches agreement with the Pentagon, shortly after competitor Anthropic was banned by Trump.
Economy

OpenAI reaches agreement with the Pentagon, shortly after competitor Anthropic was banned by Trump.

by admin February 28, 2026
written by admin

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI Inc., at the AI Impact Summit held in New Delhi, India, on Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026.
Prakash Singh | Bloomberg | Getty Images

On late Friday, OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman announced that his company has finalized an agreement with the Department of Defense regarding the utilization of its artificial intelligence models, shortly after President Donald Trump indicated that the government would not collaborate with AI competitor Anthropic.

“This evening, we came to an accord with the Department of War to implement our models within their classified infrastructure,” Altman stated in a post on X. “Throughout our discussions, the DoW exhibited profound respect for safety and a commitment to partner for optimal results.”

Altman’s message arrives at the conclusion of a tumultuous week for the AI sector, which has been at the forefront of a political discourse concerning the applications of its models. Earlier today, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth identified Anthropic as a “Supply-Chain Risk to National Security” following weeks of strained discussions. This label is often reserved for foreign adversaries, compelling DoD vendors and contractors to confirm that they do not employ Anthropic’s models.

Additionally, President Trump instructed every federal agency in the U.S. to “immediately cease” all application of Anthropic’s technology.

Anthropic was the pioneering lab to utilize its models across the DoD’s classified network and had been in negotiations regarding the terms of its contract with the agency before the talks fell through. The firm sought assurances that its models would not be deployed for fully autonomous weapon systems or mass surveillance of Americans, while the DoD insisted on the understanding that the military could utilize the models for all lawful purposes.

In a memo to staff on Thursday, Altman conveyed that OpenAI held the same “red lines” as Anthropic. He mentioned in his Friday post that the DoD consented to these limitations.

“Two of our most significant safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human accountability for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems,” Altman wrote. The DoW endorses these principles, reflects them in regulations and policies, and we incorporated them into our agreement.

The rationale behind the DoD’s decision to favor OpenAI over Anthropic remains unclear, although government officials have recently criticized Anthropic for allegedly being excessively focused on AI safety.

Altman expressed that OpenAI intends to create “technical safeguards to ensure its models perform as intended,” and that the company will assign personnel to “aid with our models and ensure their safety.”

“We are urging the DoW to extend these same conditions to all AI companies, which we believe should be readily accepted by everyone,” Altman wrote. “We have shown our strong intent to transition from legal and governmental confrontations towards reasonable agreements.”

In a statement released on Friday, Anthropic expressed that it was “deeply saddened” by the Pentagon’s decision to categorize the company as a supply chain risk. It declared its intent to contest that designation in court.

WATCH: Hegseth directs Pentagon to classify Anthropic a supply-chain risk

February 28, 2026 0 comments
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Bill Clinton inquired regarding the hot tub image and asserts he was unaware of any Epstein-related crimes.
Global

Bill Clinton inquired regarding the hot tub image and asserts he was unaware of any Epstein-related crimes.

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

“As soon as the footage of my statement today becomes available, I wish for it to inspire everyone to appear before Congress and share what they know,” Clinton remarked. “I hope it will encourage the justice department to ultimately disclose all the documents and guarantee that this never occurs again. The survivors warrant that.”

February 27, 2026 0 comments
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Defense secretary Pete Hegseth recognizes Anthropic as a supply chain vulnerability.
Tech/AI

Defense secretary Pete Hegseth recognizes Anthropic as a supply chain vulnerability.

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

Anthropic has announced plans to contest the classification in court.

Anthropic has announced plans to contest the classification in court.

Updated Feb 28, 2026, 2:19 AM UTC
US-VENEZUELA-CONFLICT-TRUMP
US-VENEZUELA-CONFLICT-TRUMP
Tina Nguyen
Tina Nguyen is a Senior Reporter for The Verge and the author of Regulator, focusing on the second Trump administration, political influencers, technological lobbying, and the conflict between Big Tech and Big Government.

Shortly after President Donald Trump revealed on Truth Social that he was prohibiting Anthropic products from federal usage, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth escalated the situation by declaring the AI firm a “supply-chain risk,” which Anthropic states it is prepared to contest legally.

This move could have an immediate effect on a variety of significant tech firms that utilize Claude for their contracts with the Pentagon, including Palantir and AWS. It remains unclear how broadly the Pentagon may restrict companies that provide services through Claude for purposes outside of national security, with Anthropic asserting that the classification pertains solely to the use of its Claude AI in Department of Defense contract work.

Following a week of intense discussions regarding the company’s acceptable use policies, the Pentagon issued Anthropic an ultimatum: consent by Friday, 5:30 PM EST, allowing the Pentagon to use Claude for “all lawful purposes,” including autonomous lethal weapons without human oversight and mass surveillance, or face the classification as a supply-chain risk. This classification is generally applied to firms with connections to foreign governments that represent threats to national security and would prevent any organization using Anthropic products from engaging with the Department of Defense.

In a tweet made just after 5PM ET, Hegseth extended the designation to include companies engaging in “any business activity with Anthropic,” reiterating Trump’s instruction that firms had six months to sell off their interests in Anthropic products.

“Our stance has always remained firm and will continue to be: the Department of War requires complete, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for every LAWFUL purpose in defending the Republic,” he asserted. “Instead, @AnthropicAI and its CEO @DarioAmodei have opted for deceit. Masquerading in the pious language of ‘effective altruism,’ they have sought to coerce the United States military into compliance – a cowardly display of corporate virtue-signaling that prioritizes Silicon Valley values over the lives of Americans.”

Hegseth, as Secretary of Defense, possesses the discretion to designate a company as a “supply-chain risk.” Nevertheless, this choice follows multiple other efforts by the Pentagon to pressure Anthropic into allowing the use of Claude as they wished, including a warning to invoke the Defense Production Act.

On Friday evening, Anthropic replied to both the Department of Defense and the White House, stating in a blog post that it had not received direct communication from either entity about the negotiation developments. According to Anthropic, contrary to what Hegseth’s tweet suggested, it informs customers that “The Secretary lacks the statutory authority to substantiate this claim.”

The firm maintains that the classification can solely apply “to the deployment of Claude as part of Department of War contracts—it cannot influence how contractors utilize Claude for other clients,” asserting that simply having a contract with Anthropic is not relevant.

Regarding the classification itself and the DoD policy advocated by Hegseth, Anthropic has expressed its willingness to litigate:

Labeling Anthropic as a supply chain risk would represent an unprecedented measure—one historically reserved for US adversaries, never before publicly designated to an American entity. We are profoundly disheartened by these events. As the pioneering AI company to integrate models into the US government’s classified systems, Anthropic has offered support to American military personnel since June 2024 and is committed to continuing that support.

We believe this classification would be legally questionable and set a perilous precedent for any American company engaging with the government.

No level of intimidation or punishment from the Department of War will alter our position on mass domestic surveillance or completely autonomous weapons. We will contest any supply chain risk classification in court.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth:

This week, Anthropic displayed a master class in arrogance and betrayal, as well as a classic example of how not to conduct business with the United States Government or the Pentagon.

Our stance has never shifted and will not shift: the Department of War must have absolute, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for all LAWFUL purposes in defense of the Republic.

Instead, @AnthropicAI and its CEO @DarioAmodei, have opted for duplicity. Hiding behind the self-righteous language of “effective altruism,” they have attempted to coerce the US military into compliance – a cowardly display of corporate virtue-signaling that prioritizes Silicon Valley ideals over American lives.

The Terms of Service of Anthropic’s flawed altruism will never surpass the safety, preparedness, or lives of American troops on the battlefield.

Their true aim is crystal clear: to obtain veto authority over the operational decisions of the United States military. That is unacceptable.

As President Trump articulated on Truth Social, it is the Commander-in-Chief and the American people who will decide the fate of our armed forces, not unelected tech executives.

Anthropic’s position is fundamentally at odds with American values. Consequently, their relationship with the United States Armed Forces and the Federal Government has been irreversibly changed.

In line with the President’s directive for the Federal Government to halt all use of Anthropic’s technology, I am instructing the Department of War to classify Anthropic as a Supply-Chain Risk to National Security. Immediately, no contractor, supplier, or partner that conducts business with the US military may engage in any commercial activity with Anthropic. Anthropic will continue to supply the Department of War its services for a maximum of six months to facilitate a smooth transition to a more suitable and patriotic service.

America’s military personnel will never be held captive by the ideological whims of Big Tech. This determination is final.

Update, February 27th: Added reaction from Anthropic.

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  • Tina Nguyen
Hayden Field and Richard LawlerFeb 27
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Google makes HTTPS quantum-proof by squeezing 15 kB of data into a 700-byte space
Tech/AI

Google makes HTTPS quantum-proof by squeezing 15 kB of data into a 700-byte space

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

Google and other browser makers require that all TLS certificates be published in public transparency logs, which are append-only distributed ledgers. Website owners can then monitor the logs in real time to verify that no rogue certificates have been issued for their domains. The transparency programs were launched after the 2011 hack of Netherlands-based DigiNotar, which enabled the creation of roughly 500 fake certificates for Google and other sites, some of which were used to spy on web users in Iran.

Once practical, Shor’s algorithm could be used to fake classical encryption signatures and to break the classical public keys that protect the certificate logs. Ultimately, an attacker could fabricate the signed certificate timestamps that are presented to a browser or operating system to indicate a certificate has been logged when it hasn’t.

To eliminate that risk, Google is adding cryptographic material from quantum-resistant algorithms such as ML-DSA. That change would only permit forgeries if an attacker were able to break both the classical and post-quantum schemes. The new approach is part of what Google calls the quantum-resistant root store, which will complement the Chrome Root Store the company formed in 2022.

The MTCs rely on Merkle Trees to offer quantum-resistant proof that a certificate has been published without having to include most of the lengthy keys and hashes. By applying other techniques to shrink the data, the MTCs will be roughly the same 4kB length they are now, Westerbaan said.

The new system has already been rolled out in Chrome. For now, Cloudflare is enrolling roughly 1,000 TLS certificates to evaluate how well the MTCs perform. At present Cloudflare is generating the distributed ledger; the plan is for CAs to take on that role in time. The Internet Engineering Task Force standards body has recently formed a working group called the PKI, Logs, And Tree Signatures, which is coordinating with other stakeholders to build a long-term solution.

“We view the adoption of MTCs and a quantum-resistant root store as a critical opportunity to ensure the robustness of the foundation of today’s ecosystem,” Google’s Friday blog post said. “By designing for the specific demands of a modern, agile internet, we can accelerate the adoption of post-quantum resilience for all web users.”

Post updated to correct reported sizes of various items.

February 27, 2026 0 comments
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NASA is delaying its plans for a Moon landing
Tech/AI

NASA is delaying its plans for a Moon landing

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

The agency will cease efforts to land on the Moon with Artemis III, postponing the landing until 2028 with Artemis IV.

The agency will cease efforts to land on the Moon with Artemis III, postponing the landing until 2028 with Artemis IV.

Feb 27, 2026, 11:11 PM UTC
Artemis I Rollout
Artemis I Rollout
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield is a writer covering the realm of consumer technology. Stevie began at Laptop Mag focusing on news and evaluations regarding hardware, gaming, and AI.

NASA revealed during a press briefing on Friday that it is postponing its Moon landing plans until Artemis IV in 2028. The Artemis III mission, which was set for 2027, was initially intended to attempt a Moon landing but will now serve as a test flight. NASA has also stated that it is “increasing its frequency of missions,” which includes adding a second test flight in 2027 and aiming for “at least one surface landing each year thereafter,” including the Artemis IV landing.

The revision to the Artemis launch timetable was prompted by a report from NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) this month that noted substantial safety hazards with NASA’s prior launch strategies. ASAP expressed significant concern over Artemis III, claiming that the report identified excessive “cumulative technical, operational, and scheduling risks tied to multiple first-of-a-kind objectives designated for a single mission.”

The Artemis II mission, planned for this year, has encountered numerous issues during testing over the past weeks, pushing its launch to no earlier than April. Artemis II aims to orbit the Moon — if successful, it will mark the first time humans reach lunar orbit since Apollo 17 in 1972.

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  • Stevie Bonifield

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Under a Paramount-WBD merger, two ailing media giants would be brought together.
Tech/AI

Under a Paramount-WBD merger, two ailing media giants would be brought together.

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

If Paramount and WBD complete a merger, it would be the biggest consolidation in streaming history and would drive greater consolidation across the sector.

“What began as a fragmented yet adaptable streaming landscape is moving toward rebundling—fewer, bigger super-platforms with wider libraries and higher price points,” Mathur said.

Paramount holds on to cable

Paramount’s bid for WBD stands out for its heavy emphasis on cable networks, many of which are losing audience and advertising dollars. A merged WBD would add channels such as HGTV, Cartoon Network, TLC, and CNN to Paramount’s linear lineup, which already includes Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, and CBS.

Though both Paramount and WBD see declines in their cable divisions, those units remain profitable. Paramount’s TV and media arm — covering its cable channels and studios — reported $1.1 billion in adjusted OIBDA in Q4 2025. WBD’s cable business recorded $1.41 billion in adjusted EBITDA that quarter.

In the end, a Paramount-WBD combination could threaten a diversity of viewpoints. Since Ellison’s takeover, CBS News has shifted under new editor-in-chief Bari Weiss. There have been concerns about censoring CBS under Ellison’s Paramount, raised as well by Stephen Colbert, who this month said CBS prevented him from interviewing Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico; CBS has denied the claim. Additionally, Paramount could leave a lasting imprint on CNN, from cost-cutting and layoffs to altered coverage.

More to come

Regulatory scrutiny will dominate the conversation around a Paramount-WBD deal in the coming months. Federal sign-off seems possible, but the transaction will also face European review and potential state lawsuits. The theater industry is likewise lobbying against the proposed merger.

If regulators do greenlight a Paramount-WBD tie-up, two struggling companies will have a steep task creating a profitable combined entity. Even with approval, Paramount-Skydance-Warner-Bros.-Discovery faces significant hurdles.

Even if the bidding war concludes, the contest over WBD is far from over.

February 27, 2026 0 comments
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WBD staff are anxious about the impending surge of job cuts as Paramount surpasses Netflix's offer to purchase the firm.
Economy

WBD staff are anxious about the impending surge of job cuts as Paramount surpasses Netflix’s offer to purchase the firm.

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

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An American flag waves at Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank, California, on September 12, 2025.
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The Warner Bros. Discovery board might have benefited its investors on Thursday by opting for Paramount Skydance‘s purchase proposal as opposed to Netflix‘s, but it also unsettled many of its staff.

While some employees hold WBD shares and might favor the financial aspects of Paramount’s $31-per-share proposition compared to Netflix’s $27.75-per-share bid, CNBC conversed with 10 WBD team members in various positions within the organization. All 10, who wished to stay anonymous due to concerns of possible repercussions, voiced worries about prospective job cuts and uncertainties about who would lead their departments if Paramount and WBD were to merge.

“It’s reasonable to say that people feel dejected by the announcement,” remarked a veteran WBD official.

Regardless, a WBD-Paramount merger “is not a certainty,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta stated yesterday.

The deal must receive regulatory clearance in both the U.S. and Europe. WBD CEO David Zaslav recognized during a company-wide meeting on Friday that the agreement may still face hurdles and showed empathy for those experiencing a sense of disorientation moving from Netflix to Paramount, as mentioned by individuals familiar with the situation.

“The agreement may not finalize. If it falls through, we secure $7 billion, and we return to our tasks,” Zaslav indicated, according to leaked audio shared with Business Insider.

Nonetheless, numerous WBD employees informed CNBC that they wished Netflix had taken over WBD, pointing to several reasons.

While both Paramount and WBD excel in news, sports, theatrical films, and streaming TV, Netflix has significantly less overlapping interests. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos has consistently stated he intended to keep the WBD operations intact, maintaining a separate theatrical segment from Netflix while also preserving HBO Max as an independent streaming service for the foreseeable future.

Netflix was also not looking to take over WBD’s linear cable division with its offer. Employees at CNN, TNT Sports, and the former Discovery networks would have kept their roles to pave the way for a standalone publicly traded entity.

Currently, WBD staff are facing the threat of extensive job reductions. Paramount leaders have previously declared intentions to save $6 billion by cutting “redundant functions” in “back office, finance, corporate, legal, technology, infrastructure, etc.,” as per Chief Strategy Officer Andy Gordon. Both WBD and Paramount have already undergone thousands of layoffs in recent years.

Concerns regard culture and leadership too. Mark Thompson presently oversees CNN, while Bari Weiss serves as the editor-in-chief at CBS News and could likely include CNN in her scope.

The Wall Street Journal reported in December that Paramount CEO David Ellison assured President Donald Trump he would implement extensive changes at CNN if he gained control over the network. Three CNN employees who conversed with CNBC reported a pervasive sense of fear among their peers concerning Weiss possibly enacting significant changes to the cable network’s anchors and style.

“In spite of all the speculations you’ve seen throughout this process, I would advise against jumping to conclusions about the future until more information is available,” Thompson noted in a memo to staff on Thursday.

CNN media correspondent Brian Stelter observed that CNN “is a very profitable entity, and it would be unwise for any owner to jeopardize that.”

In the entertainment realm, WBD employees worry that there could be an excess of decision-makers, which may stifle creativity and innovation for both film and television projects.

One WBD executive pointed out that Paramount’s President Jeff Shell, Chair of Direct to Consumer Cindy Holland, and Chair of Television George Cheeks are all accustomed to holding senior positions in their respective organizations. Shell was the CEO of NBCUniversal. Cheeks previously served as co-CEO of Paramount before its merger with Skydance. Holland was a high-ranking executive at Netflix for 18 years.

The interaction of this mix with WBD’s entertainment leadership team remains uncertain and could potentially result in culture clashes.

TNT Sports is managed by Luis Silberwasser and has predominantly guided WBD towards younger demographics with its programming choices and investments, such as Bleacher Report and House of Highlights. Conversely, CBS Sports caters to the audience demographics of CBS, which has historically focused on an older viewership. This could either cause cultural friction or allow the divisions to complement each other effectively.

Although Silberwasser will collaborate with CBS Sports President David Berson on employee redundancies, like every other unit, there is some reason to feel hopeful regarding the sports division, as WBD and CBS have enjoyed a longstanding partnership in producing March Madness, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. This has provided both units with a certain level of familiarity.

WBD also lost NBA rights in the last season. Merging with CBS’s extensive sports rights portfolio, including the NFL and the Masters, positions WBD as a formidable contender in sports, even as a subsidiary of CBS.

Another recurring concern among staff is the $64 billion in debt that accompanies the $111 billion total enterprise value of the arrangement. Several employees mentioned that managing such large debt loads has impeded WBD in recent years, leading to fears of continued similar challenges. Two employees indicated they found reassurance in being part of a large corporation like Netflix, which has a market value exceeding $400 billion, while Paramount Skydance’s market valuation stands at merely $15 billion.

February 27, 2026 0 comments
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MIT Technology Review has been selected as a finalist in reporting for the 2026 ASME awards.
Tech/AI

MIT Technology Review has been selected as a finalist in reporting for the 2026 ASME awards.

by admin February 27, 2026
written by admin

AI is frequently referred to as a black box, but it’s not only the internal mechanisms that are enigmatic. Top AI firms have kept energy consumption data under wraps, complicating efforts to assess its environmental impact. In a comprehensive inquiry, senior AI journalist James O’Donnell and senior climate journalist Casey Crownhart devoted six months to analyzing numerous report pages, speaking with experts, and calculating figures. 

The team investigated the energy expense of a single query and subsequently expanded their analysis to create an overarching view that demonstrated the potential consequences of AI’s present and future energy requirements. Their findings unveiled the substantial energy footprint of AI, the sources of that energy, and who will bear the costs. In the period following the project’s release, leading AI companies such as Open AI, Mistral, and Google disclosed information regarding their models’ energy and water consumption. 

The 2026 awards ceremony will take place in New York City on May 19. 

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Defense secretary Pete Hegseth recognizes Anthropic as a supply chain vulnerability.
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