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Economy

Investors allocated billions to private credit. Now, numerous individuals are seeking to retrieve their funds.

by admin March 5, 2026
written by admin


In this piece

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The scramble to exit private credit is leading to renewed examination of the sector’s less-liquid frameworks and its swift growth into the retail investment arena.

Blackstone has emerged as the latest fund manager facing a wave of requests from investors wanting to exit its premier private credit strategy.

The asset management firm announced this week it will accommodate 100% of redemption demands in its massive $82 billion Blackstone Private Credit Fund, or BCRED, following record withdrawal requests of 7.9% of assets, amounting to approximately $3.8 billion.

This followed Blue Owl Capital revealing last month that it was terminating regular quarterly liquidity distributions in its Blue Owl Capital Corporation II fund, a semi-liquid private credit initiative targeting U.S. retail investors. The private credit expert will instead transition to irregular payouts financed through asset sales, earnings, and other strategic arrangements.

This surge in redemption requests is currently putting the private market sector’s engagement with retail investors under increased examination, highlighting the disparity between non-publicly traded, higher-yielding illiquid assets and retail-style accessibility.

‘A feature, not a bug’

Blackstone — the largest alternative investment manager globally, with $1.27 trillion in assets under management — stated it is increasing a previously announced buyback offer to 7% of total shares, with the firm and its employees covering the remaining 0.9%, to fulfill the redemption requests completely.

Blackstone COO and President Jon Gray recognized that the risk of private credit firms being unable to fulfill withdrawals and potentially restricting investor access is “not advantageous in the short term” for the industry.

However, during an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk On The Street” on Tuesday, Gray mentioned that individual investors and financial advisors “in most instances do” understand the product.

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Blackstone.

“What people often overlook is, they are intended as semi-liquid products,” Gray stated. “The notion that there are caps is essentially a feature, not a flaw of these products. What you’re essentially doing is foregoing a degree of liquidity for enhanced returns. This is the same trade-off that institutional investors have engaged in for quite some time.”

Shares of publicly traded alternative asset managers — comprising Blackstone and Blue Owl, alongside KKR, Ares Management and Carlyle Group, among others — have declined as worries over various pressure points within the sector have proliferated.

These concerns encompass late-cycle loan quality, AI-related vulnerabilities in software portfolios, and apprehensions regarding additional individual failures following last year’s First Brands and Tricolor collapses.

Gray indicated that low-leverage loans yielding a premium for investors are “a pretty sound option,” asserting that he anticipates they will continue to surpass liquid credit in performance.

The BCRED fund has produced a 9.8% return since its inception in its primary share class, signaling that, for now, the challenge is more about liquidity than performance. Gray remarked there had been a “significant amount of discourse” surrounding private credit in recent weeks, adding, “it’s not uncommon for investors to feel anxious.”

Moody’s Ratings cautioned that the delicate balance for private credit in delivering substantial returns while also providing retail-like liquidity will continue to be challenged as the sector moves towards mainstream acceptance. In a recent commentary, Marc Pinto, global head of private credit at Moody’s, remarked that funds might need to maintain a greater share of more liquid, lower-yielding assets to adapt to the expanding retail presence — which could slow down returns.

‘180-degree pivot’

In the end, the foundational assets will remain illiquid, no matter how the fund is structured, said William Barrett, managing partner at Reach Capital. “The retail market needs to be aware of that and should not approach investing in these products in the same manner as it would with an ETF,” Barrett wrote to CNBC via email.

“For decades, private markets inflows have been primarily from the institutional sector,” Barrett noted. “It’s logical for our industry to now extend our offerings to retail but it may be wise to first pilot with HNWI [high net worth individuals] and mass-affluent demographics rather than executing an abrupt 180-degree change to mass retail.”

Barrett emphasized that the industry must prudently determine suitable target markets for appropriate liquidity structures and the right foundational assets.

He added that while there has been minimal indication of underperformance in the credit sphere at the portfolio level, “it is reasonable to assume that semi-liquid products will experience liquidity challenges first.”

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Blue Owl Capital.

Man Group, the London-listed global alternatives manager that has increased its private credit efforts in recent years, stated that private credit loans are issued with the “explicit aim” of being held to maturity.

“This lack of liquidity is a characteristic of the asset class, not a shortcoming,” said Andrew Weymann, director, client portfolio manager, U.S. private credit, and Zeshan Ashfaque, senior managing director and senior credit officer, U.S. direct lending, in a note released Tuesday.

They noted that redemption pressures within private credit could also be affected by another area of fragility: exposure to software-as-a-service firms. Blue Owl has a substantial direct lending portfolio within this sector, which has been unsettled by fears that swiftly evolving AI tools could undermine traditional SaaS business models.

“If retail inflows decelerate and outflows increase, especially for managers most vulnerable to AI risks or whose capital bases comprise a significant retail segment, this will present an additional challenge for the sector,” Weymann and Ashfaque remarked.

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Anthropic and the Pentagon have returned to discussions, according to FT.
Economy

Anthropic and the Pentagon have returned to discussions, according to FT.

by admin March 5, 2026
written by admin

Anthropic’s Dario Amodei observes after meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron at the AI Impact Summit held in New Delhi on February 19, 2026.
Ludovic Marin | Afp | Getty Images

Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, has returned to negotiations with the U.S. Department of Defense following the collapse of discussions on Friday regarding the deployment of the company’s AI technologies by the military, as reported by The Financial Times.

Amodei is engaging in discussions with Emil Michael, the under-secretary of defense for research and engineering, in a final attempt to finalize an agreement outlining the terms under which the Pentagon would have access to Anthropic’s Claude systems, the Times disclosed, citing sources with knowledge of the situation.

Negotiations fell apart on Friday, as President Donald Trump instructed federal bodies to cease the use of Anthropic’s technologies, while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced he would classify the company as a supply-chain threat to national security.

Recently, Michael had criticized Amodei, labeling him a “liar” with a “God complex,” in an X post.

A new contract would allow the U.S. military to keep utilizing Anthropic’s technology, which has reportedly been employed in Washington’s conflict with Iran.

Claude became the initial significant model implemented within the government’s classified systems via a $200 million deal awarded to Anthropic by the DoD, but the company subsequently requested assurances that its tools wouldn’t be used for domestic surveillance or autonomous weaponry. The Pentagon had insisted that the military would have the right to use the technology for any lawful purpose.

In a memo seen by FT, Amodei allegedly informed staff that towards the conclusion of negotiations with the Defense Department, it had proposed accepting Anthropic’s terms if a “specific clause about ‘analysis of bulk acquired data'” was removed — a clause he claimed, “precisely aligned with the scenario we were most apprehensive about.”

Amodei also articulated in his message that the communications from the Pentagon and OpenAI, which finalized a new agreement with the Defense Department on Friday, were “just outright falsehoods regarding these matters or efforts to obfuscate them.”

The timing of OpenAI’s agreement with the Pentagon, announced shortly after the White House criticized Anthropic, had triggered public discontent, with Claude experiencing a spike in app downloads while ChatGPT reportedly saw a rise in app uninstalls.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman later acknowledged that his organization “shouldn’t have hurried” into its agreement and described modifications to its own safeguards regarding how the Defense Department could utilize its technology.

In a post on X, Altman further commented on the issue, stating: “In my discussions over the weekend, I reiterated that Anthropic should not be classified as a [supply chain risk], and we hope the [Department of Defense] extends to them the same terms we have accepted.”

Founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees and researchers who departed due to disagreements over the firm’s trajectory, Anthropic presents itself as a “safety-first” alternative.

For months, government officials have criticized Anthropic for its alleged excessive focus on AI safety.

A tech industry coalition, including members like Nvidia, Google, and Anthropic, had sent a letter to Hegseth on Wednesday expressing apprehension over his designation of a U.S. company as a supply-chain risk.

The Defense Department and Anthropic did not respond immediately to a CNBC inquiry regarding their reported negotiations.

March 5, 2026 0 comments
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A recently released video by the White House combines Call of Duty gameplay with real footage of strikes in Iran.
Tech/AI

A recently released video by the White House combines Call of Duty gameplay with real footage of strikes in Iran.

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

  • Entertainment

The video features visuals, music, and edits reminiscent of those found in Call of Duty highlight reels.

The video features visuals, music, and edits reminiscent of those found in Call of Duty highlight reels.

Mar 5, 2026, 1:09 AM UTC
Screenshot 2026-03-04 at 5.07.12 PM
Screenshot 2026-03-04 at 5.07.12 PM
Jay Peters
Jay Peters is a senior reporter focusing on technology, gaming, and a variety of other topics. He began his tenure at The Verge in 2019 following nearly two years at Techmeme.

On Wednesday, the White House shared a video featuring real military actions against Iran, styled similarly to Call of Duty highlight films, and commenced the tape with a segment from Call of Duty. The authentic footage displaying missiles and various munitions striking targets in Iran includes excerpts from other videos released during the Trump administration, such as this one posted on the U.S. Central Command X account.

As stated by The Washington Post’s Drew Harwell, the animation at the beginning seems to be derived from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III when a player activates a killstreak reward that triggers a nuclear strike. The administration has frequently employed video games as inspiration for social media content promoting its objectives. In September, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shared a video montage of ICE operations featuring the caption “Gotta Catch ‘Em All,” set to the theme music of the original Pokémon series. A DHS recruitment post for ICE officers utilized a Halo image accompanied by the words “DESTROY THE FLOOD.”

Activision and Xbox did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

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Seven technology behemoths agreed to Trump's commitment to prevent electricity prices from surging near data centers.
Tech/AI

Seven technology behemoths agreed to Trump’s commitment to prevent electricity prices from surging near data centers.

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

The commitment aims to obligate corporations to fund necessary grid enhancements to accommodate the increasing electricity requirements from data centers.

The commitment aims to obligate corporations to fund necessary grid enhancements to accommodate the increasing electricity requirements from data centers.

Mar 5, 2026, 12:17 AM UTC
President Trump Holds Roundtable On Ratepayer Protection Pledge
President Trump Holds Roundtable On Ratepayer Protection Pledge
Justine Calma
Justine Calma is a senior science journalist focusing on energy and environmental issues with over ten years of experience. She also hosts Hell or High Water: When Disaster Hits Home, a podcast from Vox Media and Audible Originals.

Executives from Google, Meta, Microsoft, Oracle, OpenAI, Amazon, and xAI convened with President Donald Trump today to endorse a “rate payer protection pledge.” This initiative is part of their response to escalating bipartisan worries regarding electric rates increasing as tech companies and the Trump administration hustle to establish a new era of AI data centers.

“[Tech firms] require some public relations assistance since there’s a perception that the establishment of a data center results in increased electricity costs,” Trump remarked during the gathering. “Some communities turned down projects because of that concern, and now I think the situation will reverse.”

Trump officially presented a proclamation today that established the ratepayer protection pledge during a roundtable session, affirming assertions made in his recent State of the Union address. The proclamation states that “these companies will construct, source, or acquire the new generational resources and electricity necessary to meet their energy requirements, and finance all new power delivery infrastructure improvements to support their data centers.”

This strategy arises as technology firms rush to address increasing resistance to data centers that demand vast amounts of electricity to operate and train generative AI models. Household electricity expenses surged by 13 percent on average throughout the nation in 2025, based on a December report from advocacy group Climate Power. Additionally, a report by the Department of Energy forecasts that electricity demand from data centers could potentially double or triple by 2028.

Per the proclamation, the participating seven companies have “accepted the parameters of the Ratepayer Protection Pledge” and that “the commitments encapsulated within it further the national agenda of the United States.” However, it clarifies that these companies would still need to “voluntarily engage in negotiations” with local utility providers and state administrations.

The president indicated that these businesses would be accountable for increasing grid capacity “where feasible.” He also mentioned they would be liable for the expenses related to enhancing existing power facilities to keep pace with the increasing demand for electricity. Trump emphasized that the companies should establish distinct rate agreements with utilities, an effort to guarantee that they compensate appropriately for the added strain a data center imposes on the grid. These firms would shoulder these costs even if the data centers do not utilize all of the extra electricity generated. This critical measure could mitigate concerns that local populations would end up footing the bill for new power plants and transmission infrastructure which may become stranded assets if enthusiasm for AI diminishes and data center initiatives falter.

Trump mentioned that the major tech firms would “leverage their infrastructure to provide backup power to local grids during periods of necessity.” Reducing the energy consumption of a data center during peak electrical demand—such as during extreme cold snaps or heat spikes—may be a tactic to help avert power failures during emergencies. This year’s winter storms have amplified worries regarding the potential of new data centers to further strain power grids and drive up energy prices amidst emergencies. Texas introduced a law in the preceding year granting local grid operators the authority to reduce energy usage from data centers during crises. The pledge itself is less explicit, indicating that companies would “whenever feasible, provide access to their backup generation resources during scarcity periods.”

During the gathering, Gwynne Shotwell, President and COO of SpaceX (which recently revealed its plans to merge with xAI, aiming to launch data centers into space), stated that xAI intends to build a 1.2 gigawatt power generation facility to serve as the primary energy source for its supercomputer. The company similarly aims to generate abundant electricity for “each additional data center,” stated Shotwell. xAI also plans to enhance its Megapack installations to supply backup electricity to Memphis, Tennessee, and Southaven, Mississippi. The NAACP has already filed warnings of lawsuits against xAI twice due to pollution arising from temporary gas turbines installed in Tennessee and Mississippi to power its data centers.

The pledge also encompasses a promise to employ residents from local neighborhoods where data centers are being established. Meta announced today that it has initiated a pilot program in Ohio aimed at training fiber technicians, including some participants from today’s event.

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TerraPower cleared to begin construction of its first nuclear plant
Tech/AI

TerraPower cleared to begin construction of its first nuclear plant

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

On Wednesday, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced it had granted its first construction authorization in nearly a decade. The approval allows work to start at a site in Kemmerer, Wyoming, by a company called TerraPower. Best known for having Bill Gates among its financial backers, the company is attempting to build a radically different reactor that is sodium-cooled and integrates energy storage into its architecture.

That authorization doesn’t guarantee the reactor will be licensed to operate, but it marks an important milestone for the company.

TerraPower’s design, dubbed Natrium and developed in collaboration with GE Hitachi, includes several innovative aspects. The most prominent is the use of liquid sodium for cooling and heat transfer. Using sodium keeps the primary coolant in liquid form, avoiding many of the issues associated with the high-pressure steam systems of water-cooled reactors. However, sodium is highly reactive with air and water, which introduces safety risks. Natrium is also a fast-neutron reactor, potentially enabling it to consume certain isotopes that would otherwise contribute to radioactive waste in more conventional reactor types.

The reactor is relatively small compared with most current nuclear stations (about 245 megawatts versus roughly one gigawatt) and incorporates energy storage. Instead of using the sodium’s heat to generate steam, the facility will load that heat into a salt-based thermal storage medium that can be dispatched to produce electricity immediately or held for later use. That capability allows the plant to operate alongside variable renewable generation, which might otherwise undercut it on price. The storage system also permits temporary output increases up to around 500 MW.

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Space Command chief pours cold water on the idea of UAPs in space
Tech/AI

Space Command chief pours cold water on the idea of UAPs in space

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

Based on recent remarks by Gen. Stephen Whiting, head of US Space Command, we shouldn’t expect anything of that sort in whatever the government might publish in response to Trump’s forthcoming order.



Gen. Stephen Whiting, the commander of US Space Command.

Photo credit:
US Air Force/Eric Dietrich

Gen. Stephen Whiting, the commander of US Space Command.


Photo credit:

US Air Force/Eric Dietrich

“I can say, personally, I was very intrigued by the president’s announcement,” Whiting told reporters last week at the Air and Space Forces Association’s Warfare Symposium in Colorado. “I look forward to seeing whatever data is released. As a space operator with 36 years’ experience who has spent substantial time with space-domain awareness sensors and tracking objects in space, I’ve only observed manmade items, so I’m not aware of anything extraterrestrial apart from comets and similar occurrences.

“I’m very interested in the subject,” he continued. “And if anything is disclosed, I’ll be interested as an American citizen.”

Space Command’s responsibilities include an area of responsibility (AOR) that stretches from the upper layers of Earth’s atmosphere out to the Moon and beyond. One of its duties is to track, monitor, and catalog objects in space. Whiting indicated that everything he’s observed in orbit can be attributed to either human-made or natural causes.

“We would follow any presidential instruction to review our records, but I think the term of art now is UAP, and the A stands for aerial, so these refer to objects below the Kármán line (100 kilometers), within the atmosphere,” Whiting said. “I’ve seen some of the same videos and radar data many of you have, and my expectation is that the relevant services and combatant commands will hand that data over. I’m very interested in the topic, but I have no personal experience with those phenomena.”

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Some of the Finest Bread in London Can Be Discovered at This Hotel Eatery
Lifestyle

Some of the Finest Bread in London Can Be Discovered at This Hotel Eatery

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

With Exceptional Hotels, we’re unveiling the secrets behind the “unique blend” that hotels employ to curate unforgettable and meaningful dining experiences for their patrons.

Have you ever endured a disappointing hotel breakfast? Those pricy, overdone, and tasteless eggs may not qualify you for reimbursement, but you definitely deserve another chance. The Four Seasons Hotel London at Park Lane is poised to help you erase the memory of the past’s unfortunate, gloopy Hollandaise.

Situated in the extremely upscale Mayfair district, just a short stroll from Buckingham Palace across Hyde Park, the Four Seasons at Park Lane epitomizes the elegance its prestigious postcode commands. Think towering (extraordinarily high) windows, luxurious textiles in a muted color scheme, and polished black marble flooring that creates a satisfying click with each step. As the gloved and formally attired doormen welcome you in, it feels as though you’re a person of notable status, complete with Roman numerals after your name and a sprawling estate in Gloucestershire. The hotel’s dining establishment, Pavyllon by Yannick Alléno, is impressively grand, featuring crisp white tablecloths, plush velvet seating, and a menu that, as stated by general manager Romain Mervelay, blends French culinary techniques with seasonal produce to satisfy British tastes.

Image may contain Food Food Presentation Cutlery and Meal

Four Seasons London at Park Lane

Chef Alléno, serving as consulting chef, appears to have deciphered the Michelin riddle: His affiliated restaurants boast a total of 17 stars from the prestigious guide. With Pavyllon London, he and chef Benjamin Ferra Y Castell are not attempting to revolutionize cuisine. The dishes emerging from the kitchen (crafted by Castell, endorsed by Alléno) primarily consist of fine-dining staples, but any lack of innovative concepts is more than compensated for by their meticulous preparation.

This is most evident on the breakfast menu, where you’ll encounter the familiar morning favorites (eggs Benedict, avocado toast, maple pancakes) perfected to an art. It’s as if Castell, recognizing Pavyllon’s responsibility as a hotel dining venue catering to tired travelers and businesspeople, is proclaiming: “You want French toast? I’ll provide you with the finest French toast you’ve ever tasted. Just wait…”

Image may contain Food and Food Presentation

Four Seasons London at Park Lane

Exquisite sauces and premium, often luxurious, ingredients elevate the offerings beyond typical brunch selections, but what truly distinguishes them is the bread. From the delightful Viennoiserie you enjoy with your coffee to the scones served at afternoon tea, to the baguette accompanying Pavyllon’s Michelin-starred dinner, all of it is crafted in-house by a team spearheaded by executive pastry chef Francesco Mannino. And it surpasses any expectations set for hotel pastries.

The eggs Florentine shine thanks to the exceptional English muffin. It’s fluffy, chewy, and slightly crisped on top from a light fry, perfectly complementing the nutmeg-spiced Comté cheese Hollandaise. The French toast utilizes a sweet gâche, allowed to soak in milk overnight. And the notable Turkish eggs—poached eggs, labne, and a generous helping of fresh herbs atop a fluffy flatbread—originally debuted as a chef’s special but became a mainstay due to popular demand. Regarding that Viennoiserie: The seasonal feature during my visit was a stunning twisted knot of laminated dough filled with citrus and pistachio cream. It was nothing short of phenomenal.

March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Closing the operational AI divide
Tech/AI

Closing the operational AI divide

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

In collaboration withCeligo

The transformative capabilities of AI are clearly recognized. Enterprise applications are gaining traction, and organizations are evolving beyond pilot schemes to actual AI deployment. Businesses are not merely discussing AI; they are reallocating budgets and resources to realize it. Many are currently testing agentic AI, which offers unprecedented levels of automation. However, the path to full operational effectiveness is still ambiguous for numerous entities. While AI experimentation is prevalent, comprehensive enterprise adoption continues to be a challenge.

Without cohesive data systems, reliable automated workflows, and structured governance, AI initiatives may remain in pilot stages and face difficulties transitioning to full production. The emergence of agentic AI and heightened model autonomy emphasize the necessity for a comprehensive strategy in integrating data, applications, and systems. Lacking this, AI initiatives in enterprises could falter. Gartner anticipates that over 40% of agentic AI projects may be abandoned by 2027 due to expenses, inaccuracies, and governance issues. The core problem is not the AI technology itself, but rather the lack of an operational infrastructure.

To gain insights into how organizations are organizing their AI operations and how they are successfully executing AI projects, MIT Technology Review Insights conducted a survey of 500 senior IT leaders from medium to large companies in the US, all of which are engaging with AI in some capacity.

The findings from the survey, along with a series of expert discussions held in December 2025, reveal that a solid integration foundation corresponds with more sophisticated AI implementations, beneficial for enterprise-wide projects. As AI technologies and applications advance and increase, an integration platform can assist organizations in preventing redundancy and siloed operations, while providing clear supervision as they manage the expanding autonomy of workflows.

Key insights from the report highlight the following:

Some organizations are advancing with AI. In recent times, numerous studies have highlighted a deficit of concrete AI success. Yet, our research indicates that three out of four (76%) surveyed companies have at least one department with an AI workflow fully operational.

AI is most successful when applied to well-defined, established processes. Almost half (43%) of organizations are achieving success with AI applications linked to clear and automated processes. A quarter are thriving with new processes. Additionally, one-third (32%) are integrating AI into various processes.

Two-thirds of organizations do not have dedicated AI teams. Only one in three (34%) organizations maintain a team specifically focused on managing AI workflows. One in five (21%) indicate that central IT handles ongoing AI maintenance, while 25% designate the responsibility to departmental operations. For 19% of organizations, the duties are distributed among various teams.

Enterprise-wide integration platforms foster more effective AI implementation. Organizations utilizing enterprise-wide integration platforms are five times more likely to incorporate a wider array of data sources in their AI workflows. Six in ten (59%) rely on five or more data sources, compared to merely 11% of organizations utilizing integration for particular workflows, or 0% among those without an integration platform. Those employing integration platforms also exhibit increased multi-departmental AI implementation, greater autonomy in AI processes, and heightened confidence in delegating autonomy in the future.

Access the report.

This material was produced by Insights, the custom content division of MIT Technology Review. It was not composed by the editorial staff of MIT Technology Review. It was researched, crafted, and developed by human writers, editors, analysts, and illustrators. This encompasses the creation of surveys and the gathering of data for those surveys. AI tools that may have been utilized were confined to secondary production processes that underwent thorough human evaluation.

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South Africa's former defence minister, a long-time public servant and ex-prisoner of Robben Island, has passed away.
Global

South Africa’s former defence minister, a long-time public servant and ex-prisoner of Robben Island, has passed away.

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

The party performed strongly in the general elections conducted a year later, acquiring 30 parliamentary seats, yet its electoral success waned over time primarily due to a leadership conflict between Lekota and Shilowa. By the 2024 elections, Cope was unable to obtain sufficient votes to earn any seats in parliament.

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Activision hushes reliable Call of Duty informant
Tech/AI

Activision hushes reliable Call of Duty informant

by admin March 4, 2026
written by admin

  • Entertainment

TheGhostOfHope is adhering to legal requirements to cease the distribution of private information.

TheGhostOfHope is adhering to legal requirements to cease the distribution of private information.

Mar 4, 2026, 9:34 AM UTC
Illustration of a Call of Duty character from Modern Warfare II
Illustration of a Call of Duty character from Modern Warfare II
Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed is a journalist dedicated to reporting on creative sectors, technology, and online culture. She began her career at TechRadar, covering news and product assessments.

One of the most reputable informants for Call of Duty has ceased to reveal private information regarding the game series after receiving a cease and desist notification. TheGhostOfHope (also recognized in the community as “Hope”) declared on X that he is observing legal requests from developer Activision to “stop leaking and distributing confidential information related to Call of Duty/Activision.”

“I’ll still be around to discuss Official Call of Duty updates and anything unrelated to leaks/confidential information,” Hope stated. “Thanks for the support over these past few years.”

Hope earned a name for himself by providing trustworthy information about previous, current, and upcoming Call of Duty entries to his followers — including recent speculation that a standalone Call of Duty Zombies game is being produced for next-gen consoles. The official Call of Duty X account has reacted to Hope’s compliance amid rumors that he was curtailed for being “correct about everything.”

“No,” the Call of Duty account said “Even when leaks are incorrect, they still affect the individuals developing the game and disrupt player expectations.”

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