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Russian military personnel inform the BBC they witnessed comrades being executed on the orders of their commanders.
Global

Russian military personnel inform the BBC they witnessed comrades being executed on the orders of their commanders.

by admin February 24, 2026
written by admin

One individual, tasked with identifying and counting deceased soldiers, submitted comprehensive lists indicating that he is the only survivor from a contingent of 79 men he was deployed with. He claims that after refusing to participate in front-line combat, he was subjected to torture and had urine thrown on him. He reports that others in his unit who also declined would face electrocution, starvation, and were then compelled to participate in meat assaults without any weapons.

February 24, 2026 0 comments
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Global

Investigation launched following the death of 72 tigers due to illness in Thai tourist park

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

“When we eventually understood they were unwell, it had already become too late,” Somchuan Ratanamungklanon, the director of the national livestock department, stated to local media – emphasizing the challenge of identifying illness in tigers as opposed to more commonly recognized pets like cats or dogs.

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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FedEx files lawsuit seeking reimbursement for Trump tariffs, just days following Supreme Court decision.
Economy

FedEx files lawsuit seeking reimbursement for Trump tariffs, just days following Supreme Court decision.

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

An employee discharges packages from a FedEx vehicle on Cyber Monday in New York, US, on Monday, Dec. 1, 2025.
Bess Adler | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Federal Express filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government on Monday, demanding a “complete refund” of the amounts paid for tariffs that were imposed last year by President Donald Trump, which were deemed illegal by the Supreme Court last week.

This lawsuit appears to be the first by a significant American corporation seeking a refund following Friday’s ruling by the Supreme Court.

Other entities filed lawsuits seeking refunds prior to the ruling, claiming that the tariffs instituted by Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act are unlawful.

These lawsuits, which include ones from retail giant Costco, remain unresolved at the U.S. Court of International Trade in New York, the same venue where FedEx has submitted its lawsuit.

Discover more coverage of CNBC politics

  • Democrats aim to enforce refunds after Supreme Court halts Trump tariffs
  • Trump urges Netflix to dismiss Susan Rice as DOJ investigates Warner deal
  • Authorities kill armed man attempting to enter Trump Mar-a-Lago club

In its ruling on Friday, the Supreme Court stated that the Court of International Trade possesses “exclusive jurisdiction” over the IEEPA tariffs.

“Plaintiffs are requesting a full reimbursement from Defendants for all IEEPA duties paid to the United States,” Federal Express Corp and its affiliate, FedEx Logistics, stated in the new complaint.

The 11-page lawsuit identifies as defendants U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which administers tariffs, its commissioner, Rodney Scott, and the federal government.

CNBC has reached out for a statement regarding the lawsuit from CBP and the White House.

The lawsuit does not disclose the total amount FedEx has paid in IEEPA tariffs since they were applied to most U.S. trading partners last year.

However, in September, FedEx indicated it anticipated a $1 billion reduction in its earnings for the fiscal year due to U.S. trade policies, not all of which pertained to IEEPA duties. This figure represents 16% of the total earnings from the previous fiscal year.

On its website, FedEx stated, “While the Supreme Court did not discuss the matter of refunds, FedEx has taken the required steps to safeguard the company’s rights as an importer of record to request duty refunds from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.”

“Currently, no refund system has been set up by regulators or the judiciary,” the company added. “We will provide any pertinent information and updates promptly, and we appreciate your understanding as we await further direction and clarification from the U.S. government and the courts.”

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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Pentagon buyer: We're satisfied with our launch industry, but payloads are falling behind
Tech/AI

Pentagon buyer: We’re satisfied with our launch industry, but payloads are falling behind

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

DALLAS—The Space Force official responsible for directing more than $24 billion in research and development funding says the Pentagon prefers backing startups that build new space sensors and payloads over adding another rocket company to its lineup.

Spoken at a space finance conference in Dallas last week, the remark was one of several messages Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy aimed to deliver to a room of investors and commercial space executives.

Purdy also stressed that the Space Force favors high-volume production rather than pouring money into developing the newest technologies, and that the military has, at least for now, lost a key tool for supporting and diversifying the space industrial base.

Talk of favoring payloads over launchers reflects the Space Force’s recent pattern of backing small startups. Since 2020, SpaceWERX, the Space Force’s commercial innovation program, has awarded 23 funding agreements—known as Strategic Funding Increases (STRATFIs)—to commercial space startups working on new sensors, software, satellite components, spacecraft buses, and orbital transfer vehicles. SpaceWERX issued only one STRATFI to a launch company—ABL Space Systems—and that company has since exited the space launch market.

“We’re on track for mass-produced launch,” said Purdy, the military deputy for space acquisition in the Department of the Air Force. “Our ranges are arranged so we can do mass-produced launch. We’ve built our data centers and data architecture for mass production. We’ve got AI components that are mass-produced, satellite buses are nearly there, and our payloads are the remaining piece. Payloads that are affordable at scale are the critical element.”



K2’s Gravitas satellite, scheduled for launch next month, will evaluate the company’s Hall-effect thruster, solar arrays, and other systems.

Credit:
K2

K2’s Gravitas satellite, scheduled for launch next month, will evaluate the company’s Hall-effect thruster, solar arrays, and other systems.


Credit:

K2

Investing the funds

Purdy told Ars after his talk that payloads are “the last frontier” for scaling space missions. “The goal is to get missions out the door as fast as possible. Two to three years is too slow. We’ve got to shrink that to one week. I’m not talking about super exquisite [payloads]. Those aren’t most of our missions. The commercial industry, your Kuipers [Amazon LEO], your Starlinks, have largely solved the comm piece, but we’re still struggling in many other areas.”

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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IBM has become the newest victim of AI. Stock prices plummet 13% due to the risk posed by Anthropic's programming language.
Economy

IBM has become the newest victim of AI. Stock prices plummet 13% due to the risk posed by Anthropic’s programming language.

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

In this article

  • IBM
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International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

International Business Machines stock is experiencing a significant downturn this Monday, becoming yet another victim of the fast-advancing AI sector, following Anthropic’s announcement that its Claude Code tool could aid in updating outdated systems that utilize COBOL.

IBM’s shares closed the day nearly 13.2% lower, at $223.35 each, after Anthropic revealed that Claude Code could facilitate the automation of exploration and analysis tasks that contribute to the complexities of modernizing COBOL, a vital area for IBM’s business. IBM has traditionally provided mainframe systems optimized for extensive transaction processing, a domain where COBOL has been frequently deployed.

COBOL, which stands for Common Business-Oriented Language, is a major programming language created in the late 1950s, commonly utilized in business data processing, including payment processing and retail transaction management. Approximately 95% of ATM transactions in the United States rely on COBOL, as per Anthropic, positioning it as a key target for economically advantageous AI disruption.

“Hundreds of billions of COBOL lines are operational daily, supporting essential systems in sectors like finance, aviation, and government. Nevertheless, the number of individuals who comprehend it continues to decline annually,” Anthropic stated in a Monday blog post. “AI is particularly effective at simplifying the tasks that previously rendered COBOL modernization financially unfeasible.”

Claude Code can assist in modernizing COBOL codebases by mapping interdependencies across thousands of code lines, detailing workflows, and pinpointing risks that “would require human analysts months to identify,” according to Anthropic.

“Modernizing legacy code has been stagnant for years since comprehending legacy code was more expensive than recreating it. AI changes this dynamic,” the blog post noted.

This recent application reinforces Anthropic’s initiative to transform legacy code systems and aid companies in their digital transformation efforts, which are reportedly hindered partly by declining developer productivity and “technical debt.” Technical debt pertains to the future expenses resulting from shortcuts in software development that lead to greater maintenance challenges for enterprises in the future.

IBM is the latest stock to decline due to AI apprehensions, which have unsettled investors recently and fostered a tumultuous trading atmosphere characterized by a “sell first and ask questions later” mentality. On Friday, a range of cybersecurity firms experienced a downturn after Anthropic introduced a new feature in Claude Code, termed Claude Code Security, which it claimed could scan codebases for security vulnerabilities and detect software flaws for human evaluation. The sector remained under strain during Monday’s trading session.

Monday’s market decline resulted in IBM shares dropping more than 24% year to date.

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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Panasonic, once the plasma king, will stop producing its own TVs.
Tech/AI

Panasonic, once the plasma king, will stop producing its own TVs.

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

Panasonic, formerly celebrated for its plasma televisions, is exiting in-house TV production. It announced today that the Chinese firm Skyworth will assume responsibility for manufacturing, marketing, and selling TVs under the Panasonic name.

Skyworth, a TV maker based in Shenzhen, claims to be “a top three global provider of the Android TV platform.” In July, research firm Omdia reported that Skyworth ranked among the top-five TV brands by sales revenue in Q1 2025; nevertheless, the company has struggled to maintain that position consistently.

Panasonic revealed the arrangement at a “launch event,” FlatpanelsHD reported today. At the event, a Panasonic spokesperson reportedly stated:

Under the agreement the new partner will take charge of sales, marketing, and logistics across the region, while Panasonic will provide expertise and quality assurance to maintain its well-regarded audiovisual standards, including full joint development on high-end OLED models.

Panasonic also said it will offer support “for all Panasonic TVs sold up to March 2026 and all those available from April.”

Panasonic-branded sets built by Skyworth will be offered in the US and Europe. In Europe, the partners are targeting double-digit market share.

Panasonic’s wavering commitment to the TV business

Panasonic has been vacillating over its commitment to the TV market for more than a decade.

At the height of the plasma era, Panasonic led the market. In 2010, Panasonic controlled 40.7 percent of the plasma-panel market, outpacing Samsung (33.7 percent) and LG (23.2 percent), according to research from consultancy DisplaySearch. Yet in March 2014, Panasonic quit making plasma TVs, citing rising interest in flat-screen LCDs and economic troubles resulting from the bankruptcy of global investment bank Lehman Brothers. Reportedly, Panasonic had not turned a profit on its acclaimed, high-contrast plasma sets for years.

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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Will Trump's DOJ genuinely confront Ticketmaster?
Tech/AI

Will Trump’s DOJ genuinely confront Ticketmaster?

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

  • Entertainment

The recent turmoil within the Antitrust Division may not shift the verdict — however, it represents a significant alteration ahead of a significant trial.

The recent turmoil within the Antitrust Division may not shift the verdict — however, it represents a significant alteration ahead of a significant trial.

Feb 23, 2026, 8:37 PM UTC
The US Department of Justice logo above a red ticket background.
The US Department of Justice logo above a red ticket background.
Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner serves as a senior policy reporter at The Verge, focusing on the intersection of technology and governmental affairs. She has dedicated five years to covering technology policy at CNBC, addressing topics such as antitrust, privacy, and reforming content moderation.

In mid-February, the Department of Justice experienced a loss of its primary antitrust enforcer — merely weeks before it was set to present one of the year’s most significant antitrust cases in court.

Chief of the Antitrust Division Gail Slater unexpectedly announced her exit, through a post on her personal X account. However, for those closely monitoring the agency, this was far from shocking. For several months, rumors about the division had highlighted conflicts between Slater and her team with DOJ management, exacerbated by President Donald Trump’s tendency towards personal negotiations that raised doubts over who truly held the reins of antitrust enforcement.

During the summer, two of Slater’s principal deputies were dismissed for what the DOJ described as “insubordination.” One of them later recounted opposing a wireless networking agreement between Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and Juniper Networks, backed by “MAGA-In-Name-Only” lobbyists and DOJ officials. The week leading to Slater’s resignation, a third deputy also departed the agency.

The timing attracted added attention as Mike Davis, a lobbyist with close ties to Trump involved in the HPE-Juniper transaction, is also believed to be working with Live Nation. Live Nation refrained from commenting on the alleged link. “What was previously happening in private is now occurring publicly,” remarked a former DOJ official, who spoke anonymously to address personnel issues, regarding Slater’s abrupt exit. “Numerous influential corporations have realized they can simply push through unrealistic agreements and outcomes in ways that weren’t viable before, and the only requirement is to pay.” After Slater shared news of her departure, Attorney General Pam Bondi expressed gratitude in a statement “for her contributions to the Antitrust Division that aims to safeguard consumers, promote affordability, and broaden economic prospects.”

In May 2024, the DOJ and a coalition of 40 state attorneys general filed a lawsuit against Live Nation-Ticketmaster, aiming to dismantle the company they claim utilized anti-competitive practices to bind artists and venues within its sphere. They argue that by allegedly intertwining various segments of its business, employing exclusionary contracts, and threatening “financial retaliation” to exclude new competitors, the company managed to inflate ticket costs for consumers. Live Nation asserted in a blog entry at the time that the lawsuit “overlooks the actual factors responsible for rising ticket prices.”

With the commencement of jury selection for the case set for March 2nd, many are curious if the DOJ will persist in its involvement. If the agency opts to settle and withdraw from the trial, at least some of the 40 states that partnered with the DOJ in the initial lawsuit could — and likely would — continue to pursue the litigation. “We are eager to proceed to trial on March 2 against Live Nation,” declared California’s leading antitrust prosecutor, Paula Blizzard, said during an event on the day of Slater’s announcement. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti also intends to advance the states’ lawsuit, Capitol Forum reported.

The DOJ may very well continue to serve as a principal plaintiff. Omeed Assefi, who is temporarily stepping into Slater’s role, committed to advancing her agenda, MLex reported. As of February 17th, he has indicated the case is solid and leans toward trial, according to Capitol Forum. Global Competition Review also highlighted last week that Assefi urged staff to consider his approach towards criminal antitrust enforcement as a reference for his leadership of the division. “Inquire how I feel about settling cases instead of going to trial,” he reportedly said. “Inquire how I feel about accepting compromises and mere monetary fines instead of pursuing justice.”

Nevertheless, Slater was recognized as a dedicated enforcer of antitrust regulations — and reports imply her agenda was sidelined.

Generally, states are consistently ready for modifications in their trial alliances, according to Gwendolyn Lindsay Cooley, former Wisconsin antitrust chief and chair of the National Association of Attorneys General Multistate Antitrust Task Force. (Cooley consented to speak generally about the role of state enforcement and not on the specifics of the Live Nation case in particular, which Wisconsin was part of during her tenure.) “The states are well-acquainted with real politik,” Cooley remarked. State enforcers recognize that priorities and staffing can shift with administrations, whether in state offices or at the DOJ. Such shifts may necessitate alterations, such as assigning the most capable lawyers to fill vacancies left by federal attorneys. However, Cooley notes there are numerous seasoned litigators within the states. “From discussions with states generally, my understanding is they were prepared for this, and thus should be able to manage it smoothly,” Cooley stated.

The T-Mobile-Sprint merger litigation may offer a precedent. After Trump’s DOJ approved the merger, certain states settled their lawsuits, while others persisted in their efforts to obstruct the merger. Ultimately, however, they were unsuccessful — a court permitted the merger to finalize.

States could take a more assertive approach in pursuing the Live Nation-Ticketmaster proceedings. The company has faced substantial backlash from both musicians and fans, particularly after it infamously mishandled a Taylor Swift concert ticket presale in 2022. In an interview with Bloomberg, the attorneys general of California and Connecticut asserted they would uphold a rigorous standard for any settlements. “Any resolution that is politically motivated or influenced, or any settlement aimed at appeasing the president or meeting his demands is unlikely to be acceptable to Connecticut or California either,” remarked Connecticut AG William Tong.

Indeed, complaints from the public regarding Ticketmaster rank among the top 10 issues state AGs frequently encounter, according to Cooley. “That’s an aspect that state AGs will be particularly attentive to.”

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  • Lauren Feiner
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February 23, 2026 0 comments
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Anthropic claims that DeepSeek and various Chinese companies are utilizing Claude to develop their AI.
Tech/AI

Anthropic claims that DeepSeek and various Chinese companies are utilizing Claude to develop their AI.

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

DeepSeek reportedly focused on Claude’s cognitive abilities, while crafting ‘censorship-safe alternatives to politically charged inquiries.’

DeepSeek reportedly focused on Claude’s cognitive abilities, while crafting ‘censorship-safe alternatives to politically charged inquiries.’

Feb 23, 2026, 8:22 PM UTC
STK269_ANTHROPIC_2_C
STK269_ANTHROPIC_2_C
Emma Roth
Emma Roth is a journalist who reports on the streaming wars, consumer technology, cryptocurrency, social media, and more. She formerly worked as a writer and editor at MUO.

Anthropic asserts that DeepSeek and two other Chinese AI firms have exploited its Claude AI model in an effort to enhance their products. In a statement made on Monday, Anthropic revealed that the “industrial-scale initiatives” entailed the development of approximately 24,000 fake accounts and over 16 million interactions with Claude, as reported previously by The Wall Street Journal.

The three companies — DeepSeek, MiniMax, and Moonshot — are charged with “distilling” Claude, which means training a smaller AI model based on a more sophisticated one. Although Anthropic declares that distillation is a “valid training technique,” it further notes that it can “also serve illicit purposes,” such as “gaining powerful capabilities from other labs much quicker and at a lower cost compared to developing them independently.”

Anthropic contends that models obtained through illicit distillation are “unlikely” to retain existing protective measures. “Foreign laboratories that distill American models can subsequently incorporate these inadequate capabilities into military, intelligence, and surveillance systems — allowing authoritarian regimes to utilize cutting-edge AI for offensive cyber efforts, misinformation campaigns, and mass monitoring,” Anthropic states.

DeepSeek, which shook the AI sector with its potent yet more efficient models, engaged in over 150,000 exchanges with Claude and targeted its cognitive abilities, according to Anthropic. The company is also accused of utilizing Claude to create “censorship-safe options for politically sensitive inquiries concerning dissidents, political leaders, or authoritarianism.” In a correspondence to lawmakers last week, OpenAI also accused DeepSeek of “persistent efforts to leverage the capabilities built by OpenAI and other American frontier laboratories.”

Moonshot and MiniMax collectively managed over 3.4 million and 13 million engagements with Claude, respectively. Anthropic is urging other stakeholders in the AI sector, cloud providers, and legislators to tackle the issue of distillation, asserting that “restricted chip access” could constrain model training and “reduce the extent of illicit distillation.”

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The human effort involved in creating humanoid robots is being obscured.
Tech/AI

The human effort involved in creating humanoid robots is being obscured.

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

This article first appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter focused on AI. To receive stories like this directly in your inbox, subscribe here.

In January, Jensen Huang of Nvidia, leading the globe’s most valuable enterprise, announced that we are entering the era of physical AI, whereby artificial intelligence will extend beyond just language and chatbots into machines with physical capabilities. (He made a similar statement the previous year, by the way.)

The implication—driven by recent showcases of humanoid robots performing tasks like putting dishes away or car assembly—is that replicating human limbs through single-purpose robotic arms is an outdated method of automation. The new approach is to emulate human thought processes, learning, and adaptability during their tasks. However, the lack of clarity regarding the human effort needed to train and manage these robots leads to public misconceptions about the actual capabilities of robots and a failure to recognize the peculiar new types of work emerging around them.

Think about how, in this AI age, robots frequently learn from humans performing tasks. The mass generation of this data is now resulting in Black Mirror–like scenarios. For instance, a worker in Shanghai recently spent a week donning a virtual-reality headset and an exoskeleton, opening and closing the door of a microwave hundreds of times daily to train the adjacent robot, as reported by Rest of World . In North America, the robotics firm Figure seems to be pursuing a similar strategy: It announced in September that it would collaborate with the investment company Brookfield, which oversees 100,000 residential units, to gather “massive amounts” of real-world data “across various household environments.” (Figure did not respond to inquiries about this initiative.)

Just as our words became training data for large language models, our actions are now set to take the same trajectory. However, this future might leave humans in a worse predicament, and it’s already starting. Roboticist Aaron Prather informed me about recent projects with a delivery firm that had its employees wear movement-tracking sensors while carrying boxes; the data acquired will be utilized to instruct robots. The quest to develop humanoids will likely necessitate manual laborers serving as data providers on a grand scale. “It’s going to be strange,” Prather says. “No doubts about it.” 

Or take tele-operation into account. While the ultimate goal in robotics is a machine capable of autonomously completing a task, robotics companies hire individuals to remotely control their robots. Neo, a $20,000 humanoid robot from the startup 1X, is scheduled for delivery to households this year, but the company’s founder, Bernt Øivind Børnich, recently indicated that he’s not committed to any specific level of autonomy. If a robot encounters difficulties or if a customer requests it to perform a challenging task, a tele-operator from the company’s headquarters in Palo Alto, California, will take control, using its cameras to iron clothes or empty the dishwasher.

This is not inherently negative—1X obtains customer permission before entering tele-operation mode—but privacy as we understand it will vanish in a world where tele-operators are executing household chores via a robot. And if home humanoids are not genuinely autonomous, this setup is better interpreted as a means of wage arbitrage re-establishing gig work dynamics while, for the first time, allowing physical tasks to be carried out where labor costs are minimized.

We’ve traversed similar pathways before. Conducting “AI-driven” content moderation on social media platforms or assembling training data for AI enterprises often compels workers in low-wage regions to engage with distressing content. And despite assertions that AI will soon train itself and learn independently, even the finest models need a significant amount of human input to function as intended.

These human workforces do indicate that AI is not merely smoke and mirrors. Yet when they remain out of sight, the public continually overestimates the actual abilities of machines.

This benefits investors and hype, but it has repercussions for everyone. For instance, when Tesla marketed its driver-assistance system as “Autopilot,” it raised public expectations regarding what the system could safely achieve—a distortion that a Miami jury recently determined contributed to a fatal accident involving a 22-year-old woman (Tesla was ordered to pay $240 million in damages). 

The same will apply to humanoid robots. If Huang’s prediction holds true, and physical AI is poised to impact our workplaces, homes, and public spaces, the manner in which we describe and evaluate such technology is crucial. However, robotics companies remain as opaque about training and tele-operation as AI firms are regarding their training data. If this status quo persists, we risk confusing hidden human labor for machine intelligence—and perceiving far greater autonomy than actually exists.

February 23, 2026 0 comments
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The Download: Chicago’s monitoring system, and creating improved bras
Tech/AI

The Download: Chicago’s monitoring system, and creating improved bras

by admin February 23, 2026
written by admin

This is the latest edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that delivers your daily insight into the happenings in the tech world.

Inside Chicago’s surveillance system

Chicago is home to tens of thousands of surveillance cameras—estimates suggest up to 45,000. 

This rate is among the highest in the US. The city features one of the most extensive license plate reader systems nationwide and can access audio and video surveillance from various organizations, including the Chicago Public Schools, the Chicago Park District, and public transport systems, alongside numerous residential and commercial security setups like Ring doorbell cameras.

Proponents within law enforcement and security highlight that this extensive monitoring system bolsters public safety and functions effectively. 

Conversely, activists and many locals contend that it represents a surveillance panopticon, fostering a chilling effect on individual behavior and infringing on privacy and free speech rights. Read the complete article.

—Rod McCullom

Future job titles: Breast biomechanic

Two decades ago, Joanna Wakefield-Scurr was suffering from ongoing breast pain. After failing to identify the issue, her doctor suggested that a well-fitting supportive bra might provide relief. As a biomechanics professor, Wakefield-Scurr figured she could conduct some research to discover a scientifically supported solution. Twenty years later, she is still on that quest.

Wakefield-Scurr currently heads an 18-member team at the Research Group in Breast Health at the University of Portsmouth in the UK. With increasing numbers of women participating in high-impact sports, the demand for understanding the characteristics of a quality bra is rising, and she states that her lab is struggling to meet this growing demand. Read the complete article.

—Sara Harrison

These stories are both featured in the forthcoming print edition of MIT Technology Review magazine, which will focus on crime. If you haven’t yet, subscribe now to receive future issues as they are released. 

The must-reads

I’ve searched the internet to curate today’s most entertaining/important/alarming/captivating stories related to technology.

1 Inside ICE’s plans for large detention centers throughout the US
The identities of the officials who sanctioned it have been revealed through metadata. (Wired $)
+ A UK tourist with a valid visa was held by ICE for six weeks. (The Guardian)

2 The UAE claims to have faced a surge of AI-driven cyberattacks
Officials indicated the attacks represent a significant change in tactics, though details were sparse. (Bloomberg $)
+ New cybersecurity regulations are impacting smaller defense contractors. (Reuters)+ AI is already facilitating online crimes. Things could escalate. (MIT Technology Review)

3 What do the public really think about AI?
Tech executives are anxious they may not align with their objectives. (NYT $)
+ How social media fosters excessive AI boosterism. (MIT Technology Review)

4 It appears X is indeed shifting its users further to the right
As well as attracting more conservative thinkers initially. (NY Mag $)
+ The platform is currently contesting a significant European fine. (Politico $)

5 Meet the farmers resisting data center developers
They are rejecting offers worth millions for the land they have cultivated for years. (The Guardian)
+ A data center initiative launched at the White House is failing to meet its commitments. (The Information $)
+ Data centers are remarkable. Yet they are universally disliked. (MIT Technology Review)

6 America has a strategy to counter China’s AI
It plans to send Tech Corps volunteers globally to advocate for its national initiatives. (Rest of World)
+ China’s approach to attract new AI clients? Bubble tea. (FT $)
+ The State of AI: Is China poised to win the competition? (MIT Technology Review)

7 Clouds pose a significant climate challenge ☁️
They complicate scientists’ ability to accurately model the weather. (Quanta Magazine)
+ The emerging legal framework for global climate justice. (MIT Technology Review)

8 AI still struggles with interpreting PDFs
However, companies continue to implement it in work processes regardless. (The Verge)

9 A “Fitbit for farts” could assist in assessing your gut health
If you’re okay with wearing a sensor inside your underwear, that is. (WSJ $)

10 Gen Z is enamored with corporate culture ​​💼
TikTok’s “WorkTok” content is highly effective at glamorizing the daily grind. (FT $) 

Quote of the day

“Training a human requires immense energy. It consumes about 20 years of life and all the nourishment consumed during that period before intelligence is developed.”

—Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, draws a comparison between the environmental costs of training the extensive models of AI and the efforts needed to train a human during a gathering in India, as reported by TechCrunch.

One additional note

How a single mine could unlock billions in EV incentives

Located on a pine plantation north of the small town of Tamarack, Minnesota, Talon Metals has discovered one of the densest nickel deposits in America—and now they aim to start extraction.

Should regulators approve the mine, it could pave the way for what the company asserts would be the nation’s first fully domestic nickel supply chain, stretching from the mineral-rich bedrock in Minnesota to the batteries used in electric vehicles nationwide.

MIT Technology Review aimed to clarify the law’s real-world effects by focusing on one specific project to investigate how these substantial subsidies could be accessed at every stage along the supply chain. See what we discovered.

—James Temple

We can still enjoy nice things

A space for comfort, enjoyment, and escapism to elevate your day. (Have any suggestions? Reach out or send them my way.)

+ Alysa Liu’s gold medal-winning performance at the Winter Olympics is truly incredible.
+ Delicious ancient Roman pizza.
+ It’s not every day you stumble upon 2,000-year-old footprints while walking your dog 👣
+ Nature is full of wonders, and this year’s winners of the Sony World Photography Awards certainly showcase that.

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