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Fuel costs are skyrocketing. Plastic may be the following target.
Tech/AI

Fuel costs are skyrocketing. Plastic may be the following target.

by admin April 2, 2026
written by admin

As the conflict in Iran persists, affecting the Middle East and with the Strait of Hormuz remaining shut, one of the most apparent global economic consequences has been the rising fossil-fuel prices. Specifically, the spotlight is on gasoline prices, which have recently surpassed an average of $4 per gallon in the US, reaching their peak since 2022.

However, looking forward, additional ramifications for the global economy may be anticipated in the plastics sector. Plastics are produced from petrochemicals, and the supply chain ramifications stemming from the oil supply crisis near Iran are beginning to accumulate.

Currently, plastic production is responsible for approximately 5% of global carbon dioxide emissions. Our present circumstances highlight just how ingrained oil and gas derivatives are in our daily lives, extending well beyond their primary role in energy production.

As I compose this, I am clad in garments with plastic fibers, engaged in typing on a plastic keyboard, and looking through the plastic lenses of my spectacles. Envisioning a world devoid of plastic is quite challenging. In several respects, shifting away from fossil-fuel-based plastics could be even more intricate than transitioning our energy framework toward decarbonization.

Crude oil prices have experienced fluctuations recently, now exceeding $100 per barrel.

Crude oil houses a diverse array of hydrocarbons and is usually refined through distillation, separating the raw material into various fractions based on their boiling points. These fractions are subsequently processed into myriad products ranging from jet fuel to asphalt binder. Price increases have already been evident for certain products derived from crude oil, including gasoline and jet fuel.

Let’s focus specifically on naphtha. This substance can be blended into gasoline and jet fuel to enhance performance. Additionally, it can function as a solvent or serve as a fundamental component in plastic production.

The Middle East presently contributes around 20% of global naphtha output and dominates approximately 40% of the Asian market, where prices have surged by 50% in the past month.

We are beginning to observe these impacts cascading down the supply chain. The cost of polypropylene (a naphtha derivative used in food packaging, bottle caps, and automotive components) is rising, particularly across Asia. 

Generally, manufacturers maintain a certain amount of stock, but that reserve will likely deplete soon, probably within the next few weeks. The leading supplier of bottled water in India has recently declared an 11% price increase following a more than 70% rise in packaging costs, as reported by Reuters. Toys may become pricier this holiday season as manufacturers struggle with supply chain challenges.

If disruptions persist, Americans are likely to experience these consequences particularly intensely. In 2019, the average American utilized over 250 kilograms of new plastics, according to a 2022 study from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. This is an extraordinarily large figure—while the global average is merely 60 kilograms.

The ramifications of increased prices for both fuels and feedstocks could amplify, with few alternatives available. Biodegradable plastics created from materials like plant sugars do exist, yet they represent an insignificantly small segment of the market. As of 2025, global plastics production exceeded 431 million metric tons annually. Bio-based and biodegradable plastics constituted about 0.5% of that total, possibly reaching 1% by 2030.

Bio-based plastics are significantly pricier than their fossil-derived versions. Furthermore, many are produced from agricultural raw materials, so scaling production too rapidly could adversely affect the environment and compete with sectors such as food production.

Recycling is not an uncomplicated solution either. Mechanical recycling is the prevailing method employed for materials like those used in water bottles and disposable coffee cups. However, this process degrades the materials over time, making infinite reuse impossible. Chemical recycling encounters its own challenges—the plants that carry it out can be notably polluting, and currently, plastics sent to advanced recycling facilities largely do not convert back into new plastics.

Recent discussions have addressed how this energy crisis may accelerate the global shift towards renewable energy sources. Solar panels, electric vehicles, and batteries may suddenly seem more appealing as we confront the severe impacts of a disruption in the worldwide fossil-fuel supply.

Yet, regarding plastic, the future appears considerably more complex. Even though the plastics sector is encountering similar disturbances as the energy industry, compelling alternatives for a smooth shift are not readily available. Our existence is interwoven with plastic, from essential items (such as medical apparatus) to everyday products (like my take-out coffee cup). In the near future, our economy may begin to reflect the extent of our dependence on fossil-derived plastics and the challenges associated with replacing them.

This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. 

April 2, 2026 0 comments
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Trump fails to address crucial inquiries while attempting to ease tensions regarding the Iran conflict.
Global

Trump fails to address crucial inquiries while attempting to ease tensions regarding the Iran conflict.

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

One minute he insists that Iran must permit tankers to pass, and the next he advises allies to figure it out independently. “Head to the strait and simply take it, safeguard it, utilize it for your own purposes,” he declared on Wednesday. “The difficult part has been accomplished, so it ought to be straightforward.”

April 1, 2026 0 comments
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Artemis II, NASA's boldest mission in generations, heads to the Moon
Tech/AI

Artemis II, NASA’s boldest mission in generations, heads to the Moon

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla.—Three Americans and a Canadian soared into orbit from Florida’s Space Coast on Wednesday, riding the most powerful rocket ever crewed, on the opening leg of a nine-day trip around the Moon.

Perched atop the 322-foot-tall (98-meter) Space Launch System rocket, the quartet climbed away from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center at 6:35 pm EDT (22:35 UTC).

Four hydrogen-fueled RS-25 engines and a pair of solid rocket boosters ignited to lift the nearly 6 million-pound vehicle off its pad at Launch Complex 39B. Together the engines and boosters produced about 8.8 million pounds of thrust, exceeding the power of NASA’s Saturn V used during the Apollo era.

Moments later, waves of sound rolled toward onlookers several miles away as the rocket roared upward, trailing a brilliant plume of fire and smoke.

Commander Reid Wiseman, a 50-year-old Navy captain and former test pilot, delivered calm radio reports from the Orion spacecraft’s cockpit perched atop the SLS. He was accompanied by pilot Victor Glover (also a Navy captain), mission specialist Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen.

In the limelight

The launch of Artemis II represents a significant milestone for NASA. The agency has poured nearly $100 billion into components of the Artemis program over the past 20 years and now finds itself racing against China to return people to the lunar surface. The mission is historic: humans last left the Moon in 1972 and have not been back since.

This flight will not touch down on the Moon; a landing is slated for a later mission, currently planned as Artemis IV in 2028. NASA is collaborating with SpaceX and Blue Origin to create crewed landers to transport astronauts between Orion and the lunar surface, while Axiom Space is developing new suits for moonwalks.

Artemis II is validating the transport system NASA intends to use to carry crews to the Moon and back. Wednesday’s successful liftoff was the first major milestone, paving the way for manual piloting demonstrations, trajectory correction burns, life-support system checkouts and, ultimately, a loop that will swing thousands of miles past the Moon’s far side.

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Trump's ban on birthright citizenship might not succeed — yet the administration has already progressed too much
Tech/AI

Trump’s ban on birthright citizenship might not succeed — yet the administration has already progressed too much

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

By addressing the matter at all, the court demonstrated that nativists have achieved significant progress.

By addressing the matter at all, the court demonstrated that nativists have achieved significant progress.

Apr 1, 2026, 11:39 PM UTC
STK466_ELECTION_2024_CVirginia_E
STK466_ELECTION_2024_CVirginia_E
Gaby Del Valle
Gaby Del Valle is a policy reporter at The Verge focusing on surveillance, the Department of Homeland Security, and the tech-right sector.

On Wednesday morning, the Supreme Court considered arguments in Trump v. Barbara, a case contesting President Donald Trump’s 2025 executive directive prohibiting birthright citizenship. The Justices appeared doubtful of the administration’s reasoning, but by engaging with the topic of birthright citizenship, they highlighted the substantial progress nativists have made since Trump’s initial term. The 14th Amendment plainly states: “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” Trump aims to negate this and establish a new, effectively stateless class of Americans, and he has alarmingly advanced in this endeavor.

Shortly after being inaugurated for his second term, Trump released an executive order titled “Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship.” According to this order, children born to undocumented mothers or those in the country on non-immigrant visas would not automatically gain citizenship at birth, unless their fathers were either citizens or lawful permanent residents. The provisions of this order were set to take effect 30 days post-issuance. It was instantly challenged in court, and multiple federal injunctions hindered its enforcement, maintaining birthright citizenship as the prevailing law for the time being.

Trump’s initiatives revolve around the interpretation of a particular phrase: “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” The administration argues that noncitizens and individuals lacking permanent residency are not under the jurisdiction of the United States, as they pledge allegiance to a foreign power. This interpretation could overturn not only centuries of US legislation but also precedents established by English common law, leaving hundreds of thousands of children without any legal status or rendered stateless at birth. Karen Tumlin, director of the Justice Action Center, referred to the case as a “canary in the coalmine for our democracy”: If Trump can abolish birthright citizenship with a mere stroke of a pen, then no constitutional safeguard is secure.

Almost all justices, except for the most conservative, appeared unconvinced. Their inquiries predominantly centered around two pivotal rulings. One was Dred Scott v. Sandford, the 1857 case wherein the court determined that enslaved individuals were not citizens — a decision that the 14th Amendment was partly instituted to counteract. The other was United States v. Wong Kim Ark, an 1898 case in which the court decided that, despite the Chinese Exclusion Act, children born in America to Chinese nationals were indeed US citizens.

After Justice Clarence Thomas inquired how the citizenship clause relates to Dred Scott, Sauer conceded that the 1857 ruling “represented one of the worst injustices in this court’s history.” However, he contended that Congress intentionally ratified the 14th Amendment to bestow citizenship upon “newly freed slaves and their offspring” who, according to Sauer, maintained “a domicile relationship” with the United States and no ties to any foreign nation.

Sauer asserted that legislators of the 19th century could not have predicted the birth tourism phenomenon. “There are approximately 500 — 500 — birth tourism agencies in the People’s Republic of China whose enterprise is to bring individuals here to give birth and then return to their country,” Sauer stated. The current understanding of birthright citizenship “could not feasibly have been endorsed by the drafters of this amendment in the 19th century,” he claimed. “We exist in a new era,” he continued, “where eight billion individuals are merely a plane ride away from giving birth to a US citizen.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch, who was interrogating Sauer, appeared not convinced. “It’s a new world,” he conceded, but “it’s the same Constitution.”

Chief Justice John Roberts described Sauer’s examples of existing exceptions — like children of ambassadors or those in the country during a hostile invasion — as “very quirky” and not necessarily parallel to “a whole class of illegal aliens residing within the country.” Justice Elena Kagan pointed out that most of Sauer’s brief centered on individuals temporarily visiting the country on visas — yet Trump’s executive order was evidently aimed at limiting immigration, and the president has openly acknowledged this.

In 2019, Trump labeled birthright citizenship as a “magnet for illegal immigration.” Last year, presidential advisor Stephen Miller commented that the US-born children of immigrants are as significant an issue as the immigrants themselves. “In many of these immigrant communities, the first generation struggles,” Miller stated in a Fox News interview, referring to the Somali-American population, which the administration would soon target in Minneapolis, as an illustration. “You observe ongoing challenges in every following generation. Thus, you witness consistently elevated rates of welfare dependency, consistently high rates of criminal activity, and persistent difficulties in integration.”

The administration has sought to limit legal immigration in all its guises: it imposed a significant fee for H-1B work permits, has hinted it may terminate a work program for international scholars, and enacted a travel ban affecting several nations that is even impacting World Cup athletes. The initiative is blatantly racist. The president infamously complained about “all these individuals from shithole countries” who migrate, expressing a desire for “more individuals from Norway.” Just last year, he reduced the refugee resettlement cap to a mere 7,500 and prioritized resettling white South Africans. The Department of Homeland Security has tied the “homeland” to a distinctly white interpretation of Manifest Destiny that, much like controversies surrounding birthright citizenship, evokes sentiments from the 19th century.

Experts are broadly in agreement that the majority of justices seemed unpersuaded by the administration’s reasoning, yet it remains uncertain how the court will ultimately rule.

Should the court grant Trump an unforeseen victory, a series of ominous questions would arise immediately—beginning with the timing of implementation. The order was intended for enactment on February 19, 2025, 30 days following Trump’s endorsement, and would have commenced if not for various federal injunctions. “If the court aligns with Trump, it must determine a starting date for applying the president’s understanding of the 14th amendment,” César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández, a civil rights and liberties professor at Ohio State University College of Law, told The Verge. “Anyone born on or after that date and referenced in Trump’s directive would be regarded as a migrant instead of a U.S. citizen.”

Sauer urged the court to enforce Trump’s executive order “proactively” and not retroactively, stating that backdating the rule to 2025 would create numerous complications, casting doubt on the citizenship status of millions of children.

The Trump administration strives to limit who qualifies as an American while concurrently advocating policies that obstruct noncitizens from engaging in public life. The administration has made attempts to forbid states from providing in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants residing in those areas, revoked accreditation from centers serving noncitizen truckers, and has broadly sought to transform America into a “papers, please” nation.

Trump was present during Wednesday’s hearings, marking him as the first sitting president to attend oral arguments before the Supreme Court. His attendance may have been intended to pressure skeptical justices into siding with him. Norman Wong, a direct descendant of Wong Kim Ark, was also outside the courthouse, as reported by The New York Times. Wong and his family exemplify the stakes of this case, and he conveyed a message to the justices: “They will be judged by history if they misjudge this.”

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  • Gaby Del Valle

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Observe the instant Artemis II launches into space
Global

Observe the instant Artemis II launches into space

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

The Artemis team has officially embarked on a groundbreaking 10-day mission around the Moon, which may take them farther from Earth than anyone has ever ventured.

During this 10-day mission, the crew will not set foot on the Moon, but they intend to orbit it while journeying further from Earth than anyone has ever ventured. Building on the unmanned Artemis I mission in 2022, Nasa’s Artemis initiative is gearing up for deep-space explorations – with a primary objective of reaching Mars in the 2030s.

Stay updated with the BBC’s live coverage of the launch here.

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Trump administration informs Supreme Court that birth tourism demonstrates the necessity to abolish birthright citizenship
Economy

Trump administration informs Supreme Court that birth tourism demonstrates the necessity to abolish birthright citizenship

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

D. John Sauer, previously a special assistant to the Louisiana attorney general, listens during a session with the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government on Capitol Hill on July 20, 2023.
Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images News | Getty Images

An attorney representing the Trump administration during discussions at the Supreme Court on Wednesday strongly emphasized his assertion that the alleged birth tourism phenomenon serves as compelling proof that the U.S. policy of automatically granting citizenship to infants born within the nation should be abolished.

The attorney, Solicitor General D. John Sauer, stated that numerous companies, particularly those serving Chinese and Russian elites, exist to assist individuals in coming to the U.S. to ensure their children are born there and receive citizenship.

“The congressional report mentioned in our submission highlights specific hotspots, such as Russian elites traveling to Miami via these birth tourism firms,” Sauer asserted before the justices of the high court as President Donald Trump observed from the gallery.

In January 2025, Trump enacted an executive order aimed at effectively terminating birthright citizenship, a principle regarded as law for over 150 years due to the 14th Amendment of the Constitution.

“As early as 2015, media reports suggested that, according to Chinese outlets, there are 500 — 500 — birth tourism companies operating in the People’s Republic of China, whose intent is to facilitate childbirth in the U.S. and then return to their home country,” Sauer remarked, describing this figure as “striking” while refraining from identifying the media sources he referenced.

The solicitor general referenced a letter dated March 9 from congressional members addressed to the Department of Homeland Security, indicating that media reports suggest up to 1.5 million Chinese nationals may have attained U.S. citizenship through the “birth tourism” sector.

The U.S. government does not officially track how many children are born to individuals on visitor visas.

The latest estimates from the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for reducing immigration, indicated in 2020 that the number of “birth tourists” could be around 20,000 to 26,000 infants per year.

The letter mentions the conservative media organization, Breitbart News Network, which attributes the 1.5 million estimate to author Peter Schweizer, who stated that these American citizens will grow up in China only to return to the U.S. to legally vote once they reach 18. Schweizer contends that when these individuals turn 21, they will seek U.S. residency for their parents.

A woman and her spouse were convicted in 2025 on charges of conspiracy and money laundering related to her birth tourism business, USA Happy Baby.

Additionally, in 2015, federal authorities indicted 19 individuals connected to three “birth tourism” enterprises in Southern California. Federal officials detained three of those defendants in 2019.

Select CNBC as your preferred source on Google and remain updated with the most trusted name in business news.

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NASA sends four astronauts on their way to the Moon as part of the Artemis II mission.
Tech/AI

NASA sends four astronauts on their way to the Moon as part of the Artemis II mission.

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

The objective is to return astronauts to lunar orbit for the initial time since 1972.

The objective is to return astronauts to lunar orbit for the initial time since 1972.

Apr 1, 2026, 10:44 PM UTC
Artemis II Launches Manned Test Flight Around The Moon
Artemis II Launches Manned Test Flight Around The Moon
Jay Peters
Jay Peters is a senior reporter focused on technology, gaming, and related topics. He began his tenure with The Verge in 2019 following nearly two years at Techmeme.

NASA’s Artemis II mission, which aims to send four astronauts toward the Moon for the first time in over 50 years, successfully took off on Wednesday evening.

The Artemis II expedition, part of NASA’s Artemis initiative aimed at facilitating human return to the Moon as soon as 2028, will have the crew orbiting the Moon on the first manned flight of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. The crew members, Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen, will journey aboard the Orion crew capsule, with the entire mission projected to take 10 days. The mission faced a delay in February due to issues with helium supply.

Recently, NASA adjusted its timeline for a Moon landing, moving the anticipated 2027 Artemis III mission from a landing to a test flight. The next planned attempt to set foot on the lunar surface will be through the Artemis IV mission, scheduled for 2028. The last lunar landing by NASA occurred during the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. The Artemis I mission, an uncrewed endeavor that saw the SLS launch the Orion capsule around the Moon, took place in 2022.

While I compose this, NASA is live streaming the Artemis II launch on Twitch and YouTube, and providing live updates on the NASA website for those who wish to follow along.

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  • Jay Peters
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Nvidia issues a fix to curb PC gaming's "compiling shaders" wait times
Tech/AI

Nvidia issues a fix to curb PC gaming’s “compiling shaders” wait times

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

If you’re a PC gamer tired of seeing “compile shaders” pop up during load times, you may want to try out Nvidia’s newest beta App. Along with additions to DLSS 4.5 Multi Frame Generation, the beta introduces a feature that can automatically compile new shaders while your PC is idle.

Nvidia’s Auto Shader Compilation feature aims to “reduc[e] the frequency of game runtime compilation after driver updates” for systems running Nvidia’s GeForce Game Ready Driver 595.97 WHQL or later. When enabled and the machine is idle, the app will begin rebuilding DirectX shader files for your games so they’re ready the next time you launch them.

The option is off by default when you first install the Nvidia App, but you can enable it via Graphics Tab > Global Settings > Shader Cache. From there you can reserve disk space for precompiled shaders and choose how much system resources the compilation should use. You can also force shader recompilation manually through the app instead of waiting for idle time.

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Trump is compensating TSA personnel — but what is the source of the funding?
Economy

Trump is compensating TSA personnel — but what is the source of the funding?

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

Passengers stand in line for security checks in Terminal 5 at John F. Kennedy International Airport on March 27, 2026 in New York, New York.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Following several weeks of extensive queues at airports and disputes within Congress, agents of the Transportation Security Administration started to receive payment earlier this week due to an executive order issued by President Donald Trump.

The decision to circumvent Congress — which under the U.S. Constitution holds authority over federal spending — and to pay the airport security personnel unilaterally is merely a temporary solution. Discussions regarding funding for the Department of Homeland Security, which has been suspended since February, are primarily stalled while Congress takes a two-week recess.

The issuance of paychecks raises numerous inquiries: Where is the funding Trump is utilizing sourced from? How much is currently accessible? And for what duration can Trump sustain salaries for TSA personnel if Congress does not reach an agreement promptly?

Trump’s executive order instructs the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Director of the White House Office of Management and Budget “to utilize funds with a logical and reasonable connection to TSA operations to provide TSA employees with the compensation and benefits that would have been available to them if not for the Democrat-led DHS shutdown.”

The Trump administration has confirmed that the funding is derived from last year’s Republican tax and spending legislation, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

“Similar to measures taken during the initial Democrat shutdown (for example, compensating military personnel), President Trump has concluded that congressional Democrats have created an emergency scenario that cannot persist,” a senior administration official stated via email.

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The White House has not detailed the specific source of the funds within the tax and spending legislation, but Bobby Kogan, senior director of federal budget policy at the Center for American Progress, indicated that there is only one viable part that the administration might be referencing.

Hidden within the over 300-page document is a provision that allocates $10 billion “for the reimbursement of costs incurred in supporting the Department of Homeland Security’s mission to protect the borders of the United States.”

“They do have a source of funding. It is a considerable slush fund. However, it cannot be utilized for [just] anything,” Kogan stated.

Trump has previously employed creative methods to compensate certain federal employees. During the complete government shutdown last autumn, he accessed unspent research and development funds, as well as a $130 million contribution from a donor to pay the U.S. military. While Trump did not disclose the private benefactor, The New York Times reported it was billionaire Trump supporter Timothy Mellon.

While Democrats also express the desire for TSA agents to receive their pay, Trump’s latest unilateral decision to compensate federal workers without first obtaining Congressional approval raised concerns.

“I am pleased that this administration has finally opted to pay these employees, after not doing so for 41 days. The administration must clarify what funding it is allocating to compensate these workers after previously asserting it was unable to do so,” House Appropriations Committee ranking member Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., stated in a press release on the day Trump announced his intentions.

Kogan believes the majority of the $10 billion in the DHS fund from last year’s tax and spending legislation remains accessible. He approximated that funding TSA could cost around $140 million each week, indicating that the White House could sustain funding for the agency for a year without depleting finances.

A TSA officer verifies identification at the South Terminal at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport in Austin on Monday, March 30, 2026.
Jay Janner | The Austin American-Statesman | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images

But should it?

Devin O’Connor, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, mentioned that there are substantial questions regarding the legality of such an action.

“The administration has not provided any real transparency regarding their public actions that would allow anyone to determine whether what they are doing is lawful or illegal,” O’Connor stated. “They have not made a compelling argument for it publicly.”

“It is clear that when Congress allotted that $10 billion, the intention was not for those funds to be allocated for the payment of TSA employees,” O’Connor stated.

Kogan was more direct. He considers it a clear infringement of the Antideficiency Act, a law originating in the 1800s that prohibits federal agencies from utilizing funds that Congress has not authorized.

The White House, when invited to address the accusation of law violation, referred to its Office of Management and Budget. An OMB official defended the legality of the funding via email, referencing a Department of Justice memorandum that claims agencies have “considerable latitude in determining whether expenditures further the agency’s authorized functions and therefore signify appropriate usage of general or lump-sum appropriations.”

According to Kogan, no one has ever faced prosecution under the Antideficiency Act. And congressional Democrats — who typically are keen to hold Trump accountable — are unlikely to challenge the action and risk halting wages for TSA personnel given the political unpopularity of prolonged airport lines.

“No one possesses the authority to challenge this. No one was able to prevent Trump from illegally compensating the military last time,” Kogan explained. “It is simply going to be one of his countless unlawful budgetary decisions.”

TSA personnel have received payment

Trump’s executive order seems to have reduced wait times at airport security this week, at least temporarily.

Acting Assistant DHS Secretary for Public Affairs Lauren Bis stated in an email that “Most TSA employees” received a retroactive paycheck this week “that encompassed at least two full paychecks” for the recent missed payment periods.

Over 500 officers departed TSA due to missed payments triggered by the shutdown, and thousands were called out of work, according to Bis.

“A small subset might experience a slight delay due to various reasons, such as processing times at financial institutions or issues with direct deposits. We are diligently collaborating with USDA’s National Finance Center to expedite the processing for the partial paycheck they are owed from pay period 3 as quickly as possible,” Bis said.

The duration for which TSA will continue to receive compensation through the DHS fund remains uncertain as Congress struggles to unify around an agreement.

Last week, there were no objections from senators regarding a proposal to fund the entirety of DHS with the exception of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and certain sections of Customs and Border Protection, sending it to the House for final confirmation. This action enabled the Senate to effectively conclude the shutdown and depart for its scheduled recess while also easing the extensive waits at airports nationwide ahead of a busy travel period in early April for Easter and Passover.

This deal infuriated House Republicans, who declined to entertain the Senate’s compromise and instead opted to advance their own temporary spending measure aimed at sustaining funding for all of DHS — including ICE and CBP — through May 22 and refer it back to the Senate.

By that point, the Senate had already vacated Washington, ensuring a prolonged shutdown. Democrats are determined to obstruct any package that incorporates immigration enforcement funding without modifications to the agency’s operations, and senators are dispersed across the country and globe for the recess.

The White House has urged Congress to reconvene early from its break, but leaders in both chambers have not indicated any plans to do so.

Trump on Wednesday commented via TruthSocial, urging congressional Republicans to utilize the budget reconciliation process — a procedural method for spending-related measures necessitating only a simple majority in the Senate to pass — to bypass Democrats and fund ICE and CBP.

“I am requesting that the Bill be on my desk NO LATER than June 1st. Our Law Enforcement Officers and the American People should not be made to wait until the Democrats come to their senses or learn the hard way through the Polls,” Trump stated.

— CNBC’s Megan Cassella contributed to this report.

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The Download: gig workers educating humanoids, and improved AI standards
Tech/AI

The Download: gig workers educating humanoids, and improved AI standards

by admin April 1, 2026
written by admin

This is the current edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter delivering daily insights into the technology sector.

The gig economy workers educating humanoid robots from their homes 

After a lengthy shift at the hospital, Zeus, a Nigerian medical student, arrives at his flat, affixes his iPhone to his forehead, and begins filming himself performing household tasks. 

Zeus serves as a data gatherer for Micro1, selling the footage he collects to robotics companies. As the race to develop humanoids accelerates, videos created by individuals like Zeus are emerging as the most effective training method.  

Micro1 has recruited thousands of workers across over 50 nations, including India, Nigeria, and Argentina. While the pay is competitive locally, it stirs up significant concerns regarding privacy and informed consent. The role can be demanding and unconventional. Explore the complete narrative. 

—Michelle Kim 

Our audience has recently selected humanoid robots as the “11th breakthrough” to be included in our 2026 list of 10 Breakthrough Technologies. Discover what else made the list. 

AI evaluation metrics are flawed. Here’s what we require instead. 

For many years, AI has been assessed based on its ability to surpass humans in discrete tasks. However, this approach is rarely applicable in practical settings. 

While AI is tested in isolation, it functions in intricate, multifaceted environments over time. This discrepancy results in a misunderstanding of its abilities, hazards, and consequences. 

We require innovative benchmarks that evaluate AI’s effectiveness over extended periods within human groups, workflows, and organizations. Here’s a suggestion for one such framework: Human–AI, Context-Specific Assessment.  

—Angela Aristidou, a professor at University College London and a faculty fellow at the Stanford Digital Economy Lab and the Stanford Human-Centered AI Institute. 

MIT Technology Review Narrated: can quantum computers now tackle healthcare challenges? We’ll soon see. 

In a lab located on the fringes of Oxford, a quantum computer crafted from atoms and light is poised for activation. The device is compact yet potent—and incredibly valuable. Infleqtion, the enterprise that possesses it, anticipates that its capabilities might secure $5 million in a competition.  

The award will be granted to the quantum computer that successfully addresses genuine healthcare issues that “classical” computers cannot manage. Yet, only one can take the grand prize—if there is a victor at all. 

—Michael Brooks 

This represents our latest story to be transformed into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we’re releasing weekly on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Simply go to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either service, and subscribe to receive all our new content as it becomes available. 

The essential reads 

I’ve scoured the internet to present you with today’s most entertaining/significant/daunting/captivating stories regarding technology. 

1 OpenAI has just finalized the largest funding round in Silicon Valley history 
It secured $122 billion in preparation for its upcoming IPO, anticipated later this year. (WSJ $) 
+ The company is also preparing a campaign to “rethink the social contract.” (Vanity Fair $) 
+ Activists are calling for users to abandon ChatGPT. (MIT Technology Review)   

2 Iran has issued threats against 18 US tech companies  
It’s targeting their activities in the Middle East. (Politico) 
+ Enterprises at risk include Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Google. (Engadget) 
+ Iran recently targeted AWS data centers. (Reuters $) 

3 Artemis II is on the verge of transporting humans to the Moon. Here’s the research they’ll conduct 
Their studies will pave the way for future adventurers. (Nature) 
+ You can view the launch attempt today. (Engadget)  

4 Putin is working to gain comprehensive control over Russia’s internet 
Recent outages and restrictions are isolating the nation from the rest of the world. (NYT $) 
+ Is it possible to restore the internet? (MIT Technology Review) 

5 A robotaxi failure in China left passengers abandoned on highways  
Baidu vehicles stalled on the streets of Wuhan. (Bloomberg $) 
+ Authorities are attributing the issue to a “system failure.” (Reuters $) 

6 Requests from the US government for social media user data are surging 
They’ve increased by 770% over the past ten years. (Bloomberg $) 
+ Is the Pentagon permitted to monitor Americans with AI? (MIT Technology Review) 

7 Tesla has confessed that humans occasionally operate its robotaxis 
Remote operators sometimes have complete control over them. (Wired $) 

8 A satellite-colliding phenomenon could spiral out of control 
This data representation illustrates the risks of space crashes. (Guardian) 
+ Here’s a comprehensive look at what we’ve placed in space. (MIT Technology Review) 

9 Meta’s smart glasses could make you feel uncomfortable 
As noted by one journalist who tested them for a month. (Guardian) 

10 A Claude Code leak has revealed plans for a virtual pet  
We might be poised to receive a Tamagotchi for the GenAI generation. (The Verge) 

Quote of the day 

“From now on, for every assassination, an American company will be destroyed.” 

—Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issues threats to US tech companies in an affiliated Telegram, according to CNBC. 

One More Thing 

Ryan Willgosh of Talon Metals logs samples

ACKERMAN + GRUBER

How a single mine could unlock billions in EV subsidies 

In a pine forest north of the small town of Tamarack, Minnesota, Talon Metals has located one of the densest nickel deposits in the United States. Now, it intends to commence extracting the mineral. 

Products derived from the nickel might secure over $26 billion in subsidies through the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which is commencing to reshape the US economy. To grasp how, we calculated the potential tax credits available. Read the entire story to discover our findings. 

—James Temple 

We can still enjoy great things 

A space for enjoyment, entertainment, and diversion to enhance your day. (Have any suggestions? Reach out to me.) 

+ A group of dedicated enthusiasts attempted to sample-test every potato chip globally.  
+ Find romantic inspiration in these penguins’ engagement pebbles. 
+ Good news: global terrorism has reached a 15-year low. 
+ Experience countless new perspectives through these windows worldwide. 

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