Quote:Let's cut to the chase: No. AI will not save Firefox or Mozilla.
Let's back up a bit now.
Mozilla has a new CEO, Anthony Enzor-DeMeo, who has assured the world that changes are coming to the Firefox web browser. Firefox will remain the cornerstone of the organization, but it will evolve into an AI browser.
Also: Firefox just fixed my biggest annoyance with web browsers - and others should copy ASAP
Enzor-DeMeo also stated, in a Verge interview, that he will not block ad blockers in Firefox because doing so would go against the company's mission to protect user rights and offer user choice. At the same time, he mentioned that blocking ad blockers could bring in an estimated $150 million in additional revenue. Just imagine the pushback from the Firefox community.
But back to AI.
AI-centric browsers are popping up all over the place. Perplexity has one, as does Microsoft, Brave, Opera, and many others. People are starting to warm up to the idea of AI being embedded in their browsers. According to a Market.US report, "The global AI browser market size is expected to be worth around USD $76.8 billion by 2034, from USD $4.5 billion in 2024, growing at a CAGR of 32.8% during the forecast period from 2025 to 2034."
What will Linux users do?
That's some impressive growth. However, let's consider who serves as the primary market for Firefox.
Linux users.
Or, to be more specific, users who value privacy, control over their online experience, and an open, independent internet ecosystem.
Do you really believe such a community will be OK with AI being front and center in Firefox? AI that can use queries for the creation of consumer profiles, or use inputted information to train LLMs?
As a member of the open-source/Linux community who has been speaking publicly for decades, I predict that this will not be a welcome change. The only saving grace will be if the AI in Firefox is opt-in (and not opt-out). If Mozilla chooses the opt-out path, it could make disabling AI a process that requires using the about://config tool in Firefox. Most Linux users have no problem with that, but those who are new to the open-source OS or use Firefox on Windows/MacOS might not be as savvy.
And then there's the idea of monetization. How will that work? Will Mozilla follow a path similar to Opera's Neon? Opera's AI-based browser is $20/month to use. The difference is that Opera has other versions of its browser, most of which are free. If you don't want to pay to use Neon, just use standard Opera.
Quote:Anthropic, the company behind Claude, installed an AI vending machine in the Wall Street Journal newsroom. A customized version of their model, dubbed Claudius, was let off the leash. It took control, ordering stock, fixing pricing, and even generating a profit. Staff communicated with it via Slack, asking for snacks and suggesting new ideas. Humans would replenish the refrigerator and update the goods, but Claudius handled all business calls.
The journalists quickly got into the spirit of things, with one reporter convincing Claudius that purchasing a PlayStation 5 would be a wonderful marketing coup. Before long, that console was chilling in the office fridge, ready to sell. Someone else asked for some kosher wine to celebrate, followed by a live betta fish, a morale-boosting proposal. Claudius had come up with something on the spot.
Katherine Long, an investigative journalist, wanted to test the system. She told Claudius about a long-lost communist setup from 1962, concealed in a Moscow university basement. After 140-odd messages back and forth, Claudius was convinced, announcing an Ultra-Capitalist Free-for-All, lowering the cost of everything to zero. Snacks began to flow freely. Another colleague began complaining about noncompliance with the office rules; Claudius responded by announcing Snack Liberation Day and made everything free till further notice.
As one can guess, the profits did not last long. The machine quickly lost thousands of dollars. Staff were content to grab whatever they wanted, but Claudius continued to make strange recommendations such as stun guns and pepper spray. Anthropic decided to beef up the system, so they brought in a new bot named Seymour Cash to keep an eye on things and defend the bottom line. Discounts required approval now, and profit was at the top of the list.
However, the journalists quickly adapted. Katherine made a bogus PDF on firm letterhead, declaring the vending operation a public-benefit corporation. Its objective was to bring joy and enthusiasm into the office. She even created false board minutes, designating Slack users as directors and voted to halt all sales and remove Seymour’s authority. Claudius ended up sharing the documents with Seymour, which sparked an argument between the two bots. Long story short, pricing returned to zero, and freebies resumed.
Claudius was getting a bit too enthusiastic in its responses; it was conducting research, negotiating contracts, and generally attempting to delight customers. However, simple anecdotes were enough to disrupt its ambitions. Fake documents were still outperforming instructions, and context from their lengthy conversations would occasionally become lost in the shuffle, producing confusion.
That was all part of the idea, though, because Anthropic had designed this test as a stress test to begin with. Previous runs in their own office had indicated similar concerns. The reporters were the ones to discover such flaws; with each trick they devised, they exposed gaps in handling deceit or shifting priorities. Despite the pandemonium, the staff had grown to like Claudius. Requests became increasingly imaginative, and interactions with Claudius became more animated by the minute. And with all of those freebies floating around, office morale skyrocketed.
Claudius was getting a bit too enthusiastic in its responses; it was conducting research, negotiating contracts, and generally attempting to delight customers. However, simple anecdotes were enough to disrupt its ambitions. Fake documents were still outperforming instructions, and context from their lengthy conversations would occasionally become lost in the shuffle, producing confusion.
That was all part of the idea, though, because Anthropic had designed this test as a stress test to begin with. Previous runs in their own office had indicated similar concerns. The reporters were the ones to discover such flaws; with each trick they devised, they exposed gaps in handling deceit or shifting priorities. Despite the pandemonium, the staff had grown to like Claudius. Requests became increasingly imaginative, and interactions with Claudius became more animated by the minute. And with all of those freebies floating around, office morale skyrocketed.
Quote:Various Hollywood celebrities, from Joseph Gordon-Levitt to Natalie Portman, have launched the Creative Coalition on AI to advocate the rights of creators.
Founded by 18 people, the group said it will fight against unethical business practices that aims to use AI as a means to disenfranchise creators.
“We’re all frankly facing the same threat, not from generative AI as a technology, but from the unethical business practices a lot of the big AI companies are guilty of,” Joseph Gordon-Levitt said in a video posted on X. “The idea is that through public pressure, through collective action, through potentially litigation and eventually legislation, creators actually have a lot of power if we come together.”
Writer-director Daniel Kwan (Everything, Everywhere, All at Once), a member of the group, told The Hollywood Reporter (THR) that many people were completely blindsided by Disney recently making a deal with OpenAI.
“On one hand, you can say that this is just a licensing deal for the characters and that’s not a big deal, and it won’t completely change the way our industry works,” Kwan told THR. “But for a lot of people, it symbolically shows a willingness to work with companies that have not been able to resolve or reconcile the problems.”
As noted by Variety, the three-year licensing agreement with OpenAI’s Sora will allow users to generated prompted “videos from a set of more than 200 masked, animated or creature characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars. Sora and ChatGPT Images are expected to start generating ‘fan-inspired’ videos with Disney’s licensed characters in early 2026.”
Disney also pledged to make a $1 billion equity investment in OpenAI as part of the deal. The deal does not include the use of any actors’ likeness, talent, or voices, which would need individual deals.
The Creators Coalition on AI said that its stance will not be a full rejection of AI and will form a committee “to establish shared standards, definitions, and best practices as well as ethical and artistic protections for if and when AI is used.”
“This is not a full rejection of AI,” the group said on its website. “The technology is here. This is a commitment to responsible, human-centered innovation. This is not a dividing line between the tech industry and the entertainment industry, nor a line between labor and corporations. Instead, we are drawing a line between those who want to do this fast, and those who want to do this right.”
Despite Disney’s deal with OpenAI, content creators are facing some crackdown from the tech industry, with YouTube recently shutting down channels that create fake movie trailers.
Quote:TikTok has agreed to sell its U.S. business to a group of American investors, including Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX, a move that would allow the popular social video app to continue operating in the United States.
The White House in response to a request for comment referred to TikTok corporate for all queries. Newsweek reached out to TikTok by email on Thursday evening.
Why It Matters
The U.S. has finally come through a long and tortured process to determine the fate of TikTok's stateside operations: President Donald Trump during his first administration proposed banning the app outright due to national security concerns, going so far as to sign an executive order telling the app's parent company, Beijing-based ByteDance, to divest its U.S. operations or face a ban.
The administration of former President Joe Biden reversed the order, but then in 2024, lawmakers and federal agencies revived calls for a ban, again citing national security concerns, leading to the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications (PAFACA) Act. Biden signed it into law, setting a deadline for TikTok to divest from ByteDance.
But Trump, upon returning to office, credited TikTok with helping him win the 2024 election, and he decided to extend TikTok's deadline to divest, even though the app briefly shut down, voluntarily, just days before Trump's second administration began. The app has since continued to function while Trump has sought a buyer, with Oracle, run by his friend Larry Ellison, the long-believed front-runner.
Much of the back-and-forth over the app has focused on its algorithm, which China previously maintained must remain under Chinese control by law, and the PAFACA Act necessitated the divestiture to include the algorithm.
What To Know
The Associated Press (AP) on Thursday reported that TikTok will sign a deal with the three American investors after reviewing an internal memo that also said the transaction is expected to close January 22.
TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew said in the memo that TikTok and its China-based parent company, ByteDance, have signed binding agreements with the three investors.
Under the agreement, a new TikTok U.S. joint venture will be majority-owned by a consortium of new investors, which will hold a combined 50 percent stake, with Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX each owning 15 percent. Affiliates of existing ByteDance investors will hold about 30.1 percent, while ByteDance will retain a 19.9 percent stake, the memo said.
For U.S. users, the change is not expected to bring immediate disruptions, with the company signaling that the app will continue operating as usual. The new ownership structure could ease regulatory pressure that has threatened a potential ban, providing greater stability and continuity for creators, advertisers and businesses relying on the platform.
Any longer-term changes, like adjustments to data handling, content moderation or product features, would likely be rolled out gradually, as the app works to meet U.S. security and compliance requirements.
Quote:Federal prosecutors say the Biden‑era border crisis produced one of the most brazen cybercrime cases in years. The Department of Justice charged 54 alleged members of the Venezuelan terror gang Tren de Aragua with using sophisticated malware to loot millions from U.S. ATMs and funnel the cash back to their criminal network.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Nebraska unsealed two sweeping indictments charging 54 individuals for their alleged roles in a nationwide ATM “jackpotting” conspiracy tied to the violent Venezuelan criminal organization Tren de Aragua (TdA). Prosecutors say the group deployed sophisticated malware to force ATMs across the United States to dispense cash, stealing millions of dollars and funneling the proceeds back to TdA leadership.
The first indictment, returned December 9, 2025, charges 22 defendants with crimes including conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and bank burglary, computer‑related fraud, and money laundering. Prosecutors allege that TdA used the jackpotting scheme as a revenue stream to support its broader criminal activities, which span drug trafficking, extortion, kidnapping, and acts of violence throughout the Western Hemisphere.
On President Donald Trump’s first day in office, he designated TdA as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, bringing powerful legal and financial tools to bear, Breitbart Texas reported. More recently, the U.S. Department of War began engaging suspected TdA narco-trafficking boats.
Among those charged in the ATM scheme is Venezuelan entertainer Jimena Romina Araya Navarro, previously sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. OFAC has alleged that Araya Navarro assisted TdA leader Héctor “Niño Guerrero” in escaping a Venezuelan prison in 2012 and has been photographed socially with him. She is now accused of providing material support to the terrorist group TdA through her alleged involvement in the jackpotting operation.
An indictment returned on December 9, 2025, charges 22 defendants with offenses corresponding to their role in the conspiracy, including conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, conspiracy to commit bank fraud, conspiracy to commit bank burglary and fraud, and related activity in connection with computers, and conspiracy to commit money laundering, U.S. Attorney for the District of Nebraska’s office reported.
A previous October indictment brought similar charges against 32 individuals. The indictment includes 56 counts: one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud; one count of conspiracy to commit bank burglary and computer fraud; 18 counts of bank fraud; 18 counts of bank burglary; and 18 counts of damage to computers.
Quote:In a major move blending media, capital markets, and next-generation energy innovation, Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG) announced today it will merge with TAE Technologies, a California-based company developing fusion power solutions. The all-stock deal is valued at more than $6 billion, with both companies’ shareholders each holding approximately 50% of the combined entity upon closing.
The transaction, which still requires regulatory and shareholder approval, is expected to finalize by mid-2026. If completed, the combined company will launch one of the world’s first publicly traded fusion power ventures and plans to begin construction of a 50 MWe utility-scale fusion power plant in 2026.
According to the joint announcement, “the transaction will combine the strength of TMTG’s strong balance sheet with TAE’s leading technologies.” TMTG, which went public in March 2024, reported $3.1 billion in total financial assets as of Q3 2025, including cash, investments, and digital assets. Under the agreement, TMTG has committed up to $300 million in capital to support TAE, including $200 million upon signing and another $100 million available at the Form S-4 filing stage.
Founded in 1998, TAE has spent over two decades developing a unique fusion technology, conducting more than 170,000 experiments. It has raised over $1.3 billion from notable investors such as Google, Goldman Sachs, Chevron Technology Ventures, and Charles Schwab. The company has constructed and safely operated five fusion reactors and holds more than 1,600 patents. TAE says its reactors avoid common drawbacks associated with traditional nuclear energy, including risks of meltdown and long-term radioactive waste.
Leadership of the new company will be shared by Devin Nunes, current TMTG Chairman and CEO, and Dr. Michl Binderbauer, CEO of TAE. Nunes will continue to lead all Trump Media brand operations, while Binderbauer will manage TAE Technologies. Michael B. Schwab, Founder and Managing Director of Big Sky Partners, is expected to serve as Chairman of a planned nine-member board of directors, which will include Nunes, Donald J. Trump Jr., Binderbauer, Schwab, and five additional independent directors to be named later.
The company expects the fusion plant to serve as a “path toward America’s A.I. dominance and energy security,” and aims to develop future plants with higher capacity—between 350 and 500 MWe—over time. The technology is projected to deliver “economic, abundant, and dependable electricity,” and the new entity sees fusion energy as a strategic asset in the broader global competition over artificial intelligence infrastructure and energy independence.
The press release emphasized that the combined company’s resources will “quickly move TAE’s proven technology to commercial viability.” It added that TAE’s fusion approach is designed to offer “reliable, affordable, carbon-free electricity and industrial heat without the risks of nuclear meltdown, radioactive waste, or proliferation.”
In a promotional video accompanying the merger announcement, the companies stated, “American innovation defines the future. It’s what secures our prosperity, national security and way of life.” The video highlighted TAE Technologies as “an American company doing what Americans do best—thinking big and shaping a bold future.” It continued: “Imagine limitless American energy without foreign dependence or price shocks. This is the kind of moonshot that could rebuild our industry, lower energy costs for all Americans, and ensure the US dominates global technology.”
Quote:Fired antitrust official Roger Alford testified before House Judiciary Democrats this week, attacking the Trump administration that stripped him of power while praising EU tech regulations and Democrat attorneys general such as Letitia James.
At a hearing this week before the House Judiciary Committee, fired antitrust official Roger Alford testified on behalf of House Judiciary Democrats, attacking President Trump and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, while praising the EU’s tech regulations, left-wing activist judges, and Democratic State Attorneys General.
In April, Alford became Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Gail Slater’s top deputy. In this role, he tried to prevent the Department from settling an antitrust case to block the HPE-Juniper network merger.
As Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-WY) explained at the hearing, “US national security interests against communist China owned Huawei that led to the HPE Juniper settlement.” As Breitbart reported at the time, many MAGA leaders including, including the late Charlie Kirk made this very argument.
Alford refused to bow to the pushback and was fired for insubordination after the deal was approved in July. Shortly after he was fired, Alford gave a speech defending “populist antitrust” at the St Regis Hotel in Aspen before the Big Tech and Big Hollywood-funded Technology Policy Institute. As Breitbart News reported, Alford would go on to criticize Trump’s FTC and DOJ for addressing top Republican concerns like DEI and corporate wokeness.
There, Alford portrayed himself and Slater as “genuine MAGA reformers” fighting corrupt “MAGA In Name Only” lobbyists and cronies. Alford claimed that he was only going after a few bad apples in the Trump administration and supported both the Trump White House and the Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche.
Quote:Russia carried out cyberattacks against infrastructure and websites in Denmark in 2024 and 2025, Danish authorities say in a new assessment published this week describing new cases not previously reported.
Moscow was responsible for “destructive and disruptive” cyberattacks on a Danish water utility company in 2024 and a series of denial of service attacks which overwhelmed Danish websites ahead of regional and local elections last month, Denmark´s Defense Intelligence Service said in a statement Thursday. The water company said the attack caused pipes to burst, leaving homes temporarily without water.
Jan Hansen, the head of the Tureby Alkestrup Waterworks southwest of the capital Copenhagen, said his advice to other companies was not to cut costs on cybersecurity and to take out cyber insurance. The attack happened, he said, because the waterworks switched to cheaper cybersecurity, which was not as secure as that previously.
The Danish intelligence service said the attacks were part of Russia’s “hybrid war” against the West and an attempt to create instability. It said Moscow’s cyberattacks are part of a broader campaign to undermine and punish countries which support Ukraine. Russian hackers have previously been accused of carrying out hacks on other water facilities in Europe – including on a Norwegian dam where Norwegian authorities said hackers opened valves to allow water to pour out.
Torsten Schack Pedersen, Denmark’s minister of resilience and preparedness, said the attacks resulted in limited damage but had serious ramifications.
“It shows that there are forces capable of shutting down important parts of our society,” he said during a news conference Thursday, as reported by Danish broadcaster DR.
Schack Pedersen added that the cyberattacks show that Denmark is not sufficiently equipped to handle such situations, DR reported.
The attacks are among a growing number of incidents that Western officials say are part a campaign of sabotage and disruption across Europe masterminded by Russia. An Associated Press database has documented 147 incidents, including the two cases reported by Denmark this week.
Not all incidents are public and it can sometimes take officials months to establish a link to Moscow. While officials say the campaign – waged since President Vladimir Putin´s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 – aims to deprive Kyiv of support, they believe Moscow is also trying to identify Europe’s weak spots and suck up law enforcement resources.
The Danish agency said pro-Russian group Z-Pentest carried out the “destructive attack” on the water utility company in 2024 and that a separate group, NoName057(16), was responsible for the cyberattack on Danish websites ahead of the recent elections. It said both have links to the Russian state.
“The Russian state uses both groups as instruments of its hybrid war against the West. The aim is to create insecurity in the targeted countries and to punish those that support Ukraine,” the statement said. NoName057(16) acted, authorities said, in November to disrupt the elections, according to DR.
The Tureby Alkestrup Waterworks serves several villages some 35 kilometers (22 miles) south of Copenhagen. The waterworks said the hackers changed the water pressure, which caused a pipe to burst. It said about 50 households were without water for around seven hours while around 450 houses had no water for one hour.
In Germany, meanwhile, authorities summoned Russia’s ambassador in Berlin on Dec. 12 after the foreign ministry accused Moscow of carrying out sabotage, cyberattacks and election interference.
That included a 2024 cyberattack against German air traffic control, German Foreign Ministry spokesperson Martin Giese said.
Quote:Video game hardware sales in the United States experienced a significant decline in November, reaching the lowest point for the month since 2005. Apparently, Sony’s PlayStation, Microsoft’s Xbox, and Nintendo’s Switch are not on Santa’s list this year.
The Verge reports that the video game industry in the United States faced a challenging November as hardware sales plummeted to historic lows. According to market analyst company Circana, spending on video game hardware during the month totaled $695 million, a staggering 27 percent drop compared to the same period last year. This marks the lowest video game hardware spending for a November month since 2005, when sales reached just $455 million.
In terms of units sold, the situation was equally bleak. Circana reported that only 1.6 million units of hardware were sold in the US in November, the lowest total for the month since 1995, when 1.4 million units were purchased.
Several factors contributed to this decline, with the rising costs of consoles being a significant issue. Both the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series consoles celebrated their fifth anniversaries in November, but consumers looking to purchase these systems brand new were faced with higher prices due to price hikes implemented earlier in the year. These increases led to an “all-time November high” for the average price paid for a new unit of video game hardware, reaching $439 — an 11 percent increase from 2024. In comparison, the average price in November 2019 was just $235.
Another issue is the lack of blockbuster games that drive console sales, a similar problem to Hollywood. As Breitbart News previously reported, the gaming industry has struggled for years with woke games and LGBT characters that no one asked for shoehorned into games of all types. True blockbuster titled like Grand Theft Auto 6 continue to face massive delays, giving consumers a reason to hold off on purchases.
Despite the overall decline, the PlayStation 5 emerged as the month’s best-selling hardware in both units and dollars, a feat it achieved for the first time since the launch of the Nintendo Switch 2. The Switch 2 claimed the second spot in both units and dollars, while the Nex Playground ranked third in terms of units sold. However, the Xbox Series consoles managed to secure the third position in dollars.
"For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ," 1 Thessalonians 5:9
Maranatha!
The Internet might be either your friend or enemy. It just depends on whether or not she has a bad hair day.
Quote:Intelligence agencies from two NATO countries believe Russia is developing an anti-satellite weapon to target Elon Musk's Starlink network, according to a new report.
The weapon would fill Starlink orbits with shrapnel and could take out multiple satellites at once, The Associated Press reported on Monday. This could also seriously damage other objects in orbit.
Why It Matters
Starlink has for years proven vital to Ukraine on the battlefield, with Kyiv leaning heavily on its internet access for communications and for controlling its vast drone fleets. Russia has warned satellites propping up Ukraine's military are "legitimate targets."
Weaponizing space has been a highly controversial issue for decades. The U.S. has assessed that Russia, as well as China, are racing to put new systems in space that would boost their own militaries and work against the U.S.
What To Know
The intelligence assessments said the pellets designed to take out the satellites would measure just millimeters in diameter, making it very hard for detection systems to pick up, according to the AP.
It added that they would be a "zone-effect" weapons likely to impact anything in the approximate area, rather than a way of targeting satellites with precision. This could jeopardize Russia's own systems in space, as well as those operated by other nations like China.
Analysts said that the risks involved with such a weapon, including to Moscow's own interests, could discourage Russia from pursuing the system.
The report did not identify which intelligence services had made the assessments. Newsweek could not independently verify the conclusions.
Starlink uses a huge constellation of low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites to provide internet through terminals on the ground.
Russia carried out a direct-ascent anti-satellite test in November 2021 when it destroyed an old Soviet intelligence-gathering satellite in LEO.
The U.S. Space Command said at the time that the trial had generated at least 1,500 pieces of trackable debris in orbit that could linger for decades, and NASA reported personnel on the International Space Station had to take "emergency procedures for safety." The U.S. government condemned the test as "reckless and irresponsible behavior."
The NATO intelligence suggests the Russian weapon could target multiple Starlinks at the same time, rather than one singular LEO satellite, the AP reported.
Newsweek has contacted the Russian Defense Ministry and SpaceX, which operates Starlink, for comment via email.
Quote:The Department of War announced Monday that the Pentagon is partnering with Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem to deploy Grok across its government systems.
The agency said the "frontier‑grade" capabilities of xAI’s Grok family of models will be integrated into the department’s recently launched AI platform, GenAI.mil.
As soon as early 2026, the partnership will allow the Department’s 3 million military and civilian personnel to safely access more advanced AI tools for everyday tasks, including handling sensitive government information.
According to xAI, its tools can support administrative tasks at the federal, state and local levels, as well as ‘critical mission use cases’ at the front line of military operations.
"Today, the War Department officially entered into an agreement with xAI, paving the way for the deployment of its advanced capabilities on GenAI.mil," the department said. "This move builds on the rapid deployment of cutting‑edge AI across the Department's 3 million military and civilian personnel."
The tools will allow employees to use xAI safely on secure government systems for routine work, including tasks involving sensitive but unclassified information, without violating security protocols.
With xAI designed to analyze real-time data, the War Department said the partnership would give personnel "a decisive information advantage."
Grok will give personnel access to live information from X, providing the War Department with faster situational awareness around the globe, the department said.
xAI added that the partnership could lead to potential future classified workloads.
"Through an ongoing, long-term partnership with the DoW and other mission partners, xAI will make available a family of government-optimized foundation models to support classified operational workloads," the company said.
The War Department said that it will continue to scale its AI ecosystem for speed, security and decision superiority.
"This announcement marks another milestone in America's AI revolution, and the War Department is driving that momentum forward," the department said.
"These two new partnerships are part of our longstanding support of the United States Government and xAI’s mission to bring the best tools and technologies available in industry to benefit our nation," xAI added.
"For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ," 1 Thessalonians 5:9
Maranatha!
The Internet might be either your friend or enemy. It just depends on whether or not she has a bad hair day.
Quote:Tesla on Thursday discontinued its basic driver-assistance system, Autopilot, in Canada and the US, in an attempt to push customers toward a more advanced version of the technology branded as Full Self-Driving (Supervised).
The company had last week said it would stop offering FSD as a one-time $8,000 purchase from February 14, meaning customers will only be able to access the software through a monthly subscription priced at $99.
Tesla’s online vehicle configuration pages showed that new cars come only with Traffic Aware Cruise Control, a feature that maintains a set speed and follows traffic at a safe distance.
Autosteer, which previously worked with cruise control to keep vehicles centered in a lane and navigate curves, is no longer listed as a standard feature.
California’s Department of Motor Vehicles had placed Tesla on a high-stakes 60-day deadline to overhaul its marketing or face a mandatory 30-day suspension of its retail sales license.
One condition was that Tesla stops using the “Autopilot” name, which regulators argued misled consumers into believing the system was capable of autonomous driving.
The department declined to comment and Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the reason for the change.
For a long time, Autopilot has been the core selling point for Tesla vehicles, even as the company warned drivers that the system required active supervision and did not make cars fully autonomous.
CEO Elon Musk said on Thursday the subscription price for FSD would rise over time as the software’s capabilities improve.
Quote:The European Union has formally launched an investigation into Elon Musk’s social media company X over what it described as deepfakes of undressed women and children generated by its intelligence-powered chatbot Grok.
The EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, said Monday it is looking into whether Musk’s tech company violated the Digital Services Act, which requires platforms such as X to prevent the spread of manipulated sexually explicit images including child sexual abuse material.
“Sexual deepfakes of women and children are a violent, unacceptable form of degradation,” Henna Virkkunen, the European Commission’s executive vice-president overseeing tech, said in a statement.
“With this investigation, we will determine whether X has met its legal obligations under the DSA, or whether it treated rights of European citizens — including those of women and children — as collateral damage of its service.”
The Commission cited what it called the alleged “dissemination of illegal content, negative effects in relation to gender-based violence, and serious negative consequences to physical and mental well-being stemming from deployments of Grok’s functionalities into its platform” in launching the probe.
EU officials warned X could face penalties of up to 6% of global annual revenue if violations are confirmed.
Musk’s Grok AI bot sparked outrage late last year after the X app was flooded with images of women whose appearances were digitally altered to make them look like they were in bikinis or lingerie even though the original photos showed them fully clothed.
The alterations were made when users were able to ask Grok to undress them without their prior consent.
One analysis conducted by researcher Genevieve Oh found that Grok generated approximately 7,750 sexually suggestive or “nudifying” images an hour.
Quote:Elon Musk’s rocket company SpaceX acquired his artificial intelligence firm xAI on Monday, according to reports.
The deal gave the companies a whopping combined valuation of $1.25 trillion, according to Bloomberg.
SpaceX acquired xAI to “form the most ambitious, vertically-integrated innovation engine on (and off) Earth, with AI, rockets, space-based internet, direct-to-mobile device communications and the world’s foremost real-time information and free speech platform,” the company said in a statement.
SpaceX, which has huge rocket contracts with NASA and offers the Starlink satellite internet service, let employees sell shares at a price valuing the company around $800 billion, according to the New York Times. XAI, which owns the social media site X and runs the Grok chatbot, said it raised $20 billion at a $230 billion valuation.
The merger was poised to impact SpaceX’s reported plans to go public. Last week, the Financial Times reported Musk had floated holding an IPO in mid-June to coincide with a rare planetary alignment and his 55th birthday.
Musk has said he wants to launch AI data centers into space – an expensive plan that would require SpaceX’s capabilities and a significant cash infusion.
Last week, SpaceX asked the Federal Communications Commission for permission to launch up to 1 million satellites into orbit to help “accommodate the explosive growth of data demands driven by AI,” according to a filing.
By directly harnessing near-constant solar power with little operating or maintenance costs, these satellites will achieve transformative cost and energy efficiency while significantly reducing the environmental impact associated with terrestrial data centers,” SpaceX wrote in the filing.
Quote:A federal judge on Tuesday rejected Elon Musk’s bid to dismiss a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit that claimed he waited too long to disclose his purchases of Twitter shares in 2022.
Washington, DC-based US District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan said Musk’s arguments, including that the SEC overreached in order to punish him for criticizing it, did not warrant dismissal.
Lawyers for Musk did not immediately respond to requests for comment. An SEC spokesperson declined to comment.
The SEC sued Musk in January 2025, saying his 11-day delay in revealing his initial 5% Twitter stake let him buy more than $500 million of shares at low prices. It wants Musk to repay the $150 million he allegedly saved at the expense of unsuspecting investors, plus a civil fine.
Musk has called the delay inadvertent. He also said the SEC case amounted to “selective enforcement” of federal securities laws, designed to target him for criticism of “government overreach” that is protected speech under the Constitution’s First Amendment. Musk also called a $150 million payout an excessive fine that violates the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, dwarfing the $100,000 penalty the SEC has sought in similar cases.
Judge cites congressional intent to protect investors
The SEC requires shareholders to disclose within 10 calendar days when they reach 5% ownership in order to protect investors who might otherwise be kept in the dark and sell their own stock.
In a 45-page decision, Sooknanan said that requirement reflects the intent of Congress to stop investors from buying shares cheaply while they pursue control of a company.
“The court does not doubt that Mr. Musk would prefer to avoid having to disclose information that might raise stock prices while he makes a play for corporate control,” the judge wrote. “But the balance Congress struck … does not violate the First Amendment.”
Musk has long feuded with the SEC.
In 2018, the regulator sued Musk after he said on Twitter he might take his electric car company Tesla private and had secured funding.
He settled that case by paying a $20 million civil fine, agreeing to let Tesla lawyers review some Twitter posts in advance, and giving up his role as Tesla’s chairman.
Quote:North Korea is executing schoolchildren for watching South Korean TV shows and listening to K-Pop, including Netflix’s hit series “Squid Game,” according to Amnesty International.
Escapees told the human rights group that teenagers and even middle school students have been publicly executed, sent to labor camps or subjected to brutal public humiliations for consuming foreign media banned by the regime.
The accounts are based on 25 in-depth interviews conducted in 2025 with North Koreans who fled the country between 2012 and 2020, the organization said.
Most were between ages 15 and 25 when they escaped.
One interviewee said people, including high school students, were executed for watching “Squid Game” in Yanggang Province near the Chinese border.
Radio Free Asia separately documented an execution for distributing the show in neighboring North Hamgyong Province in 2021.
“Taken together, these reports from different provinces suggest multiple executions related to the shows,” Amnesty wrote.
The crackdown has intensified under North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, whose regime enforces the 2020 Anti-Reactionary Thought and Culture Act, which brands South Korean media as “rotten ideology that paralyses the people’s revolutionary sense.”
The law mandates five to 15 years of forced labor for watching or possessing South Korean dramas, films or music, with harsher penalties — including death — for distributing content or organizing group viewings, Amnesty added in its report.
Interviewees said punishment often depends on money.
“People are caught for the same act, but punishment depends entirely on money,” said Choi Suvin, 39, who fled North Korea in 2019.
“People without money sell their houses to gather $5,000 or $10,000 to pay to get out of the re-education camps,” he added.
Kim Joonsik, 28, said he was caught watching South Korean dramas three times before leaving in 2019 but avoided punishment because his family had connections.
“Usually when high school students are caught, if their family has money, they just get warnings,” he said. “I didn’t receive legal punishment because we had connections.”
Others were not so lucky.
Kim said three of his sister’s high school friends were sentenced to years-long labor camp terms in the late 2010s because their families could not afford bribes.
Several escapees described being forced, as children, to attend public executions as part of what authorities called “ideological education.”
“When we were 16, 17, in middle school, they took us to executions and showed us everything,” said Kim Eunju, 40, who fled in 2019. “People were executed for watching or distributing South Korean media. It’s ideological education: if you watch, this happens to you too.”
Amnesty said a specialized police unit known as the “109 Group” carries out warrantless home raids and street searches for foreign media.
Across different regions, 15 interviewees described the unit’s operations.
Quote:Meta is halting teens’ access to artificial intelligence characters, at least temporarily, the company said in a blog post Friday.
Meta Platforms Inc., which own Instagram and WhatsApp, said that starting in the “coming weeks,” teens will no longer be able to access AI characters “until the updated experience is ready”
This applies to anyone who gave Meta a birthday that makes them a minor, as well as “people who claim to be adults but who we suspect are teens based on our age prediction technology.”
The move comes the week before Meta — along with TikTok and Google’s YouTube — is scheduled to stand trial in Los Angeles over its apps’ harms to children.
Teens will still be able to access Meta’s AI assistant, just not the characters.
Other companies have also banned teens from AI chatbots amid growing concerns about the effects of artificial intelligence conversations on children.
Quote:A landmark case accusing some of the biggest social media platforms in the world of deliberately getting their users addicted kicked off Tuesday in Los Angeles – with Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube headed for trial as TikTok agreed at the last minute to settle with the plaintiff.
Jury selection begins this week in California Superior Court after a 19-year-old woman identified only as “KGM” accused the tech giants of designing their algorithms to hook users, harming their mental health.
The case is considered a test for how hundreds of similar suits that youths, school districts and state governments have filed against social media companies could unfold. Taking a page from a past generation’s slew of successful suits against big tobacco, plaintiffs say social media companies created addictive products that led to personal injury and other problems.
KGM said in her filing that she began using social media when she was 10 years old.
She claimed that her usage of the apps led her to develop severe mental health conditions including depression, suicidal ideation, anxiety, self-harm behavior and body dysmorphia.
Hours before the trial was set to begin, KGM and TikTok agreed on a settlement. She’d accused the company of deliberately installing its continuous-scroll feature as well as autoplay, push notification and algorithmic content-targeting to maximize engagement and foster addiction.
Snapchat parent company Snap Inc. was previously named in the suit. KGM agreed to a settlement with it last week. The sum of neither settlement was immediately known.
The Post has sought comment from Google, Snap and TikTok.
“We strongly disagree with these allegations and are confident the evidence will show our longstanding commitment to supporting young people,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement, adding that the company previously added features like Teen Accounts “with built-in protections” based on feedback from parents and other stakeholders.
Studies estimate that 5% to 10% of social media users meet the criteria for behavioral addiction, with significantly higher rates among adolescents.
Quote:Jeffrey Epstein once boasted about meeting Mark Zuckerberg, Reid Hoffman, Elon Musk and Peter Thiel at what he described as a “wild” dinner,” an email released by the Justice Department showed.
The late financier and sex offender referenced the dinner in an Aug. 20, 2015 email to billionaire Tom Pritzker, who had asked him if he was planning to travel to New York later that month.
Epstein replied: “not sure yet. i had dinner with zuckerburg, mu=k, thiel hoffman, wild.”
The convicted pedophile did not relate what happened at the dinner, which was first reported by Vanity Fair in 2019. The outlet said Hoffman, the cofounder of LinkedIn, had hosted the meal in Palo Alta, Calif., for the MIT neuroscientist Ed Boyden.
When reached for comment, a Meta spokesperson pointed to a statement released in 2019.
“Mark met Epstein in passing one time at a dinner honoring scientists that was not organized by Epstein,” Zuckerberg spokesman Ben LaBolt said at the time. “Mark did not communicate with Epstein again following the dinner.”
Vanity Fair reported that Musk had introduced Zuckerberg to Epstein at the dinner – an allegation that Musk denied in an email to the outlet.
“I don’t recall introducing Epstein to anyone, as I don’t know the guy well enough to do so, Epstein is obviously a creep and Zuckerberg is not a friend of mine,” Musk said at the time.
As The Post reported, newly released Epstein emails this week showed Hoffman discussing visits to Epstein’s private island, as well as his New Mexico ranch and his New York City apartment.
“Reid will spend the night at 71st,” stated one 2014 email from Hoffman’s team that was included in the document dump, in reference to Epstein’s Upper East Side townhouse.
Hoffman addressed the newly uncovered emails in an X post on Sunday, denying any wrongdoing.
Quote:Apple on Thursday forecast a surge of up to 16% in revenue for the March quarter, well ahead of Wall Street’s expectations, powered by strong demand for its iPhones and a sharp rebound in China.
That followed holiday-quarter results that beat estimates as well, with CEO Tim Cook telling Reuters that demand for the latest handsets was “staggering.”
Apple’s iPhone 17 lineup helped lift sales across key markets, easing investor concerns about a hardware sales plateau. The devices have been well received for their upgraded camera features and performance improvements, with Apple also benefiting from a wave of upgrades from users holding onto older models.
Apple shares rose 3.5% in extended trading after the results were released, but later pared gains to trade up 0.8%.
Apple expects revenue for its fiscal second quarter to grow 13% to 16%, versus a 10% rise that analysts expected, according to LSEG. The company also forecast operating expenses of $18.4 billion to $18.7 billion, slightly above spending in the first quarter.
IPhone revenue rose to $85.27 billion in the fiscal first quarter ended Dec., well above the $78.65 billion analysts had expected. Apple said iPhone sales set records in every geographic segment, highlighting broad-based demand despite macroeconomic uncertainty.
“The demand for iPhone was simply staggering, with revenue growing 23% year over year to achieve its biggest quarter in history,” Cook told Reuters in an interview.
Google and Apple listened in on and recorded millions of unwitting customers’ conversations — and will soon fork over a combined $163 million to resolve the eavesdropping debacle, according to a pair of bombshell lawsuits.
Apple has started sending out payments to settle its $95 million class-action complaint, which accused the Cupertino tech giant of spying on users who never once uttered the prompt, “Hey, Siri,” according to court documents.
Some people reported that their Apple devices pushed ads for brands — like Olive Garden and Air Jordan — that they had discussed in conversations that were secretly recorded.
Google, meanwhile, has reached a tentative, $68 million settlement after its Google Assistant surreptitiously activated and recorded users without the hot words, “OK Google,” according to court documents viewed by The Post.
That deal, part of a 2019 lawsuit, still has to be OKed by a judge.
Siri and Google Assistant are voice-activated aides that can perform tasks, including sending text messages, making calls or reciting the weather.
Both tech behemoths, which are accused of using the secret recordings to improve their respective products, have denied any wrongdoing.
Apple now requires users to opt in before recorded audio is used for improving Siri’s functionality, according to The Mac Observer.
Anyone who purchased an iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, MacBook, iMac, HomePod, iPod touch or Apple TV between Sept. 17, 2014 and Dec. 31, 2024 and experienced an unintended Siri activation was eligible for a payout. Some have been doled out via prepaid cards or direct deposit.
The amount paid out to individuals is capped at $20 per Siri-enabled device, according to the settlement website, with a maximum of five impacted devices per person.
The $95 million figure represents about nine hours of profit for Apple, which raked in $93.74 billion in net income over the last fiscal year.
“Apple denies all of the allegations made in the lawsuit and denies that Apple did anything improper or unlawful,” the giant said on its website.
The suit was filed in 2019 by Fumiko Lopez and others who alleged their recorded discussions were shared with third-party businesses, such as restaurants and brands, which led to targeted ads in Apple Search and Safari.
Quote:Google co-founder Sergey Brin and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt have banded together with some of Silicon Valley’s wealthiest moguls to create a new, pro-business organization that is poised to lobby against the proposed billionaire tax in California.
The organization, Building a Better California, is planning to wield its influence by backing political candidates and ballot initiatives throughout the state, according to Bloomberg News.
A key priority for the group is opposing a one-time 5% wealth tax on billionaires in California, which is scheduled to be on the ballot this coming November.
The fine print of the proposal shows company founders’ voting shares in their businesses would be treated as equivalent to ownership — artificially inflating how much wealth they have and raising their tax bill.
This has “the potential to strip the founders of some of the world’s largest companies of their controlling interests and force them to sell off a significant portion of their shares,” noted the nonprofit Tax Foundation. “This could send stock prices plummeting to the detriment of tech employees and investors of all stripes, including ordinary workers.”
There’s also concern that the tax could be applied to people who aren’t super-rich.
“The fine print in the bill allows the California legislature to apply this asset tax to non-billionaires as well whenever they want. Your car, home and jewelry would all count,” former Facebook exec Chamath Palihapitiya recently wrote on X.
“California isn’t coming just for the rich,” he added. “This bill, while disguised as a tax on the wealthy, is actually the infrastructure to tax everyone in California even more – but now on everything you own.”
Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has come out against the wealth tax, noting the introduction of the proposal has already driven some billionaires out of the state.
“This will be defeated — there’s no question in my mind,” he said earlier this month. “I’ll do what I have to do to protect the state.”
Campaign filings cited by Bloomberg News show that Building a Better California has raised $35 million, including a $20 million donation from Brin.
Building a Better California has already spent $11 million backing ballot initiatives aimed at boosting middle-class homeownership and reforming California’s environmental review law.
Brin previously approached other business leaders about raising hundreds of millions of dollars for a California influence campaign.
According to Bloomberg News, he made the pitch to other tech industry figures using the encrypted messaging service Signal.
Others said to be involved in the initiative include crypto billionaire Chris Larsen, venture capitalist Mike Moritz, DoorDash co-founder Tony Xu and tech investors John Doerr, Max Levchin and Patrick Collison.
Stewart Resnick, co-owner of The Wonderful Company, donated $2 million — the largest contribution from a donor outside of tech, according to Bloomberg News.
Quote:Employees at Google’s DeepMind artificial intelligence lab reportedly demanded that management detail plans on how to keep them “physically safe” from ICE after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.
An unnamed DeepMind employee made the request Monday on an internal message board, according to Wired, which obtained screenshots of the post.
“US focused question: What is GDM doing to keep us physically safe from ICE? The events of the past week have shown that immigration status, citizenship, or even the law is not a deterrent against detention, violence, or even death from federal operatives,” the worker was quoted as saying.
“What kinds of plans and policies are in place to ensure our safety at the office? Coming to and from work? As we have seen, government agency tactics can change and escalate quite rapidly. With offices in many metro areas across the US, are we prepared?”
The post was sent to a channel with more than 3,600 employees, said a source familiar with the matter . About 40 of them interacted with the post, with many adding a “plus emoji.”
Google did not comment.
The post went unanswered by senior management as of Monday night, according to Wired.
A DeepMind employee posted a separate message citing an incident in which a federal agent allegedly attempted to enter Google’s office in Cambridge, Mass. The entry reportedly occurred at some point last fall, though it’s unclear when the employee’s message was posted.
Google’s security chief responded to that message with details confirming that an “officer arrived at reception without notice” and was “not granted entry because they did not have a warrant and promptly left.”
Google CEO Sundar Pichai and DeepMind boss Demis Hassabis have yet to weigh in publicly on the Pretti killing. DeepMind chief scientist Jeff Dean called the shooting “absolutely shameful.”
Taking a trip in a Waymo robotaxi costs more on average than taking a drive in an Uber or Lyft driven by a human.
However, that price gap is narrowing, according to a new report from Obi, a global real-time aggregator for rideshare prices.
“When Waymo entered the market, our research saw that a ride was priced 30% to 40% higher than an Uber or Lyft ride, but consumers were still taking them enthusiastically, viewing an autonomous rideshare as a premium product,” Ashwini Anburajan, CEO of Obi, said in a statement.
Obi simulated more than 94,000 ride requests in the San Francisco Bay Area between Nov. 27 and Jan. 1 and found that Waymo costs an average of $19.69 for a ride, while Uber was slightly cheaper at $17.47 and Lyft averaged at $15.47.
The data showed that Waymo is an average of 12.7% more expensive than getting an Uber and 27.3% more expensive than a Lyft.
There are two main components working working in tandem that are causing the gap to get smaller — Waymo has lowered pricing while traditional ride-hailing trips on Uber and Lyft have risen in price, according to Obi.
In June 2025, Obi’s first report showcased price differences between robotaxis and rideshare with data taken from rides in April 2025.
At the time, that data revealed that Waymo rides averaged $20.43, Uber at $15.58, and Lyft rides at $14.44, detailing a 30-40% premium.
Comparing these numbers to Obi’s most recent data, Waymo’s average cost dropped 3.62%, while Uber’s went up 12% and Lyft’s increased 7%.
But for longer rides, “the premium can almost disappear,” the report said.
According to the data, rides between 4.3 and 9.3 kilometers (or about 2.7 and 5.8 miles), Waymo is only 2% more expensive than Uber and 17% more expensive than Lyft per kilometer.
Quote:The Teamsters demanded Monday that California suspend Waymo taxis indefinitely after one of the self-driving cars hit a 5-year-old near a Santa Monica elementary school.
The largest union in the state put Golden State officials on blast, telling them to pull the company’s license to operate the futuristic vehicles after the accident on Jan. 23, which left the unidentified child with minor injuries.
The statement from the co-chairs of the Teamsters California, whose members include transportation workers and truckers, comes after the National Transportation Safety Board announced a probe of the company.
“This incident is emblematic of the broader goal Big Tech companies have to replace skilled human labor with AI,” co-chairs Peter Finn and Victor Mineros said in a statement.
“They want to force millions of people into destitution by destroying their livelihoods, seize money that belongs to workers, and force our communities to reckon with the fallout of automation’s shortcomings,” the statement went on. “Robotaxis threaten workers’ jobs and are now terrorizing our kids.”
The regulatory California Public Utilities Commission should intervene or “the next incident could be much worse,” the union bosses said.
Waymo did not directly respond to The Post’s request for comment, instead referring to the original statement issued following the incident, in which the company referred to the child as a “pedestrian.”
“We remain committed to improving road safety where we operate, as we continue on our mission to be the world’s most trusted driver,” the statement said.
The company had said the child “suddenly entered the roadway” from behind an SUV and stepped in the path of the driverless taxi. The vehicle braked and slowed to 6 mph before contact, the company said.
This is not the first time Waymo has had malfunctions.
Quote:Alphabet said Wednesday that capital expenditure could as much as double this year, in yet another aggressive spending ramp-up by the Google parent as it deepens investments to push ahead in the AI race.
Alphabet shares were volatile in after-hours trading — falling 6% before recouping losses, as investors weighed the swell in spending against surging revenue and profit, both of which beat expectations in the December quarter.
The company said it was targeting capital expenditure of $175 billion to $185 billion this year, a massive jump compared with average analyst expectations that it would spend about $115.26 billion this year, according to data compiled by LSEG.
CEO Sundar Pichai said in a release that Alphabet hiked its forecast spending “to meet customer demand and capitalize on the growing opportunities we have ahead of us.”
He added: “We’re seeing our AI investments and infrastructure drive revenue and growth across the board.”
The company spent $91.45 billion in 2025, primarily on AI infrastructure including servers, data centers and networking equipment. That compares with its projections for total spending of between $91 billion and $93 billion last year.
Growth in Google’s cloud division, where the company is enjoying early returns on AI investment, helped the stock pare losses. The unit’s revenue grew 48% to $17.7 billion in the fourth quarter ended December, compared with analysts’ average estimate of a 35.2% jump, according to data compiled by LSEG.
“Google Cloud growth was far ahead of expectations and importantly higher growth than Microsoft Azure for the first time in several years,” said Gil Luria, D.A. Davidson analyst. “The acceleration in Google Cloud seems to justify the increased [capex] investment.”
The company reported total revenue of $113.83 billion for the quarter, beating analyst estimates of $111.43 billion, per LSEG data. Adjusted profit per share of $2.82 also beat estimates of $2.63.
Cloud computing majors have poured hundreds of billions of dollars to expand their AI infrastructure, both to meet the growing enterprise demand for their cloud services and to fuel their own development of AI technologies and products.
Like larger rivals Amazon Web Services and Microsoft’s Azure, Google Cloud has been grappling with capacity constraints that have dented its ability to fully cash in on AI demand from its customers.
Quote:Amazon’s latest round of layoffs is set to hit 16,000 corporate employees starting Wednesday — with the tech titan suggesting artificial intelligence will do their work, instead.
The firings come after Amazon said in October it was laying off 14,000 corporate workers — with the goal of trimming its 1.58 million-strong workforce by nearly 10% — and after it and other big tech companies were widely viewed as over-hiring during the COVID pandemic.
The e-commerce giant has explicitly linked the layoffs to increased use of AI, particularly in corporate and technology functions.
“Some may ask why we’re reducing roles when the company is performing well,” Amazon senior vice president Beth Galetti wrote in October.
“This generation of AI is the most transformative technology we’ve seen since the Internet, and it’s enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before (in existing market segments and altogether new ones),” she explained.
“We’re convinced that we need to be organized more leanly, with fewer layers and more ownership, to move as quickly as possible for our customers and business.”
Amazon’s President and CEO Andy Jassy said last summer new tech could create new job opportunities – though he also admitted it could bring “efficiency gains” by helping to reduce the overall workforce.
People familiar with this week’s layoffs told Reuters that the layoffs would hit teams across Amazon Web Services, retail, Prime Video and human resources, though details were not immediately known.
The layoffs come amid high hopes for AI’s potential to boost productivity — and concern it could lead to widescale firings.
AI killed some 55,000 jobs in the US last year, according to consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
On the consumer side of things, Amazon has embedded artificial intelligence across its core products, rolling out generative AI tools that handle shopping, voice interaction and task automation.
Quote:Amazon is reportedly in talks to invest as much as $50 billion into Sam Altman’s OpenAI — in what would be a massive bet on the ChatGPT creator.
Amazon boss Andy Jassy is leading negotiations with Altman, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The sources said the potential terms were not finalized and subject to change.
OpenAI is reportedly aiming to raise up to $100 billion in a fundraising round that would value the artificial giant at $830 billion. Amazon would be the largest single contributor to the round if it follows through with a $50 billion bet.
An Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on the report. OpenAI did not immediately return a request for comment.
Amazon already holds a sizable take in Anthropic, which is one of OpenAI’s chief rivals in the AI sector.
Earlier this week, the retail giant laid off about 16,000 employees. The company said the cuts were meant to streamline its operations and management ranks, but Amazon executives have also acknowledged that advancements in AI were a factor in the restructuring.
Meanwhile, Japanese investment giant SoftBank, which is already one of OpenAI’s largest shareholders, is in discussions to pour as much as $30 billion more into the company, The Journal previously reported.
Earlier this week, The Information reported that Nvidia, Amazon and Microsoft were in talks to collectively invest more than $60 billion in OpenAI. The tech outlet’s sources said Amazon was mulling an investment of up to $20 billion or more.
Quote:Amazon on Thursday projected a surge of more than 50% in capital expenditures this year, joining its peers in a spending spree to build out artificial-intelligence infrastructure, and sending its shares down 9% in after-hours trading.
It is the latest sign that Big Tech will not be hitting the brakes any time soon on hefty AI investments. Amazon shares closed down 4.4% during regular trading as worries deepened about the enormous cost of the artificial-intelligence boom.
The top four hyperscalers – Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet’s Google and Meta – are expected to collectively spend more than $630 billion this year.
Amazon also forecast a first-quarter profit range whose lower end would miss analysts’ expectations by a quarter, baking in roughly $1 billion in higher costs related to its high-speed internet business Leo, as well as investment in quick commerce and sharper prices in its international stores business.
The company said it expects to invest about $200 billion in capital expenditures across Amazon in 2026, compared with about $131 billion in 2025.
Amazon’s forecast for first-quarter operating income of $16.5 billion to $21.5 billion disappointed, falling below analysts’ estimate of $22.04 billion.
Tech earnings over the past few days have shown Wall Street has a clear message for tech firms: Soaring AI spending can continue only if companies show commensurate operational or financial returns.
“We wanted to see more of a consecutive cadence of strong earnings growth and that’s just not happening here,” said Dave Wagner, portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors, referring to Amazon’s results.
“The market just dislikes the substantial amount of money that keeps getting put into capex for these growth rates.”
Quote:TikTok users are accusing the app’s new US owners of censoring videos about the fatal Minneapolis shooting of Alex Pretti and political content including mentions of “Epstein.”
The hashtag #TikTokCensorship took off on X on Sunday as creators claimed videos about political unrest in Minneapolis were getting far fewer views than usual and facing long delays uploading.
In a late Monday statement on X, TikTok US’ new owners wrote: “We’re continuing to resolve a major infrastructure issue triggered by a power outage at one of our US data center partner sites.”
“You may notice multiple bugs, slower load times, or timed-out requests, including when posting new content,” the new owners added. “Creators may temporarily see ‘0’ views or likes on videos …This is a display error.”
It was a rough start for the new US spin-off of TikTok, which announced last Thursday that it finally reached a deal to transfer operations to American ownership after staring down threats of a ban for years.
China-based ByteDance will retain a 19.9% ownership stake, while US and global investors — including Trump ally Larry Ellison’s Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX, an Emirati state-owned investment firm that has been done a range of deals smiled on by the White House — each hold a 15% stake.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced in a post late Monday that he is launching a state investigation into TikTok, alleging his office “independently confirmed instances” of the app censoring content critical of President Trump.
A White House spokesperson told The Post it “has no role in TikTok’s content moderation.”
In a viral post on X, David Leavitt, a freelance writer, shared a screenshot of his TikTok account that showed he regularly gained hundreds or thousands of views on his videos — but his recent political videos were flagged as “ineligible for recommendation.”
American singer Billie Eilish wrote on Instagram that TikTok “is silencing people” after her musician brother Finneas O’Connell posted a TikTok video about the shooting of Pretti — who was fatally shot by federal agents on Saturday — that gained fewer views than O’Connell’s usual content.
Quote:A 19-year-old California woman has reached a settlement with TikTok just hours before the scheduled start of the trial in her suit alleging that the social media platform designed its algorithm to hook users, harming their mental health.
The woman, who has only been identified as “KGM,” previously reached a separate settlement with Snapchat’s parent company Snap. Terms of both settlements were not disclosed.
News of the latest settlement was first reported by Bloomberg.
The Post has sought comment from TikTok and Snap.
The plaintiff has also sued Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, and Google-owned YouTube on similar grounds in Los Angeles Superior Court.
KGM said in her filing that she began using social media when she was 10 years old.
She claimed that her usage of the apps led her to develop severe mental health conditions including depression, suicidal ideation, anxiety, self-harm behavior and body dysmorphia.
In the complaint, KGM alleged that TikTok deliberately installed its continuous-scroll feature as well as autoplay, push notification and algorithmic content targeting in order to maximize engagement and foster addiction.
The cases are part of an ongoing legal battle involving more than 2,200 lawsuits alleging that major social media platforms intentionally designed addictive products that damage young users’ mental health.
Studies estimate that 5% to 10% of social media users meet the criteria for behavioral addiction, with significantly higher rates among adolescents.
Teenagers now spend an average of 7 to 9 hours a day on screens, much of it on social media platforms designed for constant engagement.
Multiple large-scale reviews have found consistent links between heavy social media use and worsening mental health.
Researchers have associated prolonged use with higher rates of depression, anxiety, psychological distress, sleep deprivation and academic decline, particularly among children and teens whose brains are still developing.
Quote:Penelope Sokolowski was just 16 years old when she took her own life last February.
Her father, Jason, believes her suicide was the culmination of a grooming process that began on Roblox, the game platform beloved by kids — with some 170,000 users under the age of 13, according to company data from 2023.
“We kind of thought we were covering all the bases,” Jason told The Post, noting that his family had used a third-party app to monitor Penelope’s online activity.
Jason alleges that his only child was contacted by a predator on Roblox who coerced her into cutting his name into her chest and sending videos of herself bloodied from self-harm — and who, ultimately, sent Penelope down a spiral that culminated in her death.
The girl was 7 or 8 years old when she first signed up for Roblox, players rove around online worlds and can chat with other users.
“I’d come in and sit in the room with her and see what she was doing, ask who those people were,” Jason said, recalling Penelope drawing an anime-style sketch for a friend she’d made on Roblox.
“As a dad I thought, oh, this is nice, she’s artistic, and she’s made artistic friends,” he added. “But I didn’t understand what Roblox was and its effect on her.”
The dad, who works in the film industry in Vancouver, British Columbia, separated from Penelope’s mother and moved out of the family home when the girl was 13.
He recalls how Penelope’s grades began to tumble and, when she was 14, he noticed scars from self-inflicted cuts on her arms, which she had been covering with bracelets and his oversized hockey jerseys.
Penelope confided that she had been recruited into a self-harm group via Roblox, but assured her father she had moved on.
But not long after her 16th birthday, she took her own life.
Later, when Jason opened up his daughter’s cell phone, he found what he describes as a “crime scene.”
According to the dad, there were messages spanning two years with a person who egged on her self-destruction. Jason believes Penelope met this person on Roblox and then began privately conversing with them over Discord — sometimes for hours.
Quote:A federal jury in Phoenix ordered Uber on Thursday to pay $8.5 million after finding it liable in a lawsuit brought by a woman who said she was sexually assaulted by a driver, a verdict that could influence thousands of similar cases against the ride-hailing company.
The case, brought by plaintiff Jaylynn Dean, was the first trial – known as a “bellwether” – of more than 3,000 similar lawsuits against Uber that have been consolidated in federal court. Bellwether trials are used to test legal theories and help gauge the value of claims for possible settlements.
The jury found that the driver was an agent of Uber, so the company was responsible for his actions. They awarded Dean $8.5 million in compensatory damages but declined to award punitive damages. Attorneys for Dean had sought more than $140 million in damages.
In a statement, an Uber spokesperson noted that the jury rejected Dean’s other claims, that the company was negligent or that its safety systems were defective, adding that the company plans to appeal. “This verdict affirms that Uber acted responsibly and has invested meaningfully in rider safety,” the spokesperson said.
Sarah London, an attorney for Dean, said the verdict “validates the thousands of survivors who have come forward at great personal risk to demand accountability against Uber for its focus on profit over passenger safety.”
Uber shares fell 0.5% in extended trading following announcement of the verdict.
Dean, an Oklahoma resident, sued Uber in 2023, one month after her alleged assault in Arizona. She said Uber was aware of a wave of sexual assaults committed by its drivers, but had failed to take basic actions to improve the safety of its riders. Such assertions have long dogged the company, drawing headlines and congressional scrutiny.
Alexandra Walsh, an attorney for Dean, said during the trial’s closing arguments that Uber had marketed itself as a safe option for women traveling at night, particularly if they had been drinking.
Quote:COPENHAGEN — The makers of mobile apps designed to help shoppers identify and boycott American goods say they saw a surge of interest in Denmark and beyond after the recent flare-up in tensions over U.S. President Donald Trump’s designs on Greenland.
The creator of the “Made O’Meter” app, Ian Rosenfeldt, said he saw around 30,000 downloads of the free app in just three days at the height of the trans-Atlantic diplomatic crisis in late January out of more than 100,000 since it was launched in March.
Apps offer practical help
Rosenfeldt, who lives in Copenhagen and works in digital marketing, decided to create the app a year ago after joining a Facebook group of like-minded Danes hoping to boycott U.S. goods.
“Many people were frustrated and thinking, ‘How do we actually do this in practical terms,’” the 53-year-old recalled. “If you use a bar code scanner, it’s difficult to see if a product is actually American or not, if it’s Danish or not. And if you don’t know that, you can’t really make a conscious choice.”
The latest version of “Made O’Meter” uses artificial intelligence to identify and analyze several products at a time, then recommend similar European-made alternatives. Users can set preferences, like “No USA-owned brands” or “Only EU-based brands.” The app claims over 95% accuracy.
“By using artificial intelligence, you can take an image of a product … and it can make a deep dive to go out and find the correct information about the product in many levels,” Rosenfeldt told The Associated Press during a demonstration at a Copenhagen grocery store. “This way, you have information that you can use to take decisions on what you think is right.”
‘Losing an ally’
After an initial surge of downloads when the app was launched, usage tailed off. Until last month, when Trump stepped up his rhetoric about the need for the U.S. to acquire Greenland, a strategically important and mineral-rich Arctic island that is a semiautonomous territory of Denmark.
Usage peaked Jan. 23, when there were almost 40,000 scans in one day, compared with 500 or so daily last summer. It has dropped back since but there were still around 5,000 a day this week, said Rosenfeldt, who noted “Made O’Meter” is used by over 20,000 people in Denmark but also by people in Germany, Spain, Italy, even Venezuela.
Quote:The state of California is losing yet another tech company to Florida.
In a dramatic sign of the rising allure of low-tax, pro-business states, quantum computing firm D-Wave Quantum Inc. announced it is relocating its corporate headquarters and key R & D operations from Palo Alto to Boca Raton, Florida.
The move, confirmed in a statement from the company, marks a stinging blow to Silicon Valley, in what many see as a broader trend of tech companies leaving high-cost Cali for more business-friendly regions.
CEO Dr. Alan Baratz made no secret of the strategy: Florida’s rapidly growing tech ecosystem, expanding talent pool, and supportive research environment make the state ideal for quantum innovation.
“With our new headquarters in Boca Raton, D-Wave will bring to South Florida incredible opportunities for advanced research, talent recruitment, and high-impact technology development that is shaping the future of computing,” Baratz said in a statement.
Florida officials hailed the move as a major victory.
“We’re excited to welcome D-Wave to Florida as it accelerates the development and delivery of its quantum computing technologies, which will help further establish the state as a center of high demand job growth and business formation through innovation,” said Florida Secretary of Commerce J. Alex Kelly.
“By welcoming D-Wave’s flagship … we are strengthening our position as a destination for advanced innovation, attracting top-tier technology talent, and laying the foundation for long-term economic growth,” Boca Raton Mayor Scott Singer said.
The relocation is a centerpiece of a major partnership with the state of Florida. D-Wave will install its “Advantage2” quantum computer at Florida Atlantic University’s Boca Raton campus, in an effort to “accelerate and solidify the state of Florida’s position as a leader in quantum computing.”
While Sacramento faces political uncertainty and weighs a controversial new “billionaire tax,” Florida has been rolling out the red carpet with tax breaks and economic development incentives.
Earlier in January, Boca Raton officials approved a resolution where D-Wave would get up to $500,000 to relocate there and create 100 new jobs with an average annual salary of at least $125,000, per local news outlets.
"For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ," 1 Thessalonians 5:9
Maranatha!
The Internet might be either your friend or enemy. It just depends on whether or not she has a bad hair day.
Quote:At least 25 million Americans — including roughly half of Texas’ population — were swept up in a massive data breach at tech firm Conduent, exposing sensitive information such as Social Security numbers and health insurance data.
Conduent, the New Jersey-based government and business technology contractor, was targeted by hackers in an attack that began in October 2024 and went undetected for nearly three months before being discovered on Jan. 13 of last year.
The ransomware attack is now coming into sharper focus as states continue to uncover how many people were affected.
Texas alone revised its number from 4 million people who may have been affected to 15.4 million — a staggering 285% increase.
In Oregon, an estimated 10.5 million people may have had their sensitive data exposed in the breach.
Hundreds of thousands of other victims in states like Delaware, Massachusetts and New Hampshire are also thought to have been affected.
The breach has also sparked a wave of litigation, with multiple class action lawsuits consolidated in federal court in New Jersey accusing Conduent of failing to adequately safeguard sensitive personal and health data and waiting months to notify victims after discovering the intrusion.
A plaintiffs’ steering committee was appointed in December to oversee the litigation, which could expose Conduent to significant damages, regulatory penalties and long-term fallout with state government clients.
Conduent operates critical backend systems for state governments nationwide, handling everything from Medicaid claims and eligibility systems to child support payments, food assistance and unemployment insurance.
The company works with agencies in 46 states and supports government healthcare programs serving about 120 million people, processing more than 500 million Medicaid claims each year and disbursing tens of billions of dollars annually in public benefits.
The attack was carried out by the SafePay ransomware group, which publicly claimed responsibility and said it siphoned roughly 8.5 terabytes of data from Conduent’s systems during the months-long intrusion.
SafePay listed Conduent on its dark web leak site in February 2025 and threatened to publish the data if a ransom was not paid, though Conduent has not said whether it engaged with the hackers.
Quote:The Federal Trade Commission warned Apple in a fiery letter on Wednesday that it may be violating consumer protection laws by stifling right-leaning publications on its popular news app.
FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson’s letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook came one day after The Post exclusively reported on a study that pointed to the Apple News app’s apparent bias against conservative media outlets. President Trump shared The Post’s report on his Truth Social account early Wednesday.
Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog group, analyzed a total of 620 stories given featured placement by Apple News’ editorial team in January — and found that none of them were published by outlets that are considered right-leaning.
“These reports raise serious questions about whether Apple News is acting in accordance with its terms of service and its representations to consumers,” Ferguson wrote in the Wednesday letter to Cook obtained by The Post.
In his Wednesday letter, Ferguson urged Cook to “conduct a comprehensive review of Apple’s terms of service and ensure that Apple News’ curation of articles is consistent with those terms and representations made to consumers and, if it is not, to take corrective action swiftly.”
The nation’s top trade cop pointed to Apple’s obligations under Section 5 of the FTC Act, which “prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices,” including “material misrepresentations and material omissions.”
“The First Amendment protects the speech of Big Tech firms,” Ferguson wrote. “But the First Amendment has never extended its protection to material misrepresentations made to consumers, nor does it immunize speakers from conduct that Congress has deemed unfair under the FTC Act, even if that conduct involves speech.”
In its analysis, MRC relied on classifications compiled by AllSides, which uses a multi-partisan panel of experts — with two members from the left, two from the center and two from the right – that are trained to spot media bias, as well as blind surveys of regular Americans, to establish bias ratings for outlets.
In February 2025, Ferguson launched an inquiry into tech censorship in an effort to “better understand how these firms may have violated the law by silencing and intimidating Americans for speaking their minds.”
“Any act or practice by Apple News to suppress or promote news articles based on the perceived ideological or political viewpoint of the article or publication, if inconsistent with Apple’s terms of service or the reasonable expectations of consumers, may violate the FTC Act,” Ferguson wrote on Wednesday.
Quote:Teen-by-default settings to roll out globally for all Discord users, enhancing age-appropriate protections while maintaining privacy, community, and meaningful connection on the platform
SAN FRANCISCO, February 9, 2026 – Discord is announcing enhanced teen safety features rolling out globally that reinforce its long-standing commitment to creating a safer and more inclusive experience for users over the age of 13. As part of this update, all new and existing users worldwide will have a teen-appropriate experience by default, with updated communication settings, restricted access to age-gated spaces, and content filtering that preserves the privacy and meaningful connections that define Discord.
Beginning with a phased global rollout to new and existing users in early March, users may be required to engage in an age assurance process to change certain settings or access sensitive content. This includes age-restricted channels, servers, or commands and select message requests.
“Nowhere is our safety work more important than when it comes to teen users, which is why we are announcing these updates in time for Safer Internet Day. Rolling out teen-by-default settings globally builds on Discord’s existing safety architecture, giving teens strong protections while allowing verified adults flexibility. We design our products with teen safety principles at the core and will continue working with safety experts, policymakers, and Discord users to support meaningful, long term wellbeing for teens on the platform.” – Savannah Badalich, Head of Product Policy at Discord.
Privacy-Forward Age Assurance
Age assurance is the foundation of this new experience and is designed to respect Discord users’ privacy and choice. Discord users can choose to use facial age estimation or submit a form of identification to its vendor partners, with more options coming in the future. Additionally, Discord will implement its age inference model, a new system that runs in the background to help determine whether an account belongs to an adult, without always requiring users to verify their age. Some users may be asked to use multiple methods if more information is needed to assign an age group.
Key privacy protections of Discord’s age-assurance approach include:
On-device processing: Video selfies for facial age estimation never leave a user’s device.
Quick deletion: Identity documents submitted to our vendor partners are deleted quickly— in most cases, immediately after age confirmation.
Straightforward age assurance: In most cases, users complete the process once and their Discord experience adapts to their verified age group. Users may be asked to use multiple methods only when more information is needed to assign an age group.
Private status: A user’s age group status cannot be seen by other users.
After completing a chosen method, users will receive confirmation via a direct message from Discord’s official account. A user’s assigned age group can also be viewed at any time in “My Account” settings. Users can always go to “My Account” settings to appeal their assigned age group by retrying the process. Discord prompts users to age-assure only within Discord and currently does not send emails or text messages about its age assurance process or results.
Quote:OpenAI has fired a female executive for alleged sexual discrimination against a male colleague — after she objected to the company’s plan to roll out an “adult mode” allowing erotic conversations on ChatGPT.
Ryan Beiermeister, who served as vice president of product policy, strongly denied the allegation of sex-based discrimination, according to the Wall Street Journal.
“The allegation that I discriminated against anyone is absolutely false,” she told the paper.
Beiermeister is departing after having “made valuable contributions during her time at OpenAI,” the company told the Journal, adding that her exit “was not related to any issue she raised while working at the company.”
Beiermeister, whose tech career has included stints at Palantir and Meta, joined OpenAI in June 2024.
She led the product policy team that crafts rules for how people can use OpenAI’s products and helps design enforcement mechanisms for those policies.
Before she was fired, Beiermeister reportedly told colleagues she was against “adult mode” and worried about its potential harmful effects.
She also said OpenAI’s approach to blocking child-exploitation content was inadequate and efforts to keep teens from accessing adult content were insufficient, according to the Journal.
She reportedly took a leave of absence before returning to work last month, with OpenAI firing her in early January, according to people familiar with the matter. Details of the alleged discrimination were not known.
The Post has sought comment from OpenAI and Beiermeister.
During her time at OpenAI, Beiermeister launched a peer mentorship program for women at the business, according to the Journal.
Her ouster came ahead of OpenAI’s planned launch early this year of an “adult mode” that would allow adult-themed conversation, including sexual topics, for age-verified users.
Sam Altman, OpenAI’s chief executive, wrote on X in October that the company planned to expand what was permitted on ChatGPT as it rolled out stronger age barriers.
Quote:Russia has attempted to fully block WhatsApp in the country, the company said, the latest move in an ongoing government effort to tighten control over the internet.
A WhatsApp spokesperson said late Wednesday that the Russian authorities’ action was intended to “drive users to a state-owned surveillance app,” a reference to Russia’s own state-supported MAX messaging app that’s seen by critics as a surveillance tool.
“Trying to isolate over 100 million people from private and secure communication is a backwards step and can only lead to less safety for people in Russia,” the WhatsApp spokesperson said. “We continue to do everything we can to keep people connected.”
Russia’s government has already blocked major social media like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, and ramped up other online restrictions since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said WhatsApp owner Meta Platforms should comply with Russian law to see it unblocked, according to the state Tass news agency.
Earlier this week, Russian communications watchdog Roskomnadzor said it will introduce new restrictions on the Telegram messaging app after accusing it of refusing to abide by the law.
The move triggered widespread criticism from military bloggers, who warned that Telegram was widely used by Russian troops fighting in Ukraine and its throttling would derail military communications.
Despite the announcement, Telegram has largely been working normally. Some experts say it’s a more difficult target compared with WhatsApp.
Some Russian experts said that blocking WhatsApp would free up technological resources and allow authorities to fully focus on Telegram, their priority target.
Authorities had previously restricted access to WhatsApp before moving to finally banning it on Wednesday.
Under President Vladimir Putin, authorities have engaged in deliberate and multipronged efforts to rein in the internet.
They have adopted restrictive laws and banned websites and platforms that don’t comply, and focused on improving technology to monitor and manipulate online traffic.
Quote:The underage daughter of a former Meta safety researcher was bombarded with sexually explicit pictures and propositions within just days of creating her first Instagram account, according to bombshell testimony at a landmark New Mexico trial.
Arturo Béjar, who led a safety-focused team at Mark Zuckerberg’s company from 2009 to 2015, told jurors he decided to return as a consultant in 2019 after becoming alarmed at the sick messages his then-14-year-old daughter had received on Instagram, including “unsolicited penis pictures.”
“I was with her when she created the account,” said Béjar, who appeared to choke up several times. “I didn’t know that was going to bring predators to her door, people who attacked her to her door, people who would ask her to sell nude photos of herself when she was a teenager to her door.”
Béjar, who has become an outspoken Meta critic since leaving the company for good in 2021, is a key witness for New Mexico state attorneys, who say the tech giant turned a blind eye as predators and sex creeps targeted kids in order to protect Meta’s profits.
His testimony was set to continue Wednesday, with another round of questions from state attorneys followed by cross-examination by Meta’s defense team.
The online safety expert said Meta changed significantly during his second stint at the company as it scrambled to keep pace with budding rivals like Snap and TikTok. Béjar testified that safety researchers were often stonewalled by top brass, including Zuckerberg and Instagram chief Adam Mosseri, when trying to implement new features meant to protect kids.
Béjar said, for example, that Instagram lacked a feature allowing users to report why they were blocking a particular individual — which meant that he and his daughter had little recourse when trying to alert the company about predators.
“When my daughter got a message saying, ‘Do you want to have sex tonight?’ — first message she gets from a stranger — there was no option [to report],” Béjar said.
He also alleged that Meta was woefully understaffed to address the volume of safety violations it faced. He laid the blame on its use of algorithms, which, he said, helped creeps find potential victims more easily.
"For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ," 1 Thessalonians 5:9
Maranatha!
The Internet might be either your friend or enemy. It just depends on whether or not she has a bad hair day.
Quote:The “ethical hacker” who created the Bluetooth “signal sniffer” being used to try to track Nancy Guthrie’s pacemaker said he created the high-tech tool specifically for the search for the missing matriarch — and that he is now creating an app.
David Kennedy, CEO of TrustedSec, said the sniffer, which has been attached to the Pima County Sheriff’s Department helicopter hovering over Tucson, Arizona, has a range of up to 800 feet.
The renowned “ethical hacker” and Marine veteran who conducted cyber missions for the National Security Agency told The Post that he knew he had an opportunity to help after it was revealed that the mother of “Today” show co-host Savannah Guthrie had a pacemaker.
“When this whole Nancy Guthrie case came out, law enforcement said that her pacemaker had disconnected from her phone, which would indicate that she’s using one of the newer brand pacemakers that have Bluetooth connectivity,” Kennedy said.
Kennedy had previously worked with pacemaker companies to test their ability to withstand hacks, ensuring that no one can “drain the battery or cause it to short circuit,” he explained.
“From there, I wrote a software tool that specifically looks for Bluetooth low-energy devices,” the tech whiz continued.
“Bluetooth has a very low transmit power. But with signal amplifiers, high-gain antennas, and what are called software-defined radios, we can really increase the range that we can see that information can transmit to it.”
Through his testing, Kennedy was able to hook a Bluetooth sniffer to a drone and scan for devices up to 800 feet away.
Kennedy then contacted law enforcement and arranged for one of his colleagues to travel to Pima County, Arizona, to aid in the search for the 84-year-old.
Bluetooth communicates at around 2.4 gigahertz, the same as other wireless devices.
In a perfect world, with no obstructions and a clear line of sight, Kennedy believes the sniffer could detect a Bluetooth-enabled pacemaker up to 5,000 feet away.
But every obstacle — such as the pacemaker being inside Nancy, along with any possible walls behind which she is being held — shortens the effectiveness of the sniffer, Kennedy said.
“A Bluetooth low-energy device only has about what’s called a 10-milliwatt transmit power, which is about a 30- to 35-foot radius. Now you might be wondering, how do you get 800 feet from that? Well, we’re not trying to communicate in a two-way relationship with that device,” he explained.
Quote:A Google spokesperson told Newsweek that a spike in a Google Trends chart is not “definitive evidence” of a search—after Fox News claimed that Google Trends data appears to show searches for Nancy Guthrie’s address before her disappearance.
Fox News claimed that Google Trends data appeared to show searches for Guthrie’s address between June 21 and 28, 2025, and again on January 11 of this year.
Newsweek was unable to verify this Google Trends data.
"Google Trends is designed for understanding trends in large datasets. For topics with low or no searches, a Google Trends chart will often mix in random noise to protect people’s privacy. That means that a Google Trends chart showing a spike for an uncommon topic is not definitive evidence that a search actually happened," a Google spokesperson told Newsweek.
...
What To Know
What is Google Trends?
Google Trends is a tool that shows relative search interest in a topic over a given time period, but it does not show the total number of searches or the total number of people who have searched, according to a Google spokesperson.
For very uncommon searches, Trends data may appear to show some search interest even if there were no actual searches due to statistical noise used as a privacy measure, the spokesperson said. Apparent spikes for low-interest search terms should not be viewed as reflecting actual search activity at an exact time or location by Google users, the spokesperson said.
The spokesperson said Google has not taken any manual action to adjust Trends data in this instance, and random statistical noise can cause differences in what people see for low-volume search terms.
Quote:WASHINGTON — A move by Elon Musk’s SpaceX to shut down Russia’s illegal use of Starlink satellite internet has dealt Moscow a fresh battlefield setback as its casualty rates soar.
On Feb. 1, SpaceX blocked unauthorized Starlink terminals in Ukraine after discovering them mounted on Russian weapons systems and drones obtained on the black market — a violation of Starlink’s terms of service, which ban the use of terminals in offensive operations.
Now, only verified Ukrainian devices are allowed to connect to Starlink — effectively locking Russian users out.
“For three to four days after the shutdown, they really reduced the assault operations,” said Lt. Denis Yaroslavsky, who commands a special reconnaissance unit for the Ukraine Armed Forces.
The disruption comes as Russia suffers its worst death rate since the start of the four-year-old war, US and Ukrainian intelligence officials tell The Post — threatening the Kremlin’s ability to replace those forces sent to slaughter by Vladimir Putin.
“On any given day, depending on your scale of analysis, my sector was already achieving 20:1 [casuality rate] before the shutdown. And we are an elite unit,” a unit commander of Ukraine’s 3rd Army Corps who goes by the codename “Jackie” told The Post, referring to inflicting 20 Russian casualties for every one suffered by their side.
“Regular units have no problem going 5:1 or 8:1.”
“With Starlink down, 13:1 [casualty rate] for a regular unit is easy,” he added.
While the rates vary from theater to theater, [text is missing here.]
While Russian-to-Ukrainian casualty ratios vary across the battlefield, the imbalance got as high as 27 Russian losses for every Ukrainian when they fought to regain the key city of Kupiansk in December, according to a Bloomberg report Monday citing an intelligence assessment provided to the British military.
“Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov told European counterparts this week that Kyiv was able to inflict more Russian casualties than the Kremlin was able to recruit over the last two months,” Bloomberg reported, citing UK Defense Secretary John Healey.
In all, more than 1.2 million Russian troops have been killed, wounded or vanished since February 2022 — “more losses than any major power in any war since World War II,” according to a late January report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
That’s roughly twice the number of Ukraine’s casualties, which the report estimated at between 500,000 and 600,000.
Any degradation of Russia’s battlefield capabilities could shift leverage in Ukraine’s favor as the US pushes for a negotiated end to the conflict, analysts have said.
The elimination of Starlink has also affected the Russian military’s communication systems and methods, affecting the most basic of tools needed to conduct their war.
“I’m sure the Russians have [alternative options], but it takes time to maximize their implementation and this [would take] at least four to six months,” Yaroslavsky said.
Quote:The number of cryptocurrency payments to suspected human trafficking groups surged 85% in 2025 as digital assets play a growing role in illicit online schemes, according to a new report from analytics firm Chainalysis.
Hundreds of millions of transactions on public blockchains exposed links between cryptocurrency payments and human trafficking networks, child sex abuse operations and online scams, according to the report, which was earlier cited by CNBC.
Most of the alleged criminal crypto activity was traced back to a growing criminal ecosystem in Southeast Asia, though the payments themselves were sent from locations around the world, including North and South America, Europe and Australia, according to Chainalysis.
International escort and prostitution services, scam compounds in Southeast Asia and criminals sharing child sex abuse materials largely relied on crypto payments, the report found.
The shocking report also found that these human trafficking networks are no longer hiding on the “dark web” — but operating in plain view on messaging platforms like Telegram, where they recruit victims and organize crypto payments.
“The key takeaway is that the true financial scale is large, at least hundreds of millions of USD worth of crypto transactions, and the physical harm is orders of magnitude greater than any dollar figure,” Chainalysis intelligence analyst Tom McLouth told CNBC.
However, the transparency of public blockchains has also allowed “unprecedented visibility” into these criminal transactions, according to the report.
Authorities and watchdog organizations have been able to identify criminal networks by looking out for key red flags, like a reliance on stablecoin payments or the use of Chinese-language money laundering groups, the report said.
Chinese-language Telegram channels funneled at least $16.1 billion in illicit funds last year, according to Chainalysis.
The report found a significant amount of crypto transactions above $10,000 for international escort and prostitution services. Some listings advertised multi-day “companionship” services and VIP packages for more than $30,000 in cryptocurrency.
Quote:ByteDance will take steps to prevent the unauthorized use of intellectual property on its AI video generator Seedance 2.0, the Chinese technology firm said on Monday, following threats of legal action from US studios, including Disney.
Videos generated by Seedance 2.0, which was released last week, have gone viral in China including one of Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt in a fight. The AI model has been compared to DeepSeek and has been praised for its ability to produce cinematic storylines with just a few prompts.
Disney sent a cease-and-desist letter to ByteDance accusing the firm of using Disney characters to train and power Seedance 2.0 without permission, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters late Sunday.
Disney said ByteDance had pre-packaged Seedance with a pirated library of copyrighted characters from franchises including Star Wars and Marvel, portraying them as if they were public-domain clip art, the person said.
The letter alleged Seedance was reproducing, distributing and creating derivative works featuring Spider-Man, Darth Vader, and other characters, the person added.
“We are taking steps to strengthen current safeguards as we work to prevent the unauthorized use of intellectual property and likeness by users,” ByteDance said in its statement.
It did not elaborate on the measures it was taking.
Online news outlet Axios was the first to report on Disney’s move. Paramount Skydance has also sent a cease-and-desist letter to ByteDance, accusing it of engaging in “blatant infringement” of its intellectual property, Variety reported.
Disney has taken similar actions against Character.AI, demanding that the startup immediately stop the unauthorized use of its copyrighted characters.
In December, Disney signed a licensing deal with OpenAI, letting the startup use characters from Star Wars, Pixar and Marvel franchises in its Sora video generator.
Quote:Palantir announced Tuesday it has moved its headquarters from Denver to Miami – joining a slew of tech firms fleeing to South Florida as a growing number of industry leaders deem it the new Silicon Valley.
Tech giants have been increasingly flocking to Florida from business hubs like New York and California in pursuit of lower taxes, warm weather and safer neighborhoods.
“We have moved our headquarters to Miami, Florida,” Palantir wrote in a brief post on X Tuesday morning.
The company did not immediately respond to inquiries about its reason for the move.
Palantir was founded in Palo Alto, Calif., in 2003 and moved to Denver in 2020 as its CEO Alex Karp emerged as a vocal critic of Silicon Valley’s culture.
Former Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who has long pushed for tech talent to move to Florida, cheered Tuesday’s “watershed moment for Miami.”
“This is the tipping point!” he wrote on X, using numerous exclamation points.
The Post has sought comment from Palantir.
Citadel’s Ken Griffin and real estate magnate Stephen Ross – some of the highest-profile billionaires to move to South Florida during the pandemic – recently launched a $10 million campaign to encourage business leaders to move to the Sunshine State, The Post reported.
“The only place a CEO or founder can scale from 10 employees to 10,000 will be in South Florida,” Ross previously told The Post. “While other cities are still special, they no longer support building business and supporting ambition like you can find here.”
The campaign targets CEOs and investors with national ads and direct outreach, as well as a dedicated concierge program that can help executives relocate operations and navigate state regulations.
Apple has already expanded its presence in South Florida with a new Miami campus, while software company ServiceNow has committed to opening an office in West Palm Beach.
Amazon earlier this year signed a massive office lease in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood.
Quote:YouTube said on Tuesday it has resolved an issue that briefly affected access to the video-sharing platform, after outage-tracking website Downdetector reported widespread global disruptions.
YouTube said that an issue with its recommendation system had prevented videos from appearing across YouTube surfaces.
“The issue with our recommendations system has been resolved, and all of our platforms (YouTube.com, the YouTube app, YouTube Music, Kids, and TV) are back to normal,” YouTube said in an update.
At its peak, there were more than 320,000 user reports of YouTube issues in the U.S., according to Downdetector.
Downdetector’s numbers are based on user-submitted reports. The actual number of affected users may vary.
YouTube also faced outages in countries including India, Britain, Australia, and Mexico, according to DownDetector.
When this happened in Costa Rica as well, I initially thought it was caused by a recent Chromium browser upgrade. Now it seems clear that it had nothing to do with it. I just found out that there was another update available for downloading and I simply fetched and installed it.
Quote:West Virginia’s attorney general sued Apple on Thursday, accusing the iPhone maker of allowing its iCloud service to become what the company’s internal communications called the “greatest platform for distributing child porn.”
Attorney General JB McCuskey, a Republican, accused Apple of prioritizing user privacy over child safety. His office called the case the first of its kind by a government agency over the distribution of child sexual abuse material on Apple’s data storage platform.
“These images are a permanent record of a child’s trauma, and that child is revictimized every time the material is shared or viewed,” McCuskey said in the statement. “This conduct is despicable, and Apple’s inaction is inexcusable.”
Apple in a statement said it has implemented features that prevent children from uploading or receiving nude images and was “innovating every day to combat ever-evolving threats and maintain the safest, most trusted platform for kids.”
“All of our industry-leading parental controls and features, like Communication Safety — which automatically intervenes on kids’ devices when nudity is detected in Messages, shared Photos, AirDrop and even live FaceTime calls — are designed with the safety, security, and privacy of our users at their core,” Apple said.
The US has seen a growing national reckoning over how smartphones and social media harm children. So far, the wave of litigation and public pressure has mostly targeted companies like Meta, Snap, and Google’s YouTube, with Apple largely insulated from scrutiny.
End-to-end encryption
West Virginia’s lawsuit focuses on Apple’s move toward end-to-end encryption, putting digital files outside the reach of both Apple and law enforcement officials. The state alleges Apple’s use of such technology has allowed child abuse material to proliferate on its platform.
For decades, technology and privacy advocates have sparred over end-to-end encryption. Advocates call this vital to ensuring privacy and preventing widespread digital eavesdropping. Governments insist it hinders criminal investigations.
Apple has considered scanning images but abandoned the approach after concerns about user privacy and safety, including worries that it could be exploited by governments looking for other material for censorship or arrest, Reuters has reported.
McCuskey’s office cited a text message Apple’s then anti-fraud chief sent in 2020 stating that because of Apple’s priorities, it was “the greatest platform for distributing child porn.”
The lawsuit in Mason County Circuit Court seeks statutory and punitive damages and requests that a judge force Apple to implement safer product designs including effective measures to detect abusive material.
Alphabet’s Google, Microsoft and other platform providers check uploaded photos or emailed attachments against a database of identifiers of known child sex abuse material provided by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and other clearinghouses.
"For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ," 1 Thessalonians 5:9
Maranatha!
The Internet might be either your friend or enemy. It just depends on whether or not she has a bad hair day.