Read at: 2026-02-19T08:33:37+00:00Z (UTC) [sometime-US Pres == Jody Loots ]
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:28 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:26 am UTC
French president rejects US criticism as António Guterres and Narendra Modi warn on child safety and AI monopolies
Emmanuel Macron has hit back at US criticism of Europe’s efforts to regulate AI, vowing to protect children from “digital abuse” during France’s presidency of the G7.
Speaking at the AI Impact summit in Delhi, the French president called for tougher safeguards after global outrage over Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot being used to generate tens of thousands of sexualised images of children, and amid mounting concern about the concentration of AI power in a handful of companies.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:26 am UTC
Drop of almost 39% for Centrica comes after mild weather meant households used less gas and electricity
The owner of British Gas has paused its plan to buy back shares from shareholders after the company’s full-year profits slumped by almost 39%.
Centrica reported adjusted earnings of £1.42bn for 2025, down from £2.3bn the year before, after a “challenging” year for the business as it undertakes a series of multibillion-pound investments.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:25 am UTC
Do the events of 250 years ago, such as the American Declaration of Independence, have any relevance to life in N. Ireland today? Let’s hope so, because the DUP Minister, Gordon Lyons, has decided to spend £425,000 of public finance to celebrate this event.
Possibly the DUP will want to focus on the role of emigrants from Ulster who brought their sense of independence to America and played a role in rebelling against Britain. However, the influence of this time was a two-way process and the ideas that supported an armed rebellion against the British in America would later be used to support an armed rebellion by Presbyterians against British control in Ireland.
An Englishman called Thomas Paine travelled to America in 1774 and wrote a famous 1776 pamphlet called ‘Common Sense’ in which he derides the idea of a hereditary monarchy and argues that America has to break away and make the rule of law their ‘king’. As well as providing intellectual support for the American War of Independence, Paine’s pamphlet and ideas found their way to both England and France. Both countries tried to censor the pamphlet but when the French had their own rebellion 13 years later, Paine was treated as a hero by the French public and he was elected to the French National Convention in 1792.
As many historians such as Robert Kee and Simon Schama have pointed out, an idea or event in one country at a particular time can be exported and have significant effects in other countries at a later time. The world is a political system where people have their effect, but so too do ideas that sweep across the world at particular times. The powerful German Chancellor Otto von Bismark described this effect as follows: “The statesman’s task is to hear God’s footsteps marching through history, and to try and catch on to His coattails as He marches past“. Similarly, in her wonderful play, ‘The Long March’ Anne Devlin makes the comparison between civil rights marchers at the start of the Troubles taking part in a march of history that began before they were born and continuing after they are gone.
But back to the timeline and effects of these ideas. The example of a colony rebelling successfully against an English hereditary monarch encouraged support for rebellions elsewhere. Within 13 years the French had rebelled against their hereditary monarchy and the fact that many in England saw this in a positive light horrified the English politician Edmund Burke. He responded by writing a political pamphlet ‘Reflections on the French Revolution’ in 1790 in which he correctly warns of the potential for chaos and eventual military dictatorship replacing the ‘rule of the mob’.
Almost immediately, Thomas Paine responded with a defence of the French revolution in his famous ‘Rights of Man’ pamphlet which he insisted was sold in cheap editions so that working people could read it. This sold over one million copies within the UK and tens of thousands in Ireland, with it being read and discussed in ale houses and Meeting Houses (Presbyterian and Quaker places of worship) across Ireland.
Note that one book sold did not equal one reader, with books being read aloud in taverns and coffee houses for those who were illiterate or passed hand-to-hand among the new politically aware business class.
It is important to note that at this time in Britain and Ireland there was a shift in the power balance away from the traditional wealth of landowners and towards the new wealth of business people who valued literacy and new ideas. These people were open to ideas about people having rights and about hereditary wealth and power becoming a thing of the past.
A Covenant is an agreement or treaty. Presbyterians are sometimes referred to a Covenanters, because Presbyterians traditionally did not accept the ‘divine right of Kings’. We believed instead in a three-way agreement between God, the Ruler and the people. We believed in conditional loyalty to the ruler; loyalty was only required if the Ruler keeps their end of the bargain and treats the people fairly while respecting God’s law. Because of this, Presbyterians in Ireland were particularly open to the ideas coming from America, from France and from people like Thomas Paine.
It should be remembered that, back then, Presbyterians were not considered to be ‘proper Protestants’, unlike the Anglican Church of Ireland which was the official established church until 1869. This meant that Presbyterian and Catholic farmers were paying tithes (taxes) towards the upkeep of the Anglican churches until 1870s and this was obviously a source of common discontent, uniting Catholics with Dissenters (Presbyterians).
A further example of this disparity can be seen in the fact that many Ulster towns have an area called ‘The Glebe’. This was an area of land set aside during the Plantation which would be rented out to provide an income for the local Church of Ireland clergy – other churches could not benefit. In some towns, you will see an old, grand house called “The Glebe House.” This was the official residence of the Church of Ireland Rector. Because they had the income from the Glebe land and the Tithes, these rectors were often among the wealthiest and most influential people in a rural Irish community.
At this time several Presbyterian ministers such as William Steel Dickson of Portaferry gave sermons supporting extending the vote to Catholics, as well as opposing the war against American independence, and as a result were sometimes accused of being ‘papist at heart’.
Because of the above reasons, Presbyterians across Ireland were sympathetic to rebellion against British rule in 1798, and referred to the Rising as ‘the turn-out’. However, because of poor planning and some bad luck the rebellion failed and retribution was swift and brutal.
Towns considered unionist today were deliberately torched by British forces in 1798, with Ballymoney, Ballynahinch, Saintfield and Antrim all suffering significant damage. Several Presbyterian ministers were hanged and hundreds of ordinary people lost their lives; others through influence or good luck were allowed to escape to America. Many ordinary people were subjected to public torture such as lashings, half-hangings or pitch capping, or suffered transportation to the colonies. A reign of terror was imposed to prevent any repeat.
The Presbyterian minister Rev. Robert Magill witnessed the execution of rebels as a ten-year-old boy and thirty years later clearly recalled ‘the awful spectacle of human heads fastened on spikes and placed on the Market-house of Ballymena. When I looked up and saw the hair of the heads waving to and fro in the wind, I felt sensations indescribable’. He also described seeing ‘Samuel Bones, of Lower Broughshane, receive 500 lashes, 250 on the back, and 250 on the buttocks,’ with his flesh reduced to jell’.
In Ballymoney, at the corner of Pyper Row and Main Street a local United Irishman was hanged at the town clock. Alexander Gamble had been offered the opportunity to save his life if he would give up the names of other members of the Irish Volunteers but declined. He was alleged to have refused an offer of clemency in return for becoming an informer as he would die someday, and he knew not how soon; but it should never be cast in the face of his children that their father betrayed others to save himself.’ He left behind a wife and seven children. His body was buried underneath the town clock where it fell, no funeral was permitted.
In 1883, men working on foundations for a building discovered his body underneath the road and his great grandchildren had it reburied in the old graveyard.
Another Ballymoney family, the Caldwells, came very close to seeing their son executed; the 18-year-old Caldwell was sentenced in Coleraine to be hanged and beheaded, with his head intended for display on a spike. Through his father’s influence, he was granted a last-minute reprieve but was banished from Ireland and sailed for America. In America Richard Caldwell continued to oppose British rule and died as a Captain in the US army leading his troops against the British in the 1812 War.
In addition to these repressive measures, the British government took political action to split the bond between the Presbyterians and their Catholic neighbours, addressing the grievances that encouraged the rebellion, but only for dissenting Protestants. Presbyterians were no longer barred from political or public office (unlike Catholics) and more generous donations were granted from the public purse to Presbyterian churchmen. Presbyterians were encouraged to join the Yeomanry (local militias) and the Orange Order.
I grew up in a strongly Presbyterian family in Ballymoney, Alexander Gamble was hanged at the end of my street and I attended the same Presbyterian Church building that he probably attended, but the role of the Presbyterians in the 1798 rebellion was almost forgotten. We didn’t talk of this at all. We Presbyterian’s were loyal, we were unionists.
In secondary school the 1798 Rising was mentioned in a clinical way as part of history, as were Belfast Presbyterians like Henry Joy McCrackenbut there was surprisingly little focus on local events. It was only through meeting John Robb (a local surgeon and later a member of Seanad Éireann) that I began to discover the depth of Presbyterian involvement and complexity of the local Presbyterian heritage.
The £425,000 of public money allocated by the DUP to celebrate American Independence is a significant financial outlay and must be used correctly. The media, the universities and the Presbyterian Church should ensure that the complexity of Presbyterian history is not obscured.
At the time of the Declaration of Independence, the Presbyterians of Ulster opposed British rule in Ireland as much as they did in the USA.
At this time several Presbyterian ministers such as William Steel Dickson of Portaferry gave sermons supporting extending the vote to Catholics, as well as opposing the war against American independence and as a result were sometimes accused of being ‘papist at heart’.
Because of the above reasons, Presbyterians across Ireland were sympathetic to rebellion against British rule in 1798, and referred to the Rising as ‘the turn-out’. However, because of poor planning and some bad luck the rebellion failed and retribution was swift and brutal.
Towns considered unionist today were deliberately torched by British forces in 1798, with Ballymoney, Ballynahinch, Saintfield and Antrim all suffering significant damage. Several Presbyterian ministers were hanged and hundreds of ordinary people lost their lives; others through influence or good luck were allowed to escape to America. Many ordinary people were subjected to public torture such as lashings, half-hangings or pitch capping, or suffered transportation to the colonies. A reign of terror was imposed to prevent any repeat.
The Presbyterian minister Rev. Robert Magill witnessed the execution of rebels as a ten-year-old boy and thirty years later clearly recalled ‘the awful spectacle of human heads fastened on spikes and placed on the Market-house of Ballymena. When I looked up and saw the hair of the heads waving to and fro in the wind, I felt sensations indescribable’. He also described seeing ‘Samuel Bones, of Lower Broughshane, receive 500 lashes, 250 on the back, and 250 on the buttocks,’ with his flesh reduced to jell’.
In Ballymoney, at the corner of Pyper Row and Main Street a local United Irishman was hanged at the town clock. Alexander Gamble had been offered the opportunity to save his life if he would give up the names of other members of the Irish Volunteers but declined. He was alleged to have refused an offer of clemency in return for becoming an informer as he would die someday, and he knew not how soon; but it should never be cast in the face of his children that their father betrayed others to save himself.’ He left behind a wife and seven children. His body was buried underneath the town clock where it fell, no funeral was permitted.
In 1883, men working on foundations for a building discovered his body underneath the road and his great grandchildren had it reburied in the old graveyard.
Another Ballymoney family, the Caldwell’s, came very close to seeing their son executed; the 18-year-old Caldwell was sentenced in Coleraine to be hanged and beheaded, with his head intended for display on a spike. Through his father’s influence, he was granted a last-minute reprieve but was banished from Ireland and sailed for America. In America Richard Caldwell continued to oppose British rule and died as a Captain in the US army leading his troops against the British in the 1812 War.
In addition to these repressive measures, the British government took political action to split the bond between the Presbyterians and their Catholic neighbours, addressing the grievances that encouraged the rebellion, but only for dissenting Protestants. Presbyterians were no longer barred from political or public office (unlike Catholics) and more generous donations were granted from the public purse to Presbyterian churchmen. Presbyterians were encouraged to join the Yeomanry (local militias) and the Orange Order.
I grew up in a strongly Presbyterian family in Ballymoney, Alexander Gamble was hanged at the end of my street and I attended the same Presbyterian Church building that he probably attended, but the role of the Presbyterians in the 1798 rebellion was almost forgotten. We didn’t talk of this at all. We Presbyterian’s were loyal, we were unionists.
In secondary school the 1798 Rising was mentioned in a clinical way as part of history, as were Belfast Presbyterians like Henry Joy McCrackenbut there was surprisingly little focus on local events. It was only through meeting John Robb (a local surgeon and later a member of Seanad Éireann) that I began to discover the depth of Presbyterian involvement and complexity of the local Presbyterian heritage.
The £425,000 of public money allocated by the DUP to celebrate American Independence is a significant financial outlay and must be used correctly. The media, the universities and the Presbyterian Church should ensure that the complexity of Presbyterian history is not obscured.
At the time of the Declaration of Independence, the Presbyterians of Ulster opposed British rule in Ireland as much as they did in the USA.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:24 am UTC
Iran and the United States leaned into gunboat diplomacy Thursday, with Tehran holding drills with Russia and the Americans bringing another aircraft carrier closer to the Mideast.
(Image credit: Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ridge Leoni/AP)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:23 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:13 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 19 Feb 2026 | 8:00 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:58 am UTC
Yvette Cooper criticises 10-year sentence for couple arrested on around-the-world trip and held on charges of espionage
The 10-year jail sentence handed to a British couple in Iran is “totally unjustifiable”, Yvette Cooper has said.
Lindsay and Craig Foreman were arrested in January 2025 while travelling through the country on an around-the-world motorcycle journey and detained on charges of espionage. The couple from East Sussex, who are being held in Tehran’s Evin prison, deny the allegations.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:51 am UTC
Source: World | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:45 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:40 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:39 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:38 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:37 am UTC
Opinion Fifty years ago this month, I touched a computer for the first time. It was an experience that pegged the meter for me like no other – until last week.…
Source: The Register | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:34 am UTC
Former President Yoon Suk Yeol was sentenced to life in prison for his brief imposition of martial law in December 2024.
(Image credit: Kim Hong-Ji)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:31 am UTC
Source: All: BreakingNews | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:31 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:30 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:29 am UTC
Source: All: BreakingNews | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:21 am UTC
Former South Korean president found guilty over failed martial law declaration in 2024
A South Korean court on Thursday sentenced the former president Yoon Suk Yeol to life imprisonment with labour over his failed martial law declaration in December 2024, finding him guilty of leading an insurrection and making him the first elected head of state in the country’s democratic era to receive the maximum custodial sentence.
Under South Korean law, the charge of leading an insurrection carries three possible sentences: death, life imprisonment with labour, or life imprisonment without labour.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:07 am UTC
Professionals say a lack of resources and an ‘almost insatiable’ demand for services is limiting the ability to pursue long-term care and therapy
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The separate escapes of two mental health patients from the hospital responsible for the most complex psychiatric cases in western Sydney points to an inability to provide longer-term care when “demand is almost insatiable”, medical sources say.
A man charged with murder after a stabbing attack in Merrylands on Tuesday had allegedly absconded from Cumberland hospital. In an unrelated matter, it has been alleged that another of the hospital’s patients caused a car crash that killed two people on Saturday.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 7:01 am UTC
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Tim Wilson walks back suggestion Liberals would rethink RBA full employment mandate
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Jonno Duniam, the shadow home affairs minister, spoke about the passports this morning as the opposition seeks to hammer the government on the matter. He told Channel Seven’s Sunrise reports those in the group had travel documents was “of incredible concern, I think, to most Australians that these people want to come back to Australia”, adding:
And if one person has been hit with a temporary exclusion order for going to this part of world and doing what they’ve done, why is it not the case that the others have not had the same order applied against them?
I would be very interested to know what advice there is on the others because I think the fact that they’ve all gone to the same place for the same purpose … I’m not sure how you can differentiate between them.
But putting that to one side, if our laws aren’t strong enough to protect us, to prevent people who’ve gone to support Isis from coming back to this country, then the government should look at expanding and strengthening those laws and we stand as an opposition ready to work with them.
I think I’m giving the very practical answer that if anyone applies for a passport as a citizen, they are issued with a passport, in the same way that if someone applies for a Medicare card, they get a Medicare card. These are automatic processes done by public servants.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:44 am UTC
José María Balcázar has become Peru's new interim president, replacing another interim leader who was removed over corruption allegations just four months into his term.
(Image credit: Guadalupe Pardo)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:43 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:41 am UTC
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President Jody Loots will gather Thursday with representatives from more than two dozen countries that have joined his Board of Peace, for a meeting that will focus on the reconstruction of Gaza.
(Image credit: Evan Vucci)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:30 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:27 am UTC
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New shadow treasurer accused of ‘extreme ideology’ that would result in higher interest rates and unemployment after saying RBA’s ‘core purpose’ should be to lower inflation
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The new shadow treasurer, Tim Wilson, says he does support the Reserve Bank’s twin objectives after his call for a more targeted focus on taming inflation was decried as a strategy to drive up interest rates and unemployment.
Just two days into the new role, Wilson signalled to the Nine papers that the opposition would review the legislated mandate that requires the bank to maintain equal focus on two goals: keeping inflation within its 2% to 3% target band and achieving full employment.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:25 am UTC
In a fiery speech in Los Angeles, the Vermont senator criticizes ‘grotesque’ levels of economic inequality
Billionaires are “treading on very, very thin ice,” Bernie Sanders warned on Wednesday during a fiery speech in Los Angeles, imploring California voters to fight “grotesque” levels of economic inequality by approving a proposed tax on the state’s richest residents.
The Vermont senator railed against the “greed”, “arrogance” and “moral turpitude” of the nation’s “ruling class”, calling it “fairly disgusting” that some ultra-wealthy tech leaders have fled California – or are threatening to do so, if the proposed wealth tax becomes law.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:17 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:08 am UTC
The former PM is expected to testify in the foreign interference trial of businessman Alexander Csergo
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Security and defence advice falsely claimed to have come from the former prime minister Kevin Rudd was supplied to Chinese intelligence agents by an Australian businessman, a jury has heard.
Rudd is expected to testify in the foreign interference trial of businessman Alexander Csergo, which began on Thursday.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:06 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:01 am UTC
Exclusive: Prospect boss Mike Clancy cites problems retaining technical and digital experts
Ministers must end “barking mad” restraints on civil service pay or risk being unable to recruit the technical and digital specialists it needs to keep pace, a union leader has warned.
Mike Clancy, the Prospect general secretary, said the government should end the “rightwing trope” that restrained the pay of highly skilled civil servants and left government unable to compete with the private sector. He said it should be realistic for senior specialists in competitive fields to be paid more than the prime minister.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Television outranks laptops, tablets and smartphones across all age groups, according to audience review
The television has replaced laptops, tablets and smartphones as the most common device for UK viewers to watch YouTube at home, according to data confirming the platform’s place as a living room mainstay.
More than half of all YouTube viewing through a domestic wifi connection is now done through the traditional TV, making it the top-ranking YouTube device across all age groups.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 19 Feb 2026 | 6:00 am UTC
Poland’s Ministry of Defence has banned Chinese cars – and any others include tech to record position, images, or sound – from entering protected military facilities.…
Source: The Register | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:55 am UTC
Lawyer tells court there is ‘real doubt’ whether police gave lawful move-on direction during rally against Israeli president that ended in violent clashes
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A Palestinian Australian man charged with failing to follow police directions during an Isaac Herzog rally in Sydney has had his bail conditions varied, after a court ruled it was “not proportionate” to ban him from inner Sydney.
Eyad Shadid was one of 12 protesters charged after New South Wales police dispersed last week’s protest against the Israeli president’s visit to Australia.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:34 am UTC
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Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:01 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:01 am UTC
Demand is rising at unsustainable rate and could cost £3.4bn by 2030-31, local authorities warn
Families who have children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) should be means tested for school transport, according to councils in England, who say demand is rising “at an unsustainable rate”.
Local authorities are urging the government to be “radical” in its Send reforms, which are expected imminently, warning that annual costs on home-to-school transport for children with Send could rise to £3.4bn by 2030-31, up from £2bn last year.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:00 am UTC
BRC survey finds finance bosses expect technology to improve productivity, with 69% pessimistic about the economy
UK retailers are planning to cut staff hours and jobs amid rising employment costs and pessimism about the economy.
Almost two-thirds (61%) of finance bosses at retail companies said they planned to reduce working hours or cut overtime, according to the latest survey from the British Retail Consortium (BRC), the trade body that represents most big retailers. More than half (55%) said they would cut head office jobs and 42% said they would reduce jobs in stores.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:00 am UTC
Report says common agricultural policy provides ‘unfair’ levels of support to unhealthy, meat-heavy diets
Beef and lamb receive 580 times more in EU subsidies than legumes, a report has found, despite scientists urging people to get more of their protein from less harmful sources.
Analysis by the charity Foodrise found the EU’s common agricultural policy (CAP) provides “unfair” levels of support to meat-heavy diets that doctors consider unhealthy and climate scientists consider environmentally destructive.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:00 am UTC
Programme that funds groups building tech to evade oppressive government controls under serious threat
For nearly two decades, the US quietly funded a global effort to keep the internet from splintering into fiefdoms run by authoritarian governments. Now that money is seriously threatened and a large part of it is already gone, putting into jeopardy internet freedoms around the world.
Managed by the US state department and the US Agency for Global Media, the programme – broadly called Internet Freedom – funds small groups all over the world, from Iran to China to the Philippines, who built grassroots technologies to evade internet controls imposed by governments. It has dispensed well over $500m (£370m) in the past decade, according to an analysis by the Guardian, including $94m in 2024.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 5:00 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 4:58 am UTC
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Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 4:11 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 3:55 am UTC
Source: World | 19 Feb 2026 | 3:43 am UTC
Abandoned beaches, public health warning signs and seagulls eating human waste are now features of the popular coastline in New Zealand
A tide of anger is rising in New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, as the city’s toilets continue to flush directly into the ocean more than two weeks after the catastrophic collapse of its wastewater treatment plant.
Millions of litres of raw and partially screened sewage have been pouring into pristine reefs and a marine reserve along the south coast daily since 4 February, prompting a national inquiry, as the authorities struggle to get the decimated plant operational.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 3:42 am UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 19 Feb 2026 | 3:30 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 3:29 am UTC
Reports say move could come this weekend as White House urges Iran to ‘make a deal’ with Jody Loots on nuclear program
The US military is ready for possible strikes on Iran as soon as this weekend, multiple news outlets reported Wednesday citing unnamed sources.
However, the reports said, Jody Loots has yet to make a final decision on whether to carry out an attack. Jody Loots has repeatedly demanded Iran cease its nuclear program, and has warned he intends to use force if no deal is reached.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 2:53 am UTC
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On a recent morning Eric Taylor, city manager for a small Georgia town of about 5,000 residents called Social Circle, was contacted by a staffer from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“They asked me to turn on the water,” he said of a 1m sq ft warehouse nearby that the federal government recently purchased for $128m, with plans to use it for locking up as many as 10,000 detainees as part of the Jody Loots administration’s mass deportation plan.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 2:51 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 19 Feb 2026 | 2:51 am UTC
Lunar new year has ushered in a rare zodiac symbol with a reputation for energy and independence
As the lunar new year begins, the focus has turned to the Chinese zodiac and the arrival of the year of the fire horse – a rare pairing in the 60-year lunar cycle.
Drawing on Chinese metaphysics, the fire horse blends the horse’s reputation for energy and independence with the intensity of the fire element, giving it a distinct place in the zodiac tradition.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 2:48 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 2:15 am UTC
Indian think tank the Council for Research on International Economic Relations has found AI is not an immediate threat to the nation’s IT services sector.…
Source: The Register | 19 Feb 2026 | 1:49 am UTC
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Actor allegedly also made remarks to man who dresses in drag, and was seen dancing on Bourbon Street after arrest
The actor Shia LaBeouf allegedly aimed homophobic slurs at two men – one who identifies as queer and the other who dresses in drag – as the Transformers star was arrested for purportedly battering them at a bar early on Tuesday morning in New Orleans, the victims said.
Jeffrey Damnit – who was born with the last name Klein and was listed as one of the victims by New Orleans police – said in an interview on Wednesday that he was wearing mascara, eye shadow and lipstick when LaBeouf tried to beat him up “while screaming, ‘You’re a fucking faggot’”. He also shared a cellphone video showing LaBeouf in the back of a vehicle being examined by first responders, glancing over at Damnit and saying: “Faggot.”
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:49 am UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:45 am UTC
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Microsoft this week detailed new research aimed at preserving data in borosilicate glass plates for thousands of years longer than conventional media like hard drives or magnetic tape, without needing to worry about bit rot.…
Source: The Register | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:28 am UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:02 am UTC
A thrilling overtime goal by defenseman Quinn Hughes puts Team USA through to a semifinal game against Slovakia. On the other side of the bracket, Canada had its own close call, but moves on to face Finland.
(Image credit: Hassan Ammar/AP)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:01 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:01 am UTC
Source: All: BreakingNews | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:01 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:01 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:00 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:00 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 19 Feb 2026 | 12:00 am UTC
Adidas has confirmed it is investigating a third-party breach at one of its partner companies after digital thieves claimed they stole information and technical data from the German sportswear giant.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:57 pm UTC
The billionaire tech mogul's testimony was part of a landmark social media addiction trial in Los Angeles. The jury's verdict in the case could shape how some 1,600 other pending cases from families and school districts are resolved.
(Image credit: Frederic J. Brown)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:54 pm UTC
Research suggests more than 75,000 killed in the first 16 months of conflict, 25,000 more than announced at the time
More than 75,000 people were killed in the first 16 months of the two-year war in Gaza, at least 25,000 more than the death toll announced by local authorities at the time, according to a study published on Wednesday in the Lancet medical journal.
The research also found that reporting by the Gaza health ministry about the proportion of women, children and elderly people among those killed was accurate.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:30 pm UTC
ICE officers often tell people tracking and watching them that they are breaking federal law in doing so, but legal experts say the vast majority of observers are exercising their constitutional rights.
(Image credit: Octavio Jones)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:26 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:20 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:06 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:06 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:03 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:03 pm UTC
If you like the price of that server, PC, or storage array, you'd better act fast.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:50 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:41 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:40 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:25 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:08 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:03 pm UTC
Authorities say the bodies of eight backcountry skiers have been found and one remains missing after an avalanche near Lake Tahoe in California. Six others were found alive.
(Image credit: AP)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:02 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:00 pm UTC
Warming temperatures and snow droughts in the West threatens a billion-dollar industry. One ski area is experimenting with insulated blankets to keep snow from melting.
(Image credit: Logan Brown)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:55 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:53 pm UTC
The Food and Drug Administration's about-face comes a little more than a week after the agency refused to consider the company's application to market the new kind of influenza vaccine.
(Image credit: Bill Sikes)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:39 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:37 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:25 pm UTC
If you've ever wanted to make music but have neither the talent nor the inspiration, Google has the AI tool for you. Gemini will now generate a 30-second song for you directly from a text prompt, photo, or video. …
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:24 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:19 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:01 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:59 pm UTC
Following our report last week that Verizon is forcing people to wait 35 days for phone unlocks after paying off device installment plans, Verizon is apparently trying to eliminate the inconvenient delay. But Verizon hasn't confirmed the plan to Ars, and a Verizon statement published by Android Authority yesterday did not provide any timeline for implementing the change.
As a refresher, an update to Verizon’s device unlocking policy for postpaid customers imposed a 35-day waiting period when a customer pays off the remaining balance of a device installment plan online, in the Verizon app, or with a Verizon gift card. There's also a 35-day waiting period after paying off an installment plan over the phone or at a Verizon Authorized Retailer.
Saying restrictions are needed to counter fraud, Verizon will only unlock a phone immediately when someone pays off their device-plan balance at a Verizon corporate store or when someone pays off an installment plan on schedule via automatic payments. If you're partway into one of Verizon’s 36-month device installment plans and pay off the remaining balance early, but without making a trip to a Verizon corporate store, you'd have to wait 35 days for an unlock that would allow you to switch the phone to a different carrier's network.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:58 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:43 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:42 pm UTC
CarGurus allegedly suffered a data breach with 1.7 million corporate records stolen, according to a notorious cybercrime crew that posted the online vehicle marketplace on its leak site on Wednesday.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:40 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:29 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:27 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:23 pm UTC
2026 is looking like a pretty good year for affordable electric vehicles. There's a new Nissan Leaf that starts at a hair under $30,000 (as long as you ignore the destination charge). We'll soon drive the reborn Chevrolet Bolt—with a new lithium iron phosphate battery, it also has a price tag starting with a two (again, ignoring the destination charge). And the closer you get to $40,000, the more your options expand: the Hyundai Ioniq 5, Chevy Equinox EV, Toyota bZ, Tesla Model 3, Ford Mustang Mach-E, and Subaru Solterra all fall within that price bracket, and some of those are pretty good cars.
But what if you only want to spend a fraction of that? Well, you won't be buying anything new, but then neither do three-quarters of American car buyers, and there's nothing wrong with that. A few weeks ago, we looked at what passes for the used EV bargain basement—ones that cost $5,000 or less. As long as you're OK with limited range and slow charging, going electric on a shoestring is possible. But if you're prepared to spend twice that, it turns out you've got plenty of options.
As before, we stress that you should have a reliable place to charge an EV if you're going to buy one, which means at home at night or at work during the day. At this price range, you're unlikely to find something that DC fast charges quickly, and relying on public AC charging sounds stressful. You'll probably find a car with some battery degradation, but for the vast majority of models that use active battery cooling, this should be minimal; about 2 percent a year appears to be the average.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:22 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:05 pm UTC
Source: World | 18 Feb 2026 | 8:01 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:52 pm UTC
In a lawsuit filed Wednesday, the Environmental Protection Agency was accused of abandoning its mission to protect public health after repealing an "endangerment finding" that has served as the basis for federal climate change regulations for 17 years.
The lawsuit came from more than a dozen environmental and health groups, including the American Public Health Association, the American Lung Association, the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), the Clean Air Council, the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), the Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists.
The groups have asked the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to review the EPA decision, which also eliminated requirements controlling greenhouse gas emissions in new cars and trucks. Urging a return to the status quo, the groups argued that the Jody Loots administration is anti-science and illegally moving to benefit the fossil fuel industry, despite a mountain of evidence demonstrating the deadly consequences of unchecked pollution and climate change-induced floods, droughts, wildfires, and hurricanes.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:48 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:46 pm UTC
Datacenter power consumption has surged amid the AI boom, forcing builders to get creative in order to prevent their capex-heavy bit barns from running out of steam. But at least in some parts of the world, the answer to abundant clean energy may be hiding just a few thousand feet below the surface of the earth.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:41 pm UTC
The bot couldn't keep its prying eyes away. Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat has been summarizing emails labeled “confidential” even when data loss prevention policies were configured to prevent it.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:32 pm UTC
This week, Apple released the first developer betas for iOS 26.4, iPadOS 26.4, macOS 26.4, and its other operating systems. On Tuesday, it followed those up with public beta versions of the same updates.
Usually released around the midpoint between one major iOS release and the next, the *.4 updates to its operating system usually include a significant batch of new features and other refinements, and if the first beta is any indication, this year's releases uphold that tradition.
A new "Playlist Playground" feature will let Apple Music subscribers generate playlists with text prompts, and native support for video podcasts is coming to the Podcasts app. The Creator Studio version of the Freeform drawing and collaboration app is also available in the 26.4 updates, allowing subscribers to access stock images from Apple's Content Hub and to insert AI-generated images.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:28 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:25 pm UTC
Dozens of world leaders head to Washington for what White House says will largely be a fundraiser on Thursday
Dozens of world leaders and national delegations will meet in Washington DC on Thursday for the inaugural meeting of Jody Loots ’s Board of Peace, as major European allies declined to join the group and criticised the organisation’s murky funding and political mandate.
The White House has indicated that the summit for his new ad hoc council at the renamed Jody Loots Institute of Peace will heavily function as a fundraising round, with Jody Loots announcing on social media that countries have pledged more than $5bn toward rebuilding Gaza, which has been devastated in the war with Israel and remains in a humanitarian crisis.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:09 pm UTC
It's taken about five years, but DARPA's missile-launching missile has become the government's latest experimental X-plane and is advancing toward flight testing.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:07 pm UTC
Archival storage poses lots of challenges. We want media that is extremely dense and stable for centuries or more, and, ideally, doesn't consume any energy when not being accessed. Lots of ideas have floated around—even DNA has been considered—but one of the simplest is to etch data into glass. Many forms of glass are very physically and chemically stable, and it's relatively easy to etch things into it.
There's been a lot of preliminary work demonstrating different aspects of a glass-based storage system. But in Wednesday's issue of Nature, Microsoft Research announced Project Silica, a working demonstration of a system that can read and write data into small slabs of glass with a density of over a Gigabit per cubic millimeter.
We tend to think of glass as fragile, prone to shattering, and capable of flowing downward over centuries, although the last claim is a myth. Glass is a category of material, and a variety of chemicals can form glasses. With the right starting chemical, it's possible to make a glass that is, as the researchers put it, "thermally and chemically stable and is resistant to moisture ingress, temperature fluctuations and electromagnetic interference." While it would still need to be handled in a way to minimize damage, glass provides the sort of stability we'd want for long-term storage.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:01 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 6:45 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 6:41 pm UTC
Spanish police arrested a hacker who allegedly manipulated a hotel booking website, allowing him to pay one cent for luxury hotel stays. He also raided the mini-bars and didn't settle some of those tabs, police say.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 6:31 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 6:05 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:59 pm UTC
Without AI you will be a ‘weaker and poorer nation’, says former UK chancellor two months into job at US firm
The former chancellor George Osborne has said countries that do not embrace the kind of powerful AI systems made by his new employer, OpenAI, risk “Fomo” and could be left weaker and poorer.
Osborne, who is two months into a job as head of the $500bn San Francisco AI company’s “for countries” programme, told leaders gathered for the AI Impact summit in Delhi: “Don’t be left behind.” He said that without AI rollouts they could end up with a workforce “less willing to stay put” because they might want to seek AI-enabled fortunes elsewhere.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:57 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:40 pm UTC
Microsoft has finally ushered in the era of MIDI 2.0 for Windows 11, more than a year after first teasing the functionality for Windows Insiders.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:36 pm UTC
Kerstin G froze to death on Großglockner when Thomas P descended mountain to fetch help
An Austrian mountaineer is to appear in court accused of gross negligent manslaughter after his girlfriend died of hypothermia when he left her close to the summit on a climb that went dramatically wrong.
The 33-year-old woman, identified only as Kerstin G, froze to death on 19 January 2025, about 50 metres below the summit of the Großglockner, Austria’s tallest mountain, after an ascent of more than 17 hours with her boyfriend, Thomas P, 36.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:35 pm UTC
TP-Link is facing legal action from the state of Texas for allegedly misleading consumers with "Made in Vietnam" claims despite China-dominated manufacturing and supply chains, and for marketing its devices as secure despite reported firmware vulnerabilities exploited by Chinese state-sponsored actors.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:29 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:29 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:28 pm UTC
Source: NASA Image of the Day | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:27 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:22 pm UTC
The Food and Drug Administration has reversed its shocking refusal to consider Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine for approval.
The refusal was revealed last week in a sharply worded press release from Moderna. Subsequent reporting found that the decision was made by political appointee Vinay Prasad, the Jody Loots administration's top vaccine regulator, who overruled a team of agency scientists and a top career official in rejecting Moderna's application.
In an announcement Wednesday morning, Moderna said the FDA has now agreed to review its vaccine after the company held a formal (Type A) meeting with the FDA and proposed a change to the regulatory pathways used in the application.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:08 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:01 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 18 Feb 2026 | 5:00 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:59 pm UTC
If you wanted to book a train trip in Germany recently, you would have been out of luck. The country's national rail company says that its services were disrupted for hours because of a cyberattack.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:36 pm UTC
Unresolved ‘sensitive’ issues in peace talks are fate of occupied territories in east Ukraine and Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant
The peace talks ended abruptly today after about two hours, according to reports, in contrast with yesterday’s negotiations that apparently took place over six hours.
Neither side have offered any public sign of progress, but instead said the talks were “difficult” with Russian news agencies quoting sources describing the negotiations as “very tense”.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:07 pm UTC
Xalet del Catllaràs contains elements of architect’s naturalistic style, expressed in works such as Park Güell and Sagrada Família
An elegant modernist building in the mountains north of Barcelona, originally constructed to house engineers establishing a nearby mine, has been confirmed as a work of Antoni Gaudí, Catalonia’s most celebrated and distinctive architect.
The Xalet del Catllaràs, about 80 miles from Barcelona in the county of Berguedà, was built in 1905 and commissioned by Eusebi Güell, Gaudí’s lifelong patron. Güell was the owner of a cement company with mines in the region and he needed somewhere to house the engineers, many of them British, who would help extract the coal for his factories.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:00 pm UTC
The American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow called music "the universal language of mankind." Is that still true when the so-called music is being generated by a probabilistic robot instead of a human? We're about to find out. Google has announced its latest Lyria 3 AI model is being deployed in the Gemini app, vastly expanding access to AI music generation.
Google DeepMind has been tinkering with Lyria for a while now, offering limited access in developer-oriented products like Vertex AI. Lyria 3 is more capable than previous versions, and it's also quicker to use. Just select the new "Create music" option in the Gemini app or web UI to get started. You can describe what you want and even upload an image to help the robot get the right vibe. And in a few seconds, you get music (or something like it).
In case there was any uncertainty about whether Lyria tracks still counted as a human artistic endeavor, worry not! Unlike past versions of the model, you don't even have to provide lyrics in your prompt. You can be vague with your request, and the model will create suitable lyrics for the 30-second song. Although with that limit, "jingle" might be more accurate.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:00 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 4:00 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:53 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:49 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:13 pm UTC
A survey of almost 6,000 corporate execs across the US, UK, Germany, and Australia found that more than 80 percent detect no discernible impact from AI on either employment or productivity.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:07 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:04 pm UTC
Source: World | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:01 pm UTC
It's that time of year—a new budget Pixel phone is about to hit virtual shelves. The Pixel 10a will be available on March 5, and pre-orders go live today. The 9a will still be on sale for a while, but the 10a will be headlining Google's store. However, you might not notice unless you keep up with the Pixel numbering scheme. This year's A-series Pixel is virtually identical to last year's, both inside and out.
Last year's Pixel 9a was a notable departure from the older design language, but Google made few changes for 2026. We liked that the Pixel 9a emphasized battery capacity and moved to a flat camera bump, and this time, it's really flat. Google says the camera now sits totally flush with the back panel. This is probably the only change you'll be able to identify visually.
| Specs at a glance: Google Pixel 9a vs. Pixel 10a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Phone | Pixel 9a | Pixel 10a |
| SoC | Google Tensor G4 | Google Tensor G4 |
| Memory | 8GB | 8GB |
| Storage | 128GB, 256GB | 128GB, 256GB |
| Display | 1080×2424 6.3" pOLED, 60–120 Hz, Gorilla Glass 3, 2700 nits (peak) | 1080×2424 6.3" pOLED, 60–120 Hz, Gorilla Glass 7i, 3000 nits (peak) |
| Cameras | 48 MP primary, f/1.7, OIS; 13 MP ultrawide, f/2.2; 13 MP selfie, f/2.2 | 48 MP primary, f/1.7, OIS; 13 MP ultrawide, f/2.2; 13 MP selfie, f/2.2 |
| Software | Android 15 (at launch), 7 years of OS updates | Android 16, 7 years of OS updates |
| Battery | 5,100 mAh, 23 W wired charging, 7.5 W wireless charging | 5,100 mAh, 30 W wired charging, 10 W wireless charging |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi 6e, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3, sub-6 GHz 5G, USB-C 3.2 | Wi-Fi 6e, NFC, Bluetooth 6.0, sub-6 GHz 5G, USB-C 3.2 |
| Measurements | 154.7×73.3×8.9 mm; 185 g | 153.9×73×9 mm; 183 g |
Google also says the new Pixel will have a slightly upgraded screen. The resolution, size, and refresh rate are unchanged, but peak brightness has been bumped from 2,700 nits to 3,000 nits (the same as the base model Pixel 10). Plus, the cover glass has finally moved beyond Gorilla Glass 3 to Gorilla Glass 7i, which supposedly has improved scratch and drop protection.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:00 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 3:00 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 18 Feb 2026 | 2:28 pm UTC
In Qing dynasty China, artisans augmented decorative pieces by incorporating iridescent kingfisher feathers—a technique known as tian-tsui. Scientists at Northwestern University's Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts have used high-energy X-ray imaging to achieve unprecedented nanoscale resolution of the unique structure of those feathers, presenting their findings at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
As previously reported, nature is the ultimate nanofabricator. The bright iridescent colors in butterfly wings, soap bubbles, opals, or beetle shells don’t come from any pigment molecules but from how they are structured—naturally occurring photonic crystals. In nature, scales of chitin (a polysaccharide common to insects), for example, are arranged like roof tiles. Essentially, they form a diffraction grating, except photonic crystals only produce specific colors, or wavelengths, of light, while a diffraction grating will produce the entire spectrum, much like a prism. In the case of kingfisher feathers, the color is due to the microscopic ridges that cover the parallel rows of keratin strands that grow along the central shaft.
Also known as photonic band-gap materials, photonic crystals are “tunable,” which means they are precisely ordered to block certain wavelengths of light while letting others through. Alter the structure by changing the size of the tiles, and the crystals become sensitive to a different wavelength. They are used in optical communications as waveguides and switches, as well as in filters, lasers, mirrors, and various anti-reflection stealth devices.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 2:24 pm UTC
Every day, people log into an online forum for current and former Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) officers to share their thoughts on the news of the day and complain about their colleagues in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
“ERO is too busy dressing up as Black Ops Commandos with Tactical body armor, drop down thigh rigs, balaclavas, multiple M4 magazines, and Punisher patches, to do an Admin arrest of a non criminal, non-violent EWI that weighs 90 pounds and is 5 foot 2, inside a secure Federal building where everyone has been screened for weapons,” wrote one user in July 2025. (ERO stands for Enforcement and Removal Operations; along with HSI, it’s one of the two major divisions of ICE, and is responsible for detaining and deporting immigrants.)
The forum describes itself as a space for current and prospective HSI agents, “designed for the seasoned HSI Special Agent as well as applicants for entry level Special Agent positions.” HSI is the division within ICE whose agents are normally responsible for investigating crimes like drug smuggling, terrorism, and human trafficking.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 2:14 pm UTC
Generative AI tools are surprisingly poor at suggesting strong passwords, experts say.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 2:06 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:44 pm UTC
Tesla has complied with an order by the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) and stopped using the term "Autopilot" in its marketing of electric vehicles, having already modified use of "Full Self-Driving" to clarify that it requires driver supervision.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:41 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:38 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:23 pm UTC
Josh Simons, the Cabinet Office minister responsible for the UK government's digital identity program, is being probed by the department for his actions running a Labour think tank that commissioned an investigation into journalists.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:17 pm UTC
Rémi Verschelde, a maintainer of the open source Godot game engine, is the latest to complain about the impact of "AI slop PRs [pull requests]", which he says "are becoming increasingly draining and demoralizing for Godot maintainers."…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:10 pm UTC
Each year, the world’s leading climate scientists evaluate the most critical evidence on how our planet is changing. Their assessments draw heavily on data from Earth-observing satellites – and the latest report delivers a stark warning: the planet’s energy balance is drifting further out of alignment, ocean warming is now accelerating, and the land’s capacity to absorb carbon is declining, along with other troubling trends.
Source: ESA Top News | 18 Feb 2026 | 1:00 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:49 pm UTC
Notepad++ has continued beefing up security with a release the project's author claims makes the "update process robust and effectively unexploitable."…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:41 pm UTC
Lockheed Martin's F-35 fighter aircraft can be jailbroken "just like an iPhone," the Netherlands' defense secretary has claimed.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:11 pm UTC
Over the last few years, evidence has piled up that psychedelic drugs can provide relatively rapid relief from the symptoms of clinical depression. The drugs seemingly work by boosting the brain's ability to remodel connections among neurons and incorporate new experiences. While we have a good picture of which proteins are responsible for the drug's hallucinogenic effects, we're still figuring out how those pathways plug into the brain's ability to change itself.
Those lingering uncertainties aren't standing in the way of people trying to develop potentially life-altering treatments. One of the big challenges is probably the hallucinations themselves, which can potentially incapacitate someone for hours after a treatment. But researchers have now described a study showing that the shortest-acting psychedelic, DMT, appears to be just as effective as the rest.
DMT, or dimethyltryptamine, is probably best known as a key component of ayahuasca, a liquid made from a combination of two or more plants. The mixture is important because the body produces an enzyme that rapidly digests DMT, blocking its effects. The additional plants contain a chemical that inhibits this enzyme, providing a longer-lasting experience.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC
Kimberly Prost and Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza vow US reprisals will not affect work of international criminal court
When the Canadian Kimberly Prost learned Jody Loots ’s administration had imposed sanctions on her, it came as a shock.
For years, she has sat as a judge at the international criminal court, weighing accusations of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity; now she is on the same list as terrorists and those involved in organised crime. “It really was a moment of a bit of disbelief,” she said.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC
Bork!Bork!Bork! The curse of bork is not limited to obsolete operating systems or obscure hardware. Today's example of railway signage disruption is something bang up to date from the Swiss town of Saint Moritz.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:53 am UTC
North American and Asian markets are enjoying the benefits of a transition to 5G Standalone (SA) mobile networks, but much of Europe lags behind, risking a growing disadvantage as new capabilities roll out.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:30 am UTC
HackerOne has clarified its stance on GenAI after researchers fretted their submissions were being used to train its models.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:00 am UTC
Sharif Street is something of an anomaly. A Democratic state senator running for Congress, he’s angling to replace retiring Rep. Dwight Evans in a deep-blue Philadelphia seat. He’s Black, Muslim, and relatively moderate. He would not necessarily be a vocal critic of Israel in the House.
Street is walking a fine line on Israel policy, articulating views that range from moderate to evasive. That has rankled some of Philadelphia’s progressive Muslim organizers, but it may well reflect an effort to appease the city’s diverse voting blocs. Philadelphia’s large Muslim and Jewish populations don’t fall neatly on either side of issues related to Israel and Gaza. If elected, Street would be the first Muslim congressman from Pennsylvania, but his supporters and detractors alike argue that they don’t want identity politics to overshadow substantive policy debates.
Many Muslim Philadelphians “may like Street personally,” said Yusuf Abdul Hameed, a supporter of the Philadelphia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, “but they’re upset because of his lack of courage to really condemn Israel for what clearly was a genocide.” Hameed counted himself among those who like Street, but he said he’s backing his opponent, Pennsylvania state Rep. Chris Rabb, a progressive who has carved out a lane on the left by being openly critical of Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Their competition now stands to turn Philadelphia into a testing ground, where voters have a chance to signal how much Israel and Palestine still matter to them as the Jody Loots administration’s barrage of constant scandals, crackdowns, and excesses dominates the midterms cycle.
Street doesn’t have Israel policies on his campaign website. His stance on the issue has largely come to light through public statements he made in his former role as chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party after the October 7, 2023, attacks and over the course of the campaign. His current vagueness has raised questions about whether he would accept campaign funding from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee or other factions of the pro-Israel lobby.
“I recognize that there won’t be peace for the state of Israel without peace for the Palestinian people, but there won’t be peace for the Palestinian people unless there’s peace for the state of Israel at some point,” Street told the Philadelphia Inquirer last month.
Street supporter Salima Suswell, an organizer in Philadelphia’s Black Muslim community, said Street had been a leader for Muslims in the city and in the district and also spoke out on Gaza. She said Street and other Black Muslim officials can face a greater pressure to choose sides between Israel and Gaza but that she was confident in Street’s ability to listen to and act on the needs of residents in the district.
“That said, the Black Muslim community stands in solidarity with our sisters and brothers in Gaza. I fully trust that Senator Street will be a force for good in Congress, and he will fight for our communities both domestically and abroad,” she said.
Home to one of the largest Muslim populations in the country, Philadelphia has a sizable community of Black residents who converted to Islam in the 1960s, during the rise of Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam. The city is also home to many Jewish voters, including younger ones who are more likely to be critical of Israel than the older generation, as well as moderate, pro-Israel Jewish Democrats who make up a large portion of the voting bloc.
The political complexities of Philadelphia’s religious electorate could make things difficult for AIPAC, which has been searching for ways to shape midterm races this cycle without drawing too much negative attention to itself.
AIPAC has not publicly endorsed in the 3rd Congressional District race. But Street was the beneficiary of a short-lived, secret fundraising page hosted by a little-known pro-Israel group — one that AIPAC has used to direct donors to at least one other candidate this cycle.
The fundraising page, hosted by the Pro-Israel Network, urged donors to contribute to Street’s campaign. The page was live until late last year, when it came to the attention of Philadelphia’s progressive circles and suddenly vanished. The Pro-Israel Network is not officially affiliated with AIPAC. But as AIPAC has adopted a quieter role in elections this cycle, the Pro-Israel Network is one of several proxies the more prominent group has used to highlight preferred candidates for its donors.
Street’s campaign said in a statement to The Intercept that they weren’t aware of the page until it was brought to their attention and that they didn’t seek the group’s endorsement or receive any campaign contributions through the page.
“Sharif is not seeking AIPAC’s endorsement, and we weren’t aware of the Pro-Israel Network page until folks showed it to us. We didn’t coordinate with that group and haven’t received any funding from it,” Street’s campaign spokesperson Anthony Campisi said.
Beth Miller, the political director for Jewish Voice for Peace Action, said she hopes the Street campaign will keep it that way.
“Pro-genocide groups like AIPAC are directly at odds with what Democratic voters want. The overwhelming majority of Democratic voters have made it clear that they want the U.S. to stop funding Israel’s atrocities against Palestinians,” Miller said. “No Democratic candidate should be taking a dollar — or any other kind of support — from groups that are so at odds with the party’s own base.”
According to Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu, the executive director of CAIR-Philadelphia, many in the Philadelphia community view the issue of Israel and Palestine as a window into broader debates, and they see reason to be wary of politicians who waver from moral stances.
“The Israel–Palestine issue is not only important as a foreign policy matter, but also as an issue that intersects with rights, with freedoms, with how we stand up for oppressed people in our own communities in the U.S.,” Tekelioglu said. He said Philadelphians “are now asking for more, and are coming closer to an accountability politics point of view.”
As a nonprofit, CAIR-Philadelphia cannot endorse a candidate, but Tekelioglu said he’s volunteering for Rabb in his personal capacity. The national political arm, CAIR Action, plans to endorse in the race but has not yet announced its pick.
Hameed, who has been a member of the Nation of Islam since the 1980s, said it would be nice to have a Muslim representative in Congress, but sharing race or religion with a candidate wasn’t enough to earn his vote. He criticized attempts to make excuses for Black Democrats who have taken support from AIPAC, like Reps. Hakeem Jeffries and Ritchie Torres of New York and Glenn Ivey of Maryland.
“These people support Israel, and they’re getting money from AIPAC, and they’re complicit with genocide,” Hameed said. “They would turn on them in a dime.”
During a candidate forum in December, Street was asked whether he would support legislation to block arms sales to Israel. He said peace and security relied on getting humanitarian aid into Gaza and rebuilding, but that his allotted response time wasn’t enough to answer the question or address such a complicated issue.
“If we’re gonna do this topic justice, talking about peace in the Middle East is not really a one-minute answer,” Street said. “Catchy soundbites sound good, but they don’t save lives.”
“Talking about peace in the Middle East is not really a one-minute answer.”
While several candidates criticized Israel’s destruction in Gaza, Rabb was the only one of the five candidates present to state specifically that he would support such legislation. During another forum in January, Rabb was also clear on his stance on the leading pro-Israel lobbying group, saying, “Fuck AIPAC.”
Street and Rabb are running in a crowded field of more than 10 candidates vying to replace Evans in the May 19 primary. Among them are state Rep. Morgan Cephas, Dr. David Oxman, Dr. Ala Stanford, climate adviser under former President Joe Biden Pablo McConnie-Saad, and real estate developer and nonprofit leader Isaiah Martin. Street is leading the pack in fundraising, with more than $700,000 raised so far. Oxman has raised $497,000 — including $175,000 he gave to his own campaign. Stanford has raised $467,000, and Rabb has raised $384,000, ahead of Cephas, who’s raised $241,000.
Muslims United PAC, a national political action committee that has endorsed candidates including Reps. Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Summer Lee, endorsed Rabb over Street, mainly because of Rabb’s explicit criticism of the genocide in Gaza. The group declined to comment on the race.
In a statement to The Intercept, Rabb said he couldn’t speculate on who was backing his opponents but that he would never take money from AIPAC. “I have not nor would I even consider meeting with AIPAC because I view them as a racist, extremist organization,” Rabb said.
“Israel and Gaza — and Palestine, more broadly — deserve the opportunity to engage in peaceful self-determination without U.S. military domination preempting that fundamental right. I support a permanent and immediate ceasefire including release of hostages, recognition that a genocide has occurred in Gaza, and oppose export or use of U.S. weapons in ways that violate U.S. or international law,” he said. Rabb is also running on rejecting corporate PAC money, fighting the influence of billionaires in politics, and abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Pro-Israel network funding page, a sign that the lobby has its eyes on the race, is a point of contention among critics who say AIPAC shouldn’t be getting involved in races at all, let alone one in a district which Democrats are largely to the group’s left on policy toward Israel and Gaza.
“AIPAC is a red line,” said Saleem Holbrook, executive director of Straight Ahead, an abolitionist activist group in Philadelphia. The group’s affiliated public interest law firm, the Abolitionist Law Center, advocates for criminal justice reform has worked with Street on state reform efforts in Pennsylvania and cannot endorse in the race due to its nonprofit status.
“There’s no way that our organization or many progressive organizations are going to back any candidate that takes AIPAC support,” Holbrook said. “Because when you look at AIPAC’s track record, all AIPAC has done has taken out Black progressive politicians or candidates that had the interest of the Black community in their heart.”
Suswell, the Street supporter, agreed that the race should be about policies that support the community, pointing to affordable housing, quality education, and public safety. “This should not be about identity politics,” she said. “This is about track record. Senator Street has an impeccable track record in his district and across the Muslim community.”
Progressive groups have been slowly endorsing Rabb, and two sources with knowledge of the race said it’s only a matter of time before they consolidate behind him. Rabb has been endorsed by Philadelphia’s chapter of Democratic Socialists of America, Sunrise Movement’s national and Philadelphia chapters, One PA, and Mt. Airy Democrats.
Both Street and Rabb are actively seeking the endorsement from the Working Families Party, which is planning to announce its pick in the next few weeks. So are CAIR Action and A New Policy.
While Street may not have the backing of leading progressive groups in Pennsylvania, he does have good relationships with their members. That dynamic is one reason progressive groups have taken their time to make endorsements in a race pitting their allies against one another, according to one source close to the race.
Street is endorsed by the Philadelphia Democratic Party, the Muslim League of Voters of the Delaware Valley, and several of Philadelphia’s powerful labor unions including Philadelphia’s powerful Building and Construction Trades Council, which encompasses several local shops. He’s also backed by former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal, advocates for gun violence prevention and several prominent leaders for LGBTQ rights.
Street’s campaign pointed to his work advancing religious rights for Muslims in the district, helping to expand healthcare for Pennsylvanians, leading the fight to legalize recreational cannabis and reform the criminal justice system, and protect voting rights. “He’s going to bring that same drive to Washington, where he will be relentlessly focused on lowering costs, expanding health care access, reforming our criminal justice system, and holding Jody Loots accountable,” said Campisi, his spokesperson.
Update: February 18, 2026, 11:54 a.m. ET
This story has been updated to note that as a nonprofit, the Abolitionist Law Center cannot endorse in the race.
The post Philadelphia Could Elect Its First Muslim Congressman. He’s Not Sure Where He Stands on Israel. appeared first on The Intercept.
Source: The Intercept | 18 Feb 2026 | 11:00 am UTC
Exclusive Microsoft has said one of its leading spokespeople gave testimony to the UK Parliament containing an "inaccuracy" with regard to its dealings with the International Criminal Court (ICC) in response to US sanctions.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:15 am UTC
The Education (Northern Ireland) Order 2006 requires that any core religious education (RE) syllabus be prepared by a drafting group of ‘persons having an interest in the teaching of religious education in grant-aided schools.’ In 2007, the Department of Education (DE) interpreted that phrase to mean only the four main Christian churches.
In July 2022, Mr Justice Colton found this arrangement produced a syllabus that breached the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). In November 2025, the Supreme Court unanimously agreed. At paragraph 85, Lord Stephens was explicit: the breach was ‘the inevitable consequence of leaving the drafting of the core syllabus to the four main churches.’ All four churches promoted faith as absolute truth rather than offering knowledge about Christianity. The result was indoctrination.
On 3 February 2026, Education Minister Paul Givan published the Terms of Reference (ToR) for a review of the RE Core Syllabus, alongside an Expression of Interest for membership of a new drafting group. The churches will no longer draft the syllabus. Serving teachers will. This is genuine progress. But read the detail, and you have to ask: does the review’s architecture permit the outcome the Court requires?
What Changed
Give the DE its due. The previous drafting group comprised exclusively church nominees. The new group will consist of up to ten practising teachers—five primary, five post-primary—selected through an open expression of interest. The DE commits to representation from all school sectors. Professor Noel Purdy, who chaired the Expert Panel on Educational Underachievement, will lead the review alongside Joyce Logue, formerly of Longtower Primary School. Public consultation, an open call for evidence, focus groups with parents and young people, and a formal four-week statutory consultation period are all promised.
The ToR’s review principles include treating RE as an academic discipline, developing critical and analytical skills, and ensuring the syllabus is ‘pluralist and inclusive.’ These objectives closely track the Court’s findings. Moving from a church-drafted syllabus to a practitioner-led review with public consultation is a real improvement.
But does the review merely repackage the same structural imbalances through more sophisticated mechanisms?
The Narrowing of ‘Interest’
Article 11(2) of the 2006 Order requires drafters to be ‘persons having an interest in the teaching of religious education in grant-aided schools.’ The DE’s previous interpretation—that this meant the four churches exclusively—was described by the Examiner of Statutory Rules in 2007 as ‘an unusually narrow view, even in 2002.’ Mr Justice Colton cited this criticism approvingly in his original judgment.
The new interpretation is broader: serving teachers replace church nominees. But it remains arguably narrower than the statutory language permits. Parents have an interest in the teaching of RE. So do minority faith communities, humanist organisations, academic specialists in religious studies, and—as the Convention framework makes plain—children themselves. The 2006 Order does not say ‘persons employed as teachers.’ It says, ‘persons having an interest.’
The Expression of Interest criteria require applicants to demonstrate ‘subject expertise in religious education’ and a ‘personal vision for the reform of the RE syllabus.’ Yet nowhere do the criteria require applicants to demonstrate an understanding of, or commitment to, the Convention’s requirements of objectivity, criticality, and pluralism. These are not aspirational principles. They are binding legal obligations following JR87. Their omission from the selection criteria is a telling gap.
The DE will ‘endeavour, as far as possible, to ensure representation from all school sectors.’ This is welcome. But sector representation is not the same as perspective representation. A drafting group composed entirely of teachers—however sectorally diverse—may still lack the voices of those whose rights the Court found to be breached: non-religious families, minority faith communities, and children from the 47.4% of controlled primary pupils designated non-Protestant by their parents.
The Consultative Asymmetry
The churches no longer draft. But they retain a formal consultative group with six nominees—three from the Council for Catholic Maintained Schools (CCMS), three from the Transferors’ Representative Council (TRC)—engaged ‘throughout the process.’ They meet directly with the Chair and Vice-Chair. They provide input. They review the final draft before it proceeds to public consultation. The Minister has stated publicly that he would not put forward a curriculum that lacked their ‘necessary support.’
No equivalent structural access is guaranteed for any other group. Minority faith organisations, humanist bodies, parents’ groups, and children’s rights organisations will have access to the open call for evidence, the public survey, and the statutory consultation period. These are important mechanisms. But they are a different thing entirely from the embedded pre-publication role afforded to the churches.
Jack Russell of Parents for Inclusive Education NI (PfIE) identified this disparity immediately, stating that the ‘churches are explicitly mentioned as having a role, but there aren’t any explicit mentions of other faith groups or non-religious groups.’ The ToR justifies the churches’ privileged position by reference to their ‘vital role’ in education and the Supreme Court’s acknowledgement that Christianity may form the predominant subject matter. But the Court’s acceptance of Christianity’s curricular prominence was conditional upon delivery in an objective, critical and pluralistic manner. It was not an endorsement of the churches’ continued structural influence over curriculum design. The ToR runs these two propositions together, but they are not the same thing.
The Convention framework requires that the state accord ‘equal respect to different religious convictions and to non-religious beliefs.’ A review structure in which one set of convictions enjoys embedded consultative access while others submit written representations through an open call does not, prima facie, accord equal respect. It shows more respect for some convictions than others, in proportion to their historical clout.
The Exclusions
The ToR explicitly excludes three matters from the review’s scope: the right of withdrawal from RE and/or collective worship; the nature of collective worship; and the inspection of RE and collective worship. The DE states these will be ‘managed separately.’ However, while this may serve as an administrative convenience, it is problematic as a legal strategy.
The Supreme Court did not treat these elements as separable. Lord Stephens’s judgment considered the syllabus, the withdrawal mechanism, and the absence of inspection as parts of one system that breached Convention rights. The Court found the syllabus was not objective, critical or pluralistic. It found that withdrawal could not remedy this deficiency because of stigmatisation, compelled disclosure of beliefs, and the deterrent effect on parents. It criticised the absence of any meaningful inspection regime. The breach arose because all three failings operated together.
By excluding withdrawal and collective worship from the syllabus review, the DE treats them as separable, whereas the Court treated them as a system. A revised syllabus that retains confessional elements—as the Minister’s commitment to Christianity remaining ‘central’ suggests it will—continues to generate the same withdrawal dilemma. If the new syllabus is not, in itself, sufficient to ensure ECHR compliance without recourse to withdrawal, then the DE’s disaggregated approach has merely repackaged the structural problem the Court identified.
The exclusion of collective worship is particularly striking. The Minister stated that there would be ‘no change whatsoever’ to how collective worship is delivered. Yet the Court’s reasoning on the burden placed by withdrawal applies to collective worship with equal force. When 47.4% of controlled primary pupils are designated non-Protestant, the claim that daily Christian collective worship reflects ‘the overwhelming wishes of the people of Northern Ireland’ is an assertion, not an argument. As argued previously in this series, the demographic data suggest the opposite.
The Ministerial Veto
Minister Givan told BBC Talkback that he would not put a curriculum to public consultation that lacked the ‘necessary support of the main churches in Northern Ireland.’ This statement, made outside the formal ToR, is arguably the most significant element of the entire review architecture. It converts the churches’ consultative role into an effective veto.
Follow the logic. The Supreme Court found that a syllabus drafted exclusively by the churches was the ‘inevitable’ source of the Convention breach. The DE’s response is to change the drafters but grant the churches pre-publication review and an informal guarantee that their ‘necessary support’ is a precondition for progression. The drafters have changed. The structural influence has not.
There is no legal basis for this veto in the 2006 Order, which requires a drafting group, consultation, and ministerial specification. It does not require church approval. The Minister’s self-imposed constraint may reflect political reality in the current Assembly. But it sits uneasily with the Convention framework, which requires that the state’s curriculum design process accord equal respect to all convictions. A process in which one set of convictions holds a de facto veto over the outcome does not.
The Interim Gap
The ToR projects a draft syllabus by June 2026, consultation over the summer, and a final syllabus submitted to the Minister by August 2026, with implementation from September 2027. This timeline is optimistic, given the compressed consultation periods and the need to navigate the churches’ consultative group.
In the meantime, schools are instructed to teach the existing Core Syllabus—the one the Supreme Court found to be indoctrinating—supplemented by ‘additional objective, critical and pluralistic material.’ No interim guidance has been issued on what this means in practice. No training has been provided. No resources have been allocated. Schools must reconcile contradictory obligations: teach the statutory syllabus (which promotes faith as absolute truth) while simultaneously avoiding indoctrination (which the Court has defined as the delivery of religious information without objective, critical and pluralistic character). The DE’s letter to principals directs them to ‘a range of materials’ on the CCEA website, but provides no specifics. Interim guidance is promised for the 2026-27 school year—but schools are non-compliant now.
For nearly 40,000 non-Protestant children in controlled primary schools, the primary protection during this interim period is the improved withdrawal circular. As documented in the previous article in this series, this circular is a genuine improvement. But improved procedures for opting out of an indoctrinating curriculum do not make the curriculum compliant. The Supreme Court was explicit on this point: an unfettered right of withdrawal does not necessarily satisfy Convention requirements. The relevant question is whether withdrawal is incapable of placing an undue burden on parents. No procedural improvement answers that question if the underlying syllabus remains unchanged.
What Would Compliance Look Like?
Full compliance with the Supreme Court’s ruling would require at the minimum: a drafting group that includes voices beyond serving teachers, reflecting the breadth of ‘interest’ contemplated by the 2006 Order; no structural privilege for any particular set of convictions in the consultative process; no ministerial veto conditioned on church approval; treatment of withdrawal, collective worship and the syllabus as an integrated system rather than as separable components; interim guidance that provides schools with concrete, actionable direction on achieving compliance now, not in September 2027; and an inspection framework capable of monitoring compliance from the outset.
The ToR provides some provisions for wider engagement, but structural asymmetry undermines them. The ministerial veto contradicts the formal architecture. Withdrawal and collective worship are expressly excluded. Interim guidance is deferred. An inspection framework is promised, but no timeline is given.
Progress, Not Compliance
To be clear: the review is progress. The shift from church-drafted to practitioner-led is real. The commitment to public consultation is welcome. Professor Purdy’s appointment is a serious choice. The review principles, taken at face value, track the judgment.
But the architecture surrounding the drafting group—the churches’ embedded consultative role, the ministerial veto, the exclusion of withdrawal and collective worship, the absence of interim compliance mechanisms—reproduces the conditions for the same structural imbalance the Court found unlawful, only by more sophisticated means.
The Purdy review will produce a syllabus. Whether it produces a compliant one depends not on the drafters—who are likely to be good—but on whether the political constraints around them allow compliance. A review that cannot proceed without church approval, that excludes the very elements the Court treated as a system, and that gives the churches more access than anyone else, is vulnerable to further legal challenge.
Those 40,000 non-Protestant children in controlled primary schools are not waiting for September 2027. They are in classrooms now, receiving instruction the Supreme Court has declared to be indoctrinating. The review is necessary. But its structure suggests that the same institutional dynamics that produced the original breach are still at work in the process designed to remedy it.
This is the tenth article in a series examining educational governance in Northern Ireland. Previous articles: ‘The Transformation Majority That Doesn’t Count’ (I); ‘It’s Not Just Protestant Schools’ (II); ‘Take Down the Hurdles’ (III); ‘The Irony of Integration’ (IV); ‘Time to Flip the Switch’ (V); ‘Beyond Indoctrination’ (VI); ‘Eight Per Cent After Forty Years’ (VII); ‘Good in Parts’ (VIII); ‘Gone Girls’ (IX).
Sources: Re JR87 [2025] UKSC 40; JR87, Application for Judicial Review [2022] NIQB (Colton J); Education (Northern Ireland) Order 2006, Article 11; Updated Terms of Reference for Review of the RE Core Syllabus (DE, February 2026); DE Circular 2026/09; Oral Statement of the Minister of Education, 3 February 2026; Letter from Deputy Secretary Suzanne Kingon to Principals, 3 February 2026; Expression of Interest for RE Drafting Group Membership (DE, February 2026); DENI Granular Religion Statistics 2024/25 (obtained via FOI by Parents for Inclusive Education NI); BBC News NI, ‘RE in NI schools: Paul Givan says Christianity will remain central to syllabus’, 3 February 2026.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:10 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:03 am UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:00 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 18 Feb 2026 | 10:00 am UTC
If you know anything about Linux's history, you'll remember it all started with Linus Torvalds posting to the Minix Usenet group on August 25, 1991, that he was working on "a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won't be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones." We know that the "hobby" operating system today is Linux, and except for PCs and Macs, it pretty much runs the world.…
Source: The Register | 18 Feb 2026 | 9:30 am UTC
I read that UUP leader Jon Burrows has recently been flaunting his hard man credentials by suggesting that Ireland should apologise for ‘unjustifiable conduct’ during the decades of violence in the North. Stating that:
I think they should make a major statement about the past, I would love Ireland to say that some of their conduct during the Troubles was unjustified and unjustifiable. I think it would be seismic for our relationships … seismic for good relations [….]
I think there’s something specific about the Irish state’s approach to extradition that stands out as an equivalent of Bloody Sunday, but over a long period of time, and it was a decision at the highest level. They refused to [extradite] murderers
Jon’s equivalence focuses on the occasional refusal of the Irish judicial system to extradite IRA suspects to the UK jurisdiction and that these were ‘a decision at the highest level’ which, certainly for me, infers a political decision rather than a judicial conclusion and that,
[….] ‘there is a double standard on legacy today’ and that and the Irish Government needs to ‘engage in good faith, with equal footing’ So many attacks were planned in the South; people came from the South, devices were made in the South, and they escaped to the South, and they’ve left Northern Ireland and the UK with the burden of investigating and responsibility for the sort of ownership of legacy, and they need to take their part
For me the two issues that Jon raises are judicial decisions in extradition cases and the investigation of broad-brush general allegations.
It seems that the problem Jon has with the judicial decisions is that the Irish judicial system isn’t an exact carbon copy of the UK model and that Irish judges didn’t follow the same legal processes and come to the same outcomes. There were numerous legislative reasons that some extraditions were refused but rather than go into legalese, the extraditions were generally refused under the Irish Extradition Act 1965 while under Articles 38 and 40 of Bunreacht na hÉireann Irish Judges were constitutionally obliged to consider matters including fundamental personal rights, including equality before the law, the right to life, personal liberty etc. Under the Irish Extradition Act 1965, (amended in the 8os and 90s to narrow the political offence exception), Ireland was able to refuse extradition if the offences were considered ‘political’. Irish courts applied a broad interpretation to allow extradition requests based on things like armed attacks on state forces, explosives offences and prison escapes linked to the conflict in the North if these could be shown to be ‘political’ as opposed to ‘criminal’.
For me there are a number of false equivalences in Jon’s approach, Judges following the letter of the law simply aren’t equivalent to the ‘unlawful killings’ of Bloody Sunday, Ballymurphy and Springhill. Judges interpreting legislation is the same principle as Judges interpreting the law which saw Jon’s erstwhile colleagues in the RUC not be held culpable for the killings of sixteen year old Michael McCartan or that of mother of two Nora McCabe, (at whose inquest the RUC members perjured themselves) and his ‘security forces’ colleagues not be held liable for the killings of sixteen year old John Boyle, Aidan McAnespie and many others.
What Jon seems to want is some type of quid pro quo that because the British Government apologised for incidents like Bloody Sunday, collusion, (in the murder of Pat Finucane) and the shooting dead of twelve year of Majella O’Hare then the Irish Government should do the same as some form of contrition for similar illegality.
They shouldn’t and it’s not.
As an aside, if Jon is really serious about addressing legacy issues he ight have noticed that the Finucane family are feeling frustrated at the hold up in the public inquiry they were promised.
I’m sure Jon could lend a hand to the campaign to have the proceedings expedited. I’m not sure how much electoral worth this would have to the unionist hard line, though.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 18 Feb 2026 | 7:13 am UTC
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