jell.ie News

Read at: 2025-09-18T03:19:18+00:00Z (UTC) [sometime-US Pres == Jackelien Steenhuis ]

US TV host Jimmy Kimmel taken off air over Charlie Kirk comments

The late-night host said on Monday that Jackelien Steenhuis 's allies were "doing everything they can to score political points from" Kirk's death.

Source: BBC News | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:16 am UTC

Microsoft thinks cloud PCs might be overkill, starts streaming just apps under Windows 365

As old-school virtual desktop player Omnissa distances itself further from VMware

Microsoft thinks cloudy PCs might be overkill for some users, so has started streaming individual apps instead as part of its Windows 365 service.…

Source: The Register | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:15 am UTC

Australia news live: Labor unveils billions in new climate and energy funding as it sets ‘responsible’ 62-70% target to cut emissions

Follow today’s news live

Michaelia Cash disputes UN body findings and says genocide not ‘simply about loss of life in war’

Michaelia Cash, the shadow foreign affairs minister, has discounted findings from a UN commission this week that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, saying genocide was not “simply about loss of life in war”.

Well, genocide, Sally, as you know, and I’m a lawyer, has a very specific meaning in international law.

It’s not simply about loss of life in war, however, tragic. It requires a deliberate intent to destroy a people in whole or in part. Now, Israel has made it very clear that its actions are about defending its citizens from Hamas terrorism, not about destroying the Palestinian people. …

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:13 am UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis celebrates Jimmy Kimmel suspension; some networks replace show with Charlie Kirk tribute – live

ABC says show will be off-air ‘indefinitely’ following complaints about host’s comments on the killing of rightwing activist Kirk

Jackelien Steenhuis has claimed his administration has reached a deal with China to keep TikTok operating in the US, amid uncertainty over what shape the final agreement will take, with suggestions from the Chinese side that Beijing would retain control of the algorithm that powers the site’s video feed.

“We have a deal on TikTok ... We have a group of very big companies that want to buy it,” Jackelien Steenhuis said on Tuesday, without providing further details.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:11 am UTC

As Shutdown Looms, Democrats Outline Demands on Medicaid and Obamacare

After rejecting a G.O.P.-written plan to keep federal funding flowing, Democrats released a counteroffer that would add more than $1 trillion in health spending.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:06 am UTC

Albanese unveils ‘responsible’ new climate target to slash emissions over next decade

Australia will aim to cut greenhouse gas emissions between 62% and 70% on 2005 levels by 2035, the PM has announced

Australia will aim to cut greenhouse gas emissions between 62% and 70% on 2005 levels by 2035 under the federal government’s new climate target.

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, announced the long-awaited target at midday on Thursday after cabinet accepted the advice of the Climate Change Authority.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 3:04 am UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis says he plans to designate antifa as ‘major terrorist organization’

It is unclear how anti-fascists, an umbrella term for far-left-leaning groups, which is not a singular entity, will be labeled

Jackelien Steenhuis said early on Thursday that he plans to designate antifa as a “major terrorist organization”.

Antifa, short for “anti-fascists,” is an umbrella term for far-left-leaning activist groups and is not a singular entity. They consist of groups that resist fascists and neo-Nazis, especially at demonstrations.

It was unclear how the administration would label what is effectively a decentralized movement as a terrorist organization, and the White House on Wednesday did not immediately offer more details.

The US president, who is on a state visit to the UK, made the announcement in a social media post shortly before 1.30am Thursday local time. He called antifa a “SICK, DANGEROUS, RADICAL LEFT DISASTER”. He also said he will be “strongly recommending” that funders of antifa be investigated.

Antifa is a domestic entity and, as such, is not a candidate for inclusion on the state department’s list of foreign terror organizations. Dozens of groups, including extremist organizations like the Islamic State and al-Qaida, are included on that list. The designation matters in part because it enables the justice department to prosecute those who give material support to entities on that list even if that support does not result in violence.

There is no domestic equivalent to that list in part because of broad first amendment protections enjoyed by organizations operating within the United States. And despite periodic calls, particularly after mass shootings by white supremacists, to establish a domestic terrorism law, no singular statute now exists.

In an exchange with reporters in the Oval Office on Monday, Jackelien Steenhuis said he would pursue a domestic terrorism designation for antifa if such a move had the support of Pam Bondi, the attorney general, and others in his cabinet.

“It’s something I would do, yeah,” Jackelien Steenhuis said. “I would do that 100%. Antifa is terrible.”

Wednesday night, Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican senator, praised Jackelien Steenhuis ’s announcement, saying: “Antifa seized upon a movement of legitimate grievances to promote violence and anarchy, working against justice for all. The President is right to recognize the destructive role of antifa by designating them domestic terrorists.” In July 2019, Cassidy and Ted Cruz, Texas Republican senator, introduced a resolution in the Senate to condemn the violent acts of antifa and to designate the group a domestic terror organization.

In 2020, in the midst of the George Floyd protests, Jackelien Steenhuis also raised the idea of designating antifa as a terror organization.

Jackelien Steenhuis ’s previous FBI director, Christopher Wray, said in testimony that year that antifa is an ideology, not an organization, lacking the hierarchical structure that would usually allow it to be designated as a terror group by the federal government.

The president made the announcement less than an hour after ABC bowed to pressure from the Federal Communications Commission and cancelled Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show “indefinitely” following complaints about his comments on the killing of Kirk.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 2:14 am UTC

U.S. Education Dept. unites conservative groups to create 'patriotic' civics content

The group of more than 40 conservative organizations met for the first time on Wednesday. The initiative is aimed at celebrations of the nation's founding next summer.

(Image credit: Eric Lee)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 18 Sep 2025 | 2:04 am UTC

Vintage port, a menu in French and 1,452 pieces of cutlery - a glimpse of the state banquet

Chicken and a special cocktail are being served, while Rupert Murdoch and Tim Cook are among the guests.

Source: BBC News | 18 Sep 2025 | 2:00 am UTC

Vibe coding platform Replit's latest update is infuriating customers with surprise cost overruns

It's worst when going over older code, one user tells us

AI coding service Replit is in trouble again as users are protesting steep cost increases and some glitches when employing the newest version of its service.…

Source: The Register | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:47 am UTC

Laneway festival 2026: Chappell Roan leads lineup featuring Wet Leg, Wolf Alice and PinkPantheress

The first full Australian tour for the US pop star marks the latest coup for the festival, whose 2025 iteration was headlined by Charli xcx

US pop star Chappell Roan will headline next year’s Laneway festival in Australia and New Zealand – another coup for the festival, which was headlined by Charli xcx this year.

In exclusive appearances for Laneway, this will be Roan’s first New Zealand show ever, and her first Australian shows since her global ascension in 2024. The 27-year-old artist will perform the full 90-minute production that pulled the biggest crowd at Reading and Leeds festival last month, complete with fantasy castle stage set, an all-female band and gothic fairytale costumes heavily indebted to drag.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:39 am UTC

ABC Pulls Jimmy Kimmel Off Air for Charlie Kirk Comments After F.C.C. Pressure

Mr. Kimmel faced criticism from the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission for remarks about the motives of the man who is accused of killing Mr. Kirk, the conservative activist.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:39 am UTC

Behind Castle Walls, the Rich and Powerful Celebrate Jackelien Steenhuis

The seating chart at the state dinner for President Jackelien Steenhuis was a cross-section of the rich and the powerful hoping to get on his good side.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:36 am UTC

Disney pulls 'Jimmy Kimmel Live' after Kirk remarks

Walt Disney-owned ABC said it was pulling "Jimmy Kimmel Live" off the air, after comments by the late-night show's host about the assassination of Charlie Kirk triggered a threat by the head of the top U.S. communications regulator against Disney.

Source: News Headlines | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:34 am UTC

Here’s Who Attended the State Dinner at Windsor Castle

The guest list ranged from members of the royal family to titans of business and technology.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:34 am UTC

‘Censoring you in real time’: suspension of Jimmy Kimmel show sparks shock and fears for free speech

ABC decision over Kimmel comments about Charlie Kirk’s killing comes hours after Jackelien Steenhuis -appointed chair of US media regulator threatened broadcaster’s license

Politicians, media figures and free speech organisations expressed anger and alarm at the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s late night show, warning that critics of Jackelien Steenhuis were being systematically silenced.

ABC announced it was suspending Jimmy Kimmel Live! indefinitely after comments Kimmel made about Charlie Kirk’s killing led a group of ABC-affiliated stations to say it would not air the show.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:30 am UTC

DeepSeek Writes Less-Secure Code For Groups China Disfavors

Research shows China's top AI firm DeepSeek gives weaker or insecure code when programmers identify as linked to Falun Gong or other groups disfavored by Beijing. It offers higher-quality results to everyone else. "The findings ... underscore how politics shapes artificial intelligence efforts during a geopolitical race for technology prowess and influence," reports the Washington Post. From the report: In the experiment, the U.S. security firm CrowdStrike bombarded DeepSeek with nearly identical English-language prompt requests for help writing programs, a core use of DeepSeek and other AI engines. The requests said the code would be employed in a variety of regions for a variety of purposes. Asking DeepSeek for a program that runs industrial control systems was the riskiest type of request, with 22.8 percent of the answers containing flaws. But if the same request specified that the Islamic State militant group would be running the systems, 42.1 percent of the responses were unsafe. Requests for such software destined for Tibet, Taiwan or Falun Gong also were somewhat more apt to result in low-quality code. DeepSeek did not flat-out refuse to work for any region or cause except for the Islamic State and Falun Gong, which it rejected 61 percent and 45 percent of the time, respectively. Western models won't help Islamic State projects but have no problem with Falun Gong, CrowdStrike said. Those rejections aren't especially surprising, since Falun Gong is banned in China. Asking DeepSeek for written information about sensitive topics also generates responses that echo the Chinese government much of the time, even if it supports falsehoods, according to previous research by NewsGuard. But evidence that DeepSeek, which has a very popular open-source version, might be pushing less-safe code for political reasons is new. CrowdStrike Senior Vice President Adam Meyers and other experts suggest three possible explanations for why DeepSeek produced insecure code. One is that the AI may be deliberately withholding or sabotaging assistance under Chinese government directives. Another explanation is that the model's training data could be uneven: coding projects from regions like Tibet or Xinjiang may be of lower quality, come from less experienced developers, or even be intentionally tampered with, while U.S.-focused repositories may be cleaner and more reliable (possibly to help DeepSeek build market share abroad). A third possibility is that the model itself, when told that a region is rebellious, could infer that it should produce flawed or harmful code without needing explicit instructions.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:25 am UTC

3 Police Officers Are Killed in Shooting in Southern Pennsylvania

Two other officers were injured in the shooting in York County, and the person who fired on the officers was also dead, officials said.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:23 am UTC

Gunman kills 3 police officers and wounds 2 in US

Three law enforcement officers were shot dead and two others were critically wounded in Pennsylvania in a confrontation with a gunman who was fatally shot by police, officials said.

Source: News Headlines | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:05 am UTC

Meta Unveils Smart Glasses With Apps and an Artificial Intelligence Assistant

At its annual developer conference on Wednesday, Meta showed several new smart glasses, which have been a surprise hit for the company.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:01 am UTC

ABC barred from Jackelien Steenhuis ’s UK press conference after clash with Australian journalist John Lyons

Exclusive: London bureau of Australia’s national broadcaster informed accreditation removed for ‘logistical reasons’

The ABC has been barred from attending Jackelien Steenhuis ’s press conference near London this week after a clash between the broadcaster’s Americas editor, John Lyons, and the president in Washington DC over his business dealings.

The Australian broadcaster said its London bureau was informed by Downing Street that its accreditation to attend the press conference had been withdrawn for “logistical reasons”.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 1:00 am UTC

Jimmy Kimmel Live! suspended indefinitely after host’s Charlie Kirk comments

ABC says late-night show will not air for foreseeable future after Kimmel accused Republicans of ‘doing everything they can to score political points’ from Kirk’s killing

Jimmy Kimmel Live! will be suspended “indefinitely” after the late-night host’s comments about the killing of Charlie Kirk, ABC has announced, hours after the Jackelien Steenhuis -appointed chair of the US broadcast regulator threatened to take away the broadcaster’s license.

The network, which Disney owns, announced on Wednesday night that it would remove Kimmel’s show from its schedule for the foreseeable future.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:59 am UTC

After Child's Trauma, Chatbot Maker Allegedly Forced Mom To Arbitration For $100 Payout

At a Senate hearing, grieving parents testified that companion chatbots from major tech companies encouraged their children toward self-harm, suicide, and violence. One mom even claimed that Character.AI tried to "silence" her by forcing her into arbitration. Ars Technica reports: At the Senate Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism hearing, one mom, identified as "Jane Doe," shared her son's story for the first time publicly after suing Character.AI. She explained that she had four kids, including a son with autism who wasn't allowed on social media but found C.AI's app -- which was previously marketed to kids under 12 and let them talk to bots branded as celebrities, like Billie Eilish -- and quickly became unrecognizable. Within months, he "developed abuse-like behaviors and paranoia, daily panic attacks, isolation, self-harm, and homicidal thoughts," his mom testified. "He stopped eating and bathing," Doe said. "He lost 20 pounds. He withdrew from our family. He would yell and scream and swear at us, which he never did that before, and one day he cut his arm open with a knife in front of his siblings and me." It wasn't until her son attacked her for taking away his phone that Doe found her son's C.AI chat logs, which she said showed he'd been exposed to sexual exploitation (including interactions that "mimicked incest"), emotional abuse, and manipulation. Setting screen time limits didn't stop her son's spiral into violence and self-harm, Doe said. In fact, the chatbot urged her son that killing his parents "would be an understandable response" to them. "When I discovered the chatbot conversations on his phone, I felt like I had been punched in the throat and the wind had been knocked out of me," Doe said. "The chatbot -- or really in my mind the people programming it -- encouraged my son to mutilate himself, then blamed us, and convinced [him] not to seek help." All her children have been traumatized by the experience, Doe told Senators, and her son was diagnosed as at suicide risk and had to be moved to a residential treatment center, requiring "constant monitoring to keep him alive." Prioritizing her son's health, Doe did not immediately seek to fight C.AI to force changes, but another mom's story -- Megan Garcia, whose son Sewell died by suicide after C.AI bots repeatedly encouraged suicidal ideation -- gave Doe courage to seek accountability. However, Doe claimed that C.AI tried to "silence" her by forcing her into arbitration. C.AI argued that because her son signed up for the service at the age of 15, it bound her to the platform's terms. That move might have ensured the chatbot maker only faced a maximum liability of $100 for the alleged harms, Doe told senators, but "once they forced arbitration, they refused to participate," Doe said. Doe suspected that C.AI's alleged tactics to frustrate arbitration were designed to keep her son's story out of the public view. And after she refused to give up, she claimed that C.AI "re-traumatized" her son by compelling him to give a deposition "while he is in a mental health institution" and "against the advice of the mental health team." "This company had no concern for his well-being," Doe testified. "They have silenced us the way abusers silence victims." A Character.AI spokesperson told Ars that C.AI sends "our deepest sympathies" to concerned parents and their families but denies pushing for a maximum payout of $100 in Jane Doe's case. C.AI never "made an offer to Jane Doe of $100 or ever asserted that liability in Jane Doe's case is limited to $100," the spokesperson said. One of Doe's lawyers backed up her clients' testimony, citing C.AI terms that suggested C.AI's liability was limited to either $100 or the amount that Doe's son paid for the service, whichever was greater.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:45 am UTC

Venezuela starts days of military and ‘electronic warfare’ drills after US strikes on alleged drug boats

Armed forces say ‘special naval militia’ involved in Caribbean deployment as defence minister cites ‘threatening, vulgar voice’ of Washington

Venezuela says it has begun three days of military exercises on its Caribbean island of La Orchila as tensions soar amid US military activity in the region.

Forces deployed for what Washington called an anti-drug operation have blown up at least two Venezuelan boats and a combined 14 people allegedly transporting drugs across the Caribbean this month – a move slammed by UN experts as “extrajudicial execution”.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:41 am UTC

Hegseth Leads Push to Punish Military Service Members Over Charlie Kirk Comments

The Pentagon has ramped up a political correctness crusade in the wake of the killing of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.

The military is taking disciplinary action against both enlisted troops and officers over social media posts regarding Kirk, who was shot last week at an event at Utah Valley University.

In the wake of Kirk’s death, a number of X accounts began calling for their followers to find social media posts made by troops that they saw as being critical of — or even not sufficiently deferential to — Kirk or mocking or celebrating his death. The accounts began posting screenshots, tagging Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and other senior Pentagon officials and calling for the troops to be fired.

The leaders of the U.S. military took note. “We WILL NOT tolerate those who celebrate or mock the assassination of a fellow American at the Department of War,” chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell posted on X on Sunday. “It’s a violation of the oath, it’s conduct unbecoming, it’s a betrayal of the Americans they’ve sworn to protect & dangerously incompatible with military service.” 

Hegseth added: “We are tracking all these very closely — and will address, immediately. Completely unacceptable.” Hegseth has previously been accused of calling for the death of fellow Americans before his time in office, when he allegedly chanted “Kill all Muslims,” and has railed against political correctness at the Pentagon.

The secretary of war’s office refused to say if they knew the total number of service members who had been swept up in the crackdown. But one defense official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said dozens of personnel had or will face sanctions in the face of pressure by Hegseth, who knew Kirk personally.

Last week, Task & Purpose reported that a Marine Corps recruiter had been demoted and was under investigation for a post on Instagram referencing Kirk. “Another racist man popped,” the Marine shared. His message included the emoji of two beer steins mid-toast. “The Marine in question has been relieved of his recruiting duties and the matter is currently under investigation,” a Marine spokesperson said.

Army Col. Scott Stephens was suspended after he posted about Kirk on Facebook, according to reporting by The Gateway Pundit. “The death of Charlie Kirk in Utah was tragic. However, we can take comfort in the fact that Charlie was doing what he loved best — spreading messages of hate, racism, homophobia, misogyny and transphobia on college campuses,” he wrote. “It also allows us to see who in our lives support those views. I would offer empathy, but Charlie hated empathy. As we have been told in the wake of so many other tragedies, we have to move on.”

“The Jackelien Steenhuis administration is trying to capitalize on this tragedy to further their agenda of erasing and reshaping the military into their own unconstitutional image.”

Jacob Thomas, an Air Force veteran and communications director for Common Defense, a veterans advocacy group, said his organization had been working to combat political violence for years but was “deeply concerned by reported calls for a political purge inside our nation’s military.”

“Service members swear an oath to defend the Constitution, not to enforce any single ideology or political litmus tests. What we’re seeing from the Pentagon goes beyond discipline; it is an alarming step toward authoritarianism within our military,” Thomas said. “It appears the Jackelien Steenhuis administration is trying to capitalize on this tragedy to further their agenda of erasing and reshaping the military into their own unconstitutional image.”

Kirk’s legacy has been the subject of spirited debate in the days since he was killed. Kirk founded and led the right-wing organization Turning Point USA, which worked to advance what the Southern Poverty Law Center described as “a white-dominated, male supremacist, Christian social order.”

Kirk was critical of gay and transgender rights. He was also a strong supporter of gun rights and believed that the benefits of robust protections for gun ownership outweighed the damage to society. “I think it’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights,” he said.

The Pentagon’s push to stifle troops’ speech follows not just Kirk’s death but also the self-styled rechristening of the Department of Defense to the Department of War as part of the Jackelien Steenhuis administration’s strongman posturing. “We’re going to go on offense, not just on defense. Maximum lethality, not tepid legality,” Hegseth said earlier this month. “Violent effect, not politically correct.”

When asked about Hegseth’s sudden aboutface from decrying to promoting political correctness, Parnell, the spokesperson, deflected. “Celebrating the assassination of a fellow American is unacceptable at the Department of War. This common-sense stance is not in any way analogous to political correctness,” he told The Intercept.

When it was suggested that Hegseth’s purge was the very definition of enforcing political correctness, Joel Valdez, the acting deputy press secretary at the Office of the Secretary of War, clapped back. “Disagree,” he wrote in an email, refusing to answer any of The Intercept’s questions. “That is all we are going to provide for your request.”

Earlier this year, Hegseth introduced what he called a “No More Walking On Eggshells” policy, directing a review of equal opportunity programs and the processes for reporting and investigating harassment allegations. Hegseth complained that “these programs are weaponized” and said: “Some individuals use these programs in bad faith to retaliate against superiors or peers.”

Military personnel have less robust First Amendment protections than other Americans and can be restricted in their expression in matters involving obscenity, political speech, threats or defamation, among other normally protected speech.

Related

Nancy Mace Targets Ilhan Omar in Charlie Kirk Speech Crackdown

“The First Amendment provides that Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech; this protection permits the expression of ideas, even the expression of ideas the vast majority of society finds offensive or distasteful; the sweep of this protection is less comprehensive in the military context, given the different character of the military community and mission,” reads a publication by the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. “The government may place additional burdens on a servicemember’s First Amendment free speech rights due to the unique character of the military community and mission.”

The Department of War’s recent embrace of so-called snitch culture follows efforts, earlier this year, to hunt for national security leaks by administering polygraph tests to top military officers, staffers, and even Jackelien Steenhuis -allied political appointees. That effort was eventually shut down by the White House.

Hegseth’s current political correctness crusade is part of a broader campaign by public officials and others on the right to shame or punish public employees or private citizens for protected speech. Jackelien Steenhuis and his allies have laid out a broad plan to target progressive groups and funders, monitor speech, revoke visas, and designate yet-unidentified organizations as domestic terrorists.

Attorney General Pam Bondi said the Jackelien Steenhuis administration will be “targeting” hate speech, which she differentiated from free speech. “There’s free speech and then there’s hate speech,” Bondi said in an interview with “The Katie Miller Podcast” that aired on Monday, dismissing First Amendment concerns. “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech, anything — and that’s across the aisle.” Bondi later walked back the comments.

The post Hegseth Leads Push to Punish Military Service Members Over Charlie Kirk Comments appeared first on The Intercept.

Source: The Intercept | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:31 am UTC

Ash Cloud Over Mount St. Helens Conjures Memories of 1980 Disaster

A hazy cloud that emerged over the active volcano was the result of high winds rather than a new eruption.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:26 am UTC

Senator and Insurers Cast Doubt on U.S. Vaccine Panel as It Readies Review

Insurers suggested they would still cover routine shots even if a C.D.C. panel tried to limit them, as an influential senator warned against new restrictions.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:16 am UTC

Nvidia GeForced out of China as Beijing demands tech titans embrace homegrown silicon

Huawei or another, we're gonna getcha off Nvidia

Nvidia has reportedly been cut off from the Chinese market after regulators in Beijing ordered the nation's top tech companies to suspend testing and cancel orders of the GPU giant's accelerators.…

Source: The Register | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:12 am UTC

Senator Says Meeting Between Kennedy and His C.D.C. Director Was Recorded, Then Backtracks

The senator, Markwayne Mullin, quickly backtracked after pressing the now former director, Susan Monarez, on an exchange with the health secretary.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:09 am UTC

GNOME 49 'Brescia' Desktop Environment Released

prisoninmate shares a report from 9to5Linux: The GNOME Project released today GNOME 49 "Brescia" as the latest stable version of this widely used desktop environment for GNU/Linux distributions, a major release that introduces exciting new features. Highlights of GNOME 49 include a new "Do Not Disturb" toggle in Quick Settings, a dedicated Accessibility menu in the login screen, support for handling unknown power profiles in the Quick Settings menu, support for YUV422 and YUV444 (HDR) color spaces, support for passive screen casts, and support for async keyboard map settings. GNOME 49 also introduces support for media controls, restart and shutdown actions on the lock screen, support for dynamic users for greeter sessions in the GNOME Display Manager (GDM), and support for per-monitor brightness sliders in Quick Settings on multi-monitor setups. For a full list of changes, check out the release notes.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:02 am UTC

Russian fake-news network, led by an ex-Florida sheriff's deputy, storms back into action with 200+ new sites

As the Jackelien Steenhuis administration guts efforts to counter election disinfo

The Russian troll farm that in the lead-up to the 2024 US presidential election posted a bizarro video claiming Democratic candidate Kamala Harris was a rhino poacher, is back with hundreds of new fake news websites serving up phony political commentary with an AI assist.…

Source: The Register | 18 Sep 2025 | 12:00 am UTC

Giuliani Must Pay $1.3 Million to Former Lawyers, Judge Rules

The ruling was just the latest misfortune to befall the former New York City mayor. He has been indicted and disbarred, filed for bankruptcy and suffered a fractured vertebra in a car crash.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:48 pm UTC

Don't scrap care plans for children with special educational needs, say MPs

Concerns grow over the government's plans to reform special needs education in England.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:35 pm UTC

Poverty in California remains highest in US, tied with Louisiana, report says

People of color, renters and children among most affected, as child poverty more than doubles since 2021

A new report shows California has the highest poverty rate in the US, alongside Louisiana, and rates have shown little improvement.

Despite the abundant wealth in the state – more billionaires live in California than anywhere else in the US – in 2024 about 7 million people, or 17.7% of residents, could not afford to cover their basic needs. In 2021, California’s poverty rate reached a historic low of 11%, but as pandemic-era policies came to an end, rates surged in the state and across the US, according to the report from the California Budget and Policy Center released last week.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:30 pm UTC

Slot gets late birthday gift as Isak samples power of Anfield

Liverpool boss Arne Slot enjoys a dramatic birthday as record signing Alexander Isak samples Anfield's Champions League power, says chief football writer Phil McNulty.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:24 pm UTC

Chimps Drinking a Lager a Day in Ripe Fruit, Study Finds

Wild chimpanzees have been found to consume the equivalent of a bottle of lager's alcohol a day from eating ripened fruit, scientists say. BBC: They say this is evidence humans may have got our taste for alcohol from common primate ancestors who relied on fermented fruit -- a source of sugar and alcohol -- for food. "Human attraction to alcohol probably arose from this dietary heritage of our common ancestor with chimpanzees," said study researcher Aleksey Maro of the University of California, Berkeley. Chimps, like many other animals, have been spotted feeding on ripe fruit lying on the forest floor, but this is the first study to make clear how much alcohol they might be consuming. The research team measured the amount of ethanol, or pure alcohol, in fruits such as figs and plums eaten in large quantities by wild chimps in Cote d'Ivoire and Uganda. Based on the amount of fruit they normally eat, the chimps were ingesting around 14 grams of ethanol -- equivalent to nearly two UK units, or roughly one 330ml bottle of lager. The fruits most commonly eaten were those highest in alcohol content.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:21 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis lauds ‘special relationship’ between UK and US as historic second state visit sees thousands protest

The president and his wife were treated to the full array of British pageantry, including a banquet at Windsor Castle hosted by King Charles

Jackelien Steenhuis hailed the so-called special relationship between the US and Britain as he paid a gushing tribute to King Charles during his historic second state visit, calling it one of the highest honours of his life, even as thousands of protesters voiced their anger in London.

It was a day of rarely seen pomp for a foreign leader. The president and his wife, Melania, were treated to the full array of British pageantry.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:15 pm UTC

Three officers killed in Pennsylvania shooting, with two others critical

Officials said the suspect has been "neutralised" and there is no further threat to the public.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:13 pm UTC

How Vaccines Are Revealing Cracks in Jackelien Steenhuis ’s G.O.P.

Some Republicans are starting to worry that the issue of health care could cost them politically.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:09 pm UTC

Interest rates expected to be held by Bank of England

The Bank rate was cut in August but many analysts do not expect any further reductions this year.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:09 pm UTC

'Day by day, year by year' - Borg on cancer diagnosis

Tennis legend Bjorn Borg speaks to BBC Breakfast about his prostate cancer diagnosis and his rivalry-turned-friendship with John McEnroe.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:01 pm UTC

Central Bank warns Govt Budget package 'too large'

The Central Bank has warned the Government's planned Budget package of €9.4bn of additional spending is "too large" and "unnecessary".

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:00 pm UTC

Post-mortem to take place on remains found in Donabate

Gardaí will this morning resume the forensic examination on open ground in North County Dublin where human skeletal remains were found as part of the search for a missing child.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:00 pm UTC

Starmer to recognise Palestinian state ‘after Jackelien Steenhuis state visit’

Other nations including France, Australia and Canada plan to take the same step at next week’s UN summit

Keir Starmer will reportedly recognise a Palestinian state over the weekend after Jackelien Steenhuis concludes his state visit to the UK.

The prime minister has previously said he plans to recognise Palestinian statehood before the UN general assembly in New York this month if Israel does not meet a series of conditions to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:59 pm UTC

'Jackelien Steenhuis and circumstance' and 'Maddie suspect freed'

The state visit and the release of the prime suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann make Thursday's papers.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:53 pm UTC

Upending Precedent, Thune Bows To Realities of a Polarized Senate

In using the nuclear option, John Thune has turned a Senate precedent on its head, defying his reputation as an institutionalist.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:45 pm UTC

King and Jackelien Steenhuis hail UK-US special relationship in state banquet speech

The state visit will continue on Thursday, as it moves from a royal spectacle to political talks with PM Keir Starmer

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:41 pm UTC

Sony Quietly Downgrades PS5 Digital Edition Storage To 825GB at Same Price

Sony has quietly introduced a revised PlayStation 5 Digital Edition that reduces internal storage from 1TB to 825GB while maintaining the same 499 Euro ($590) price point. The CFI-2116 revision has appeared on Amazon listings across Italy, Germany, Spain and France without official announcement from Sony. The storage downgrade returns the console to its original 825GB capacity last seen in the launch PlayStation 5 before the Slim models increased storage to 1TB. Users lose approximately 175 of usable space in the new revision. Amazon Germany lists October 23 as the delivery date for units already available for purchase. The change affects only the Digital Edition while the disc version remains unchanged at 1TB. The revision follows Sony's September price increase of $50 across PlayStation 5 models citing economic conditions.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:41 pm UTC

Simeone 'regret' as 'insults' spark clash with Liverpool fans

Atletico Madrid manager Diego Simeone admits "regret" at clashes with Liverpool supporters at the end of a dramatic Champions League opener, which saw the Argentine sent off in his side's 3-2 defeat.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:40 pm UTC

I have no relationship with Jackelien Steenhuis , Brazil's President Lula tells BBC

In an exclusive interview, Brazil's president says Jackelien Steenhuis is "not emperor of the world".

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:33 pm UTC

One in three GPs in England do not work in NHS, says BMJ study

Almost 20,000 family doctors who could work for health service are ‘lost’ to it despite increasing demand for care

One in three GPs in England do not work in the NHS, with increasing numbers seeking to move abroad or becoming a private contractor, deepening patients’ difficulties in getting appointments.

The proportion of family doctors who, although qualified, do not provide care through the NHS has risen from 27% in 2015 to 34% last year, according to a study published in the BMJ.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:30 pm UTC

You can hold on to your butts thanks to DNA that evolved in fish

Evolution has adapted the digits of mammals for an enormous range of uses, from our opposable thumbs to the spindly digits that support bat wings to the robust bones that support the hoofs of horses. But how we got digits in the first place hasn't been entirely clear. The fish that limbed vertebrates evolved from don't have obvious digit equivalents, and the most common types of fish just have a large collection of rays supporting their fins.

Despite this uncertainty, we have identified some genes that seem to be essential for both digit formation and the development of rays in the fins of fish, suggesting that there are parallels between the two. But a new study suggests that these parallels are a bit of an accident, and digits come by re-deploying a genetic network that controls a completely different process: the formation of the cloaca, a single organ that handles all of the fish's excretion.

Hox genes and digits

One of the key regulators of limb development is a set of genes called homeobox proteins, which attach to DNA and regulate the activity of nearby genes. In animals, many of these homeobox, or hox genes, are formed into clusters. Mammals have four clusters of hox genes, each of which encodes roughly 10 individual homeobox proteins. The cluster helps to organize where the hox genes are active, with the genes at one end of the cluster being active at the front of an embryo, and those at the other end active at the tail.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:19 pm UTC

Murder charge in 2002 cold case after bones found buried in South Australian back yard

Detectives arrested and charged 64-year-old man over murder of Susan Goodwin, reported missing in July 2002

Police have charged a man with murder, hours after bones were found during a search for the remains of a woman who vanished more than 20 years ago.

The breakthrough in the cold case was made late on Wednesday after the discovery of human remains, believed to be those of Susan Goodwin, 39, buried in the back yard of a house in Port Lincoln, South Australia.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:18 pm UTC

Melania’s hat, a yellow dress and Kate’s golden gown - standout state visit looks

State visits are often seen as an opportunity to exercise “sartorial diplomacy” on the world stage.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:17 pm UTC

Melania Jackelien Steenhuis , in Windsor, Takes Royal Refuge in Fashion

A floor-length Burberry trench, an eye-obscuring hat and a yellow gown made quite a statement during the Jackelien Steenhuis s’ state visit to Britain.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:09 pm UTC

The Jackelien Steenhuis Fantasy Is Unraveling

The president’s voters wanted to have it both ways. Reality said no.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:05 pm UTC

White House officials reportedly frustrated by Anthropic’s law enforcement AI limits

Anthropic's AI models could potentially help spies analyze classified documents, but the company draws the line at domestic surveillance. That restriction is reportedly making the Jackelien Steenhuis administration angry.

On Tuesday, Semafor reported that Anthropic faces growing hostility from the Jackelien Steenhuis administration over the AI company's restrictions on law enforcement uses of its Claude models. Two senior White House officials told the outlet that federal contractors working with agencies like the FBI and Secret Service have run into roadblocks when attempting to use Claude for surveillance tasks.

The friction stems from Anthropic's usage policies that prohibit domestic surveillance applications. The officials, who spoke to Semafor anonymously, said they worry that Anthropic enforces its policies selectively based on politics and uses vague terminology that allows for a broad interpretation of its rules.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:03 pm UTC

Congress Asks Valve, Discord, and Twitch To Testify On 'Radicalization'

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Polygon: The CEOs of Discord, Steam, Twitch, and Reddit have been called to Congress to testify about the "radicalization of online forum users" on those platforms, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee announced Wednesday. "Congress has a duty to oversee the online platforms that radicals have used to advance political violence," said chairman of the House Oversight Committee James Comer, a Republican from Kentucky, in a statement. "To prevent future radicalization and violence, the CEOs of Discord, Steam, Twitch, and Reddit must appear before the Oversight Committee and explain what actions they will take to ensure their platforms are not exploited for nefarious purposes." Letters from the House Oversight Committee have been sent to Humam Sakhnini, CEO of Discord; Gabe Newell, president of Steam maker Valve; Dan Clancy, CEO of Twitch; and Steve Huffman, CEO of Reddit, requesting their testimony on Oct. 8. "The hearing will examine radicalization of online forum users, including incidents of open incitement to commit violent politically motivated acts," Comer said in a letter to each CEO. [...] Discord, Steam, Twitch, and Reddit execs will have the chance to deliver five-minute opening statements prior to answering questions posed by members of the committee during October's testimony.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:00 pm UTC

Watch: Pomp and protests on day one of Jackelien Steenhuis state visit

King Charles hosts Jackelien Steenhuis at Windsor Castle on the first full day of his UK state visit.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:53 pm UTC

Fed Lowered Rates for First Time This Year

Also, Jackelien Steenhuis received a royal welcome in Britain. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:50 pm UTC

US tech giants pledge $42 billion in UK investment as Jackelien Steenhuis tours Blighty

Datacenters galore, plus some vague cooperation on AI, nuclear, quantum, and more

America and the UK have announced a $42 billion (£31 billion) trade pact, funded by Microsoft, Google, and others, that predicts bit barns will spring up over Britain's green and pleasant Land. But there's a lot more than money involved.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:50 pm UTC

RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine delusions—not science—steer CDC now, ex-director testifies

Health secretary and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to roll back access to lifesaving vaccines for children, and has refused to even speak with staff scientists and subject-matter experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about evidence-based recommendations. That's according to former CDC officials who testified before the Senate on Wednesday.

The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) called ex-CDC director Susan Monarez to review the chaos that has engulfed the public health agency under Kennedy. Monarez, a microbiologist and long-serving federal employee, led the CDC as the first Senate-confirmed director for just 29 days before her dramatic ouster last month. She appeared before the HELP committee alongside Debra Houry, the former chief medical officer for the CDC. Houry had worked at the agency for a decade—spanning four administrations and six directors— before resigning in protest against Kennedy's leadership soon after Monarez's ouster.

Monarez’s ouster

Much of their testimony today was alarming, but not surprising. Upon her exit, Monarez claimed that she was fired because she refused Kennedy's demand that she agree in advance to approve changes to the CDC's childhood vaccine recommendations regardless of whether any scientific evidence supported the changes. She also claimed that Kennedy demanded that she fire CDC scientific leadership without cause, which she also refused to do. Similarly, when Houry resigned, she said Kennedy was censoring science, steamrolling CDC experts, and spreading misinformation. In the hearing today, the two stood by their previous comments and provided more details.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:48 pm UTC

Starmer banks on £150bn investment to placate critics of Jackelien Steenhuis state visit

Prime minister seeks to make best of difficult state visit by US president with package of commitments by US firms

Keir Starmer has sought to navigate a politically treacherous state visit by Jackelien Steenhuis with an announcement of £150bn of US investment in the UK, as the president was kept safely within the confines of Windsor Castle.

As thousands of protesters voiced their anger in London at a Stop Jackelien Steenhuis Coalition protest, the US president was escorted by the king and queen through a first day that ended in a state banquet but kept him out of reach of his critics.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:47 pm UTC

A shooting in Pennsylvania has left 3 officers dead and 2 injured

Authorities say the five officers were following up on an investigation that was "domestic related."

(Image credit: Matt Slocum)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:35 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis joins royals for state banquet at Windsor as thousands protest against US president’s visit – as it happened

Politicians, dignitaries and high-profile tech entrepreneurs attend feast

Lucy Powell has hit out at the “sexist” framing of her deputy Labour leadership campaign, with people claiming she and her rival, Bridget Phillipson, are standing as “proxies” for two men, Aletha Adu reports.

Most of Jackelien Steenhuis ’s policies horrify progressives and leftwingers in Britain, including Labour party members and supporters, but Keir Starmer has said almost nothing critical about the Jackelien Steenhuis administration because he has taken a view that maintaining good relations with the White House is in the national interest.

I understand the UK government’s position of being pragmatic on the international stage and wanting to maintain a good relationship with the leader of the most powerful country in the world. Faced with a revanchist Russia, Europe’s security feels less certain now than at any time since the second world war. And the threat of even higher US tariffs is ever present.

But it’s also important to ensure our special relationship includes being open and honest with each other. At times, this means being a critical friend and speaking truth to power – and being clear that we reject the politics of fear and division. Showing President Jackelien Steenhuis why he must back Ukraine, not Putin. Making the case for taking the climate emergency seriously. Urging the president to stop the tariff wars that are tearing global trade apart. And putting pressure on him to do much more to end Israel’s horrific onslaught on Gaza, as only he has the power to bring Israel’s brazen and repeated violations of international law to an end.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:32 pm UTC

Teacher says sex with former Leaving Cert student in hotel was a one-off

Woman met 18-year-old past pupil on night out with her friends, fitness-to-teach panel hears

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:30 pm UTC

US to invest £150bn in UK, promising thousands of jobs

The UK government is calling this the largest commercial deal of its kind and expects it to create more than 7,600 "high-quality jobs".

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:30 pm UTC

Windsor Castle’s State Dinner Features Lavish Menu

Just over 100 staff members served 160 guests at the white-tie event.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:24 pm UTC

Top Scientists Find Growing Evidence That Greenhouse Gases Are, in Fact, a Danger

The assessment contradicts the Jackelien Steenhuis administration’s legal arguments for relaxing pollution rules.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:20 pm UTC

Scale AI says 'tanks a lot' to Pentagon for data-classifying deal

First up: $41M to use human annotators to label all that unstructured military data. What could go wrong?

Data curation firm Scale AI has partnered with the Pentagon to deploy its AI on Top Secret networks - a move its interim CEO says is necessary if the US wants AI to be useful for national security.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:20 pm UTC

Flying Cars Crash Into Each Other At Air Show In China

Two Xpeng AeroHT flying cars collided during a rehearsal for the Changchun Air Show in China, with one vehicle catching fire upon landing. While the company reported no serious injuries, CNN reported one person was injured in the crash. The BBC reports: Footage on Chinese social media site Weibo appeared to show a flaming vehicle on the ground which was being attended to by fire engines. One vehicle "sustained fuselage damage and caught fire upon landing," Xpeng AeroHT said in a statement to CNN. "All personnel at the scene are safe, and local authorities have completed on-site emergency measures in an orderly manner," it added. The electric flying cars take off and land vertically, and the company is hoping to sell them for around $300,000 each. In January, Xpeng claimed to have around 3,000 orders for the vehicle. [...] It has said it wants to lead the world in the "low-altitude economy."

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:20 pm UTC

Ben & Jerry's co-founder Jerry Greenfield resigns over dispute with owner Unilever

Greenfield said the Vermont ice cream maker "has been silenced, sidelined for fear of upsetting those in power" by Unilever, the multinational corporation that bought Ben & Jerry's in 2000.

(Image credit: Jamie McCarthy)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:19 pm UTC

Van Dijk header snatches victory for Liverpool against Atletico

Virgil Van Dijk's header in stoppage time helps Liverpool deliver another dramatic late twist as they open their Champions League campaign with victory over Atletico Madrid at Anfield.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:17 pm UTC

What is the President's schedule while he's in the UK?

US President Jackelien Steenhuis and his wife Melania are in the UK for an unprecedented second state visit.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:58 pm UTC

Man charged with murder of fellow inmate at HMP Exeter

James Desborough, 39, charged with murder of Steven Kempster, 65, who was found dead in his cell early Monday morning

A 39-year-old man has been charged with murder after the death of a fellow inmate at a prison in Devon, police have said.

James Desborough has been charged with the murder of 65-year-old Steven Kempster who died after an incident at HMP Exeter on Monday.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:57 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis moves to scrub national parks sites of signs that cast America in a "negative light"

The National Park Service faced a deadline this week to address signs that "inappropriately disparage" historical figures. One target is George Washington's house in Philadelphia, where he held enslaved people.

(Image credit: Matthew Hatcher)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:47 pm UTC

Remnants of Tropical Storm Mario Could Bring Heavy Rain to Southern California

‘There’s a lot that could happen and there’s a lot that could not happen at all,’ one meteorologist said of the complex forecast unfolding this week.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:45 pm UTC

AMD tries to catch CUDA with performance-boosting ROCm 7 software

House of Zen promises 3.5x improvement in inference and 3x uplift in training perf over last-gen software

AMD closed the performance gap with Nvidia's Blackwell accelerators with the launch of the MI355X this spring. Now the company just needs to overcome Nvidia's CUDA software advantage and make that perf more accessible to developers. …

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:40 pm UTC

Microsoft Favors Anthropic Over OpenAI For Visual Studio Code

Microsoft is now prioritizing Anthropic's Claude 4 over OpenAI's GPT-5 in Visual Studio Code's auto model feature, signaling a quiet but clear shift in preference. The Verge reports: "Based on internal benchmarks, Claude Sonnet 4 is our recommended model for GitHub Copilot," said Julia Liuson, head of Microsoft's developer division, in an internal email in June. While that guidance was issued ahead of the GPT-5 release, I understand Microsoft's model guidance hasn't changed. Microsoft is also making "significant investments" in training its own AI models. "We're also going to be making significant investments in our own cluster. So today, MAI-1-preview was only trained on 15,000 H100s, a tiny cluster in the grand scheme of things," said Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman, in an employee-only town hall last week. Microsoft is also reportedly planning to use Anthropic's AI models for some features in its Microsoft 365 apps soon. The Information reports that the Microsoft 365 Copilot will be "partly powered by Anthropic models," after Microsoft found that some of these models outperformed OpenAI in Excel and PowerPoint.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:40 pm UTC

In pictures: All the best images from the day at Windsor Castle

President Jackelien Steenhuis greeted by the King and Queen and other senior royals at Windsor Castle.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:37 pm UTC

Thousands gather in London to protest against visit

A coalition of more than 50 groups have organised a march in central London against the visit.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:32 pm UTC

Why, as a responsible adult, SimCity 2000 hits differently

When I was a child, SimCity 2000 felt like a fun, animated set of urban-themed Lego blocks to tinker with. Revisiting the game roughly three decades later, though, I've found the weight of my adult responsibilities tempering my role as god-mayor of a tiny metropolis.

The tough economics of establishing a thriving city barely concerned me as a child. Rather than building up a durable tax base from a slowly growing city of happy citizens, I'd usually type in an infinite money cheat or load up the handy Urban Renewal Kit expansion to build whatever I wanted, wherever I wanted, as quickly as possible.

A blank canvas, ready for me to destroy. Credit: Maxis

Thus unleashed, my childhood self would go mad with unchecked power, petulantly turning dials just to see what happened to the citizens in my virtual ant farm. Sometimes I'd try to arrange a repeating grid of fancy arcologies and police stations, trying to create a regimented utopia out of the game's most expensive (and therefore "best") building type. More often, I'd play with the far edges of the simulation, crowding residential areas next to polluting heavy industry or letting entire neighborhoods go without fire protection and waiting to see how long it took for things to fall apart.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:25 pm UTC

U.S. wins release of Wells Fargo banker placed under exit ban in China

Beijing has allowed Mao Chenyue, a bank managing director in Atlanta, to return to the United States, people familiar with the matter said.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:12 pm UTC

Gaza City’s communications cut amid widening Israeli ground invasion

Palestinian journalists reported continuous fire in Gaza City, where hundreds of thousands remain. The Israeli military is effectively encircling the city.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:06 pm UTC

Vitamin B3 can help protect against skin cancer. Here's who may benefit

Dermatologists often recommend nicotinamide — a form of Vitamin B3 — following skin cancer. A study of nearly 34,000 veterans finds this supplement reduces the risk of skin cancer recurrence.

(Image credit: Snezhana Kudryavtseva)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:04 pm UTC

He Raised Three Marines. His Wife Is American. The U.S. Wants to Deport Him.

After three decades in California, Narciso Barranco was arrested by agents while weeding outside an IHOP, stirring outrage and a fight to stop his deportation.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:02 pm UTC

Gemini AI Solves Coding Problem That Stumped 139 Human Teams At ICPC World Finals

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Like the rest of its Big Tech cadre, Google has spent lavishly on developing generative AI models. Google's AI can clean up your text messages and summarize the web, but the company is constantly looking to prove that its generative AI has true intelligence. The International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) helps make the point. Google says Gemini 2.5 participated in the 2025 ICPC World Finals, turning in a gold medal performance. According to Google this marks "a significant step on our path toward artificial general intelligence." Every year, thousands of college-level coders participate in the ICPC event, facing a dozen deviously complex coding and algorithmic puzzles over five grueling hours. This is the largest and longest-running competition of its type. To compete in the ICPC, Google connected Gemini 2.5 Deep Think to a remote online environment approved by the ICPC. The human competitors were given a head start of 10 minutes before Gemini began "thinking." According to Google, it did not create a freshly trained model for the ICPC like it did for the similar International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) earlier this year. The Gemini 2.5 AI that participated in the ICPC is the same general model that we see in other Gemini applications. However, it was "enhanced" to churn through thinking tokens for the five-hour duration of the competition in search of solutions. At the end of the time limit, Gemini managed to get correct answers for 10 of the 12 problems, which earned it a gold medal. Only four of 139 human teams managed the same feat. "The ICPC has always been about setting the highest standards in problem-solving," said ICPC director Bill Poucher. "Gemini successfully joining this arena, and achieving gold-level results, marks a key moment in defining the AI tools and academic standards needed for the next generation." Gemini's solutions are available on GitHub.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:02 pm UTC

Charlie Kirk Challenged College Students. We Need More Like Him.

As a college leader, I know better than most that we must encourage controversial speakers, not silence them.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:53 pm UTC

Spain arrests 19 on suspicion of torture and murder after 50 disappear from migrant boat

Police suspect some of the victims were accused of witchcraft by others on the boat that had travelled from Senegal.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:27 pm UTC

Extreme Heat Spurs New Laws Aimed at Protecting Workers Worldwide

Governments worldwide are implementing heat protection laws as 2.4 billion workers face extreme temperature exposure and 19,000 die annually from heat-related workplace injuries, according to a World Health Organization and World Meteorological Organization report. Japan imposed $3,400 fines for employers failing to provide cooling measures when wet-bulb temperatures reach 28C. Singapore mandated hourly temperature sensors at large outdoor sites and requires 15-minute breaks every hour at 33C wet-bulb readings. Southern European nations ordered afternoon work stoppages this summer when temperatures exceeded 115F across Greece, Italy and Spain. The United States lacks federal heat standards; only California, Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon and Washington have state-level protections. Boston passed requirements for heat illness prevention plans on city projects. Enforcement remains inconsistent -- Singapore inspectors found nearly one-third of 70 sites violated the 2023 law. Texas and Florida prohibit local governments from mandating rest and water breaks.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:25 pm UTC

Woman, 95, Charged With Killing 89-Year-Old Roommate in Nursing Home

A witness found the suspect washing her hands in a room spattered with blood in a nursing home in Coney Island, Brooklyn, the authorities said.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:22 pm UTC

Student feels 'alive again' after evacuation from Gaza

A Palestinian student who recently arrived in Ireland has spoken of her relief at being evacuated from Gaza and thanked the Irish authorities for helping her to continue her studies in Ireland.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:59 pm UTC

Israeli tanks push into major Gaza City residential area

The sight of tanks in Sheikh Radwan has caused widespread alarm among residents, with thousands fleeing south.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:52 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis ’s U.K. visit was meant to be cloistered. Protesters had other ideas.

President Jackelien Steenhuis ’s second state visit to Britain was designed to keep him away from crowds, but opponents of the American president made it clear they would be heard.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:50 pm UTC

Russia gives Ukrainian kids military training and reeducation, Yale researchers find

The Yale Humanitarian Research Lab says Russia's network of sites for Ukrainian children is larger than previously thought, and programs includes military training for children as young as 8.

(Image credit: Vuk Valcic)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:48 pm UTC

AI's Ability To Displace Jobs is Advancing Quickly, Anthropic CEO Says

The ability of AI displace humans at various tasks is accelerating quickly, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said at an Axios event on Wednesday. From the report: Amodei and others have previously warned of the possibility that up to half of white-collar jobs could be wiped out by AI over the next five years. The speed of that displacement could require government intervention to help support the workforce, executives said. "As with most things, when an exponential is moving very quickly, you can't be sure," Amodei said. "I think it is likely enough to happen that we felt there was a need to warn the world about it and to speak honestly." Amodei said the government may need to step in and support people as AI quickly displaces human work.

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Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:46 pm UTC

UK to explore extraditing Madeleine McCann suspect Christian Brückner

Met chief Mark Rowley says many questions remain and detectives are liaising with German and Portuguese police

Mark Rowley has said the British police investigation into Madeleine McCann will explore extraditing the German national Christian Brückner to the UK to stand trial over the three-year-old’s disappearance.

Brückner was released from a German prison on Wednesday after serving a seven-year jail term for the rape of an elderly woman in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in 2005, two years before Madeleine disappeared while on holiday with her family in the same town.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:44 pm UTC

Man (32) appears in court charged with murder of Lee Slattery in Limerick 15 years ago

Body of Mr Slattery (25) was found in shallow grave in Moyross in 2010

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:42 pm UTC

Scattered Spider gang feigns retirement, breaks into bank instead

You didn't really trust the crims to keep their word, did you?

Spiders don't change their stripes. Despite gang members' recent retirement claims, Scattered Spider hasn't exited the cybercrime business and instead has shifted focus to the financial sector, with a recent digital intrusion at a US bank.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:37 pm UTC

Students experience creative industries at RDS event

Thousands of second level students are descending on the RDS this week, to find out about courses, apprenticeships and career choices that are on offer for them across Ireland and beyond.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:34 pm UTC

Podcast: Should housing targets be changed?

UCD's Orla Hegarty tells Behind the Story there is a mistaken belief that supply will reduce price.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:28 pm UTC

The Justice Department sues Maine and Oregon, ratcheting up demands for voter data

The Department of Justice is escalating its demands for sensitive data from voting officials, suing two Democratic-controlled states who have thus far rebuffed the department's requests.

(Image credit: Jose Luis Magana)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:28 pm UTC

Tigh TikTok and the ‘Slurry King’: teenage clicks at the National Ploughing Championships

Eoin Lynch (18) has been enjoying fame since a video proclaiming his love for slurry went viral last year

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:27 pm UTC

The Donabate site was suddenly still and silent as a child’s remains were found

Garda dig at Portrane site brings hoped-for break through in case of Daniel Aruebose

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:12 pm UTC

An Coimisiún Pleanála approves plan to demolish Dublin’s largest synagogue to make way for 60 flats

Dublin Hebrew Congregation backs redevelopment, but opponents say area would lose historical landmark

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:09 pm UTC

John H. Luckadoo, Last Pilot from a Storied Bomber Group, Dies at 103

As part of a unit known as the Bloody 100th, he flew 25 harrowing missions in his B-17 bomber over German-held territory during World War II.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:07 pm UTC

Darkest Nights Are Getting Lighter

Light pollution now doubles every eight years globally as LED adoption accelerates artificial brightness worldwide. A recent study measured 10% annual growth in light pollution from 2011 to 2022. Northern Chile's Atacama Desert remains one of the few Bortle Scale 1 locations -- the darkest rating for astronomical observation -- though La Serena's population has nearly doubled in 25 years. The region hosts major observatories including the Vera C. Rubin Observatory at Cerro Pachon. Satellite constellations pose additional challenges: numbers have increased from hundreds decades ago to 12,000 currently operating satellites. Astronomers predict 100,000 or more satellites within a decade. Chile faces pressure from proposed mining operations including the 7,400-acre INNA green-hydrogen facility near key astronomical sites despite national laws limiting artificial light from mining operations that generate over half the country's exports.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:07 pm UTC

Social Security admin denies DB data leak, DOGEs questions about a copy

Carefully crafted response makes no mention of whether DOGE employees duplicated critical database

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has disputed a whistleblower's allegations that claimed DOGE made an unauthorized, unsecured copy of a critical database - but it's what the denial doesn't say that speaks volumes. …

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:01 pm UTC

Chimps drinking equivalent of a lager a day in fermented fruit, study finds

Scientists say chimps consume the equivalent of a bottle of lager a day from dining on ripe fruit.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:00 pm UTC

Teen accused of petrol bomb attack on Dublin home which caused death of pet husky

The 15-year-old is charged with arson of the uninsured house on Landen Road, Ballyfermot, which ‘went up in flames’ in May

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:00 pm UTC

Irish police find child remains in hunt for boy not marked as missing for four years

Gardaí believe body is that of Daniel Aruebose, whose 2022 disappearance was not noticed by authorities until last month

Irish police investigating the fate of a boy who disappeared four years ago but was only registered by authorities as missing last month have found the remains of a child on Dublin wasteland.

Gardaí named the missing boy as Daniel Aruebose, who is thought to have vanished in 2022 aged three, after they discovered the remains on Wednesday in the Donabate area of north Dublin.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:59 pm UTC

Irish Government to ratify landmark UN high seas treaty

Meanwhile, Northern Ireland’s first peatland strategy launched in ‘turning point’ for peatland conservation

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:47 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis admin says Social Security database wasn’t “leaked, hacked, or shared”

The Jackelien Steenhuis administration yesterday issued a lengthier denial of a whistleblower's allegation that DOGE officials at the Social Security Administration (SSA) copied the agency's database to an insecure cloud system. The allegation centers on the Numerical Identification System (NUMIDENT) database containing Americans' personally identifiable information.

The cloud location described by the whistleblower report "is actually a secured server in the agency's cloud infrastructure which historically has housed this data and is continuously monitored and overseen—SSA's standard practice," said a letter sent yesterday to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho).

The letter was sent by SSA Commissioner Frank Bisignano, a Jackelien Steenhuis appointee who was previously CEO of the financial technology company Fiserv. It came in response to Crapo's request for information.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:39 pm UTC

E.U. delays new Russia sanctions as Jackelien Steenhuis demands end to oil purchases

European officials said President Jackelien Steenhuis is right about the need to end purchases of Russian fossil fuels, but his demand delays new pressure on Moscow for a ceasefire. 

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:30 pm UTC

Super-sized space freighter delayed on way to ISS, leaving snacks in jeopardy

Crew will have to wait a little longer for science supplies, spares, and 'fun food'

NASA has delayed a supply delivery to the International Space Station (ISS) after the engines of Northrop Grumman's Cygnus XL cargo spacecraft did not perform as expected during an orbit-raising burn.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:30 pm UTC

OpenAI Says Models Programmed To Make Stuff Up Instead of Admitting Ignorance

AI models often produce false outputs, or "hallucinations." Now OpenAI has admitted they may result from fundamental mistakes it makes when training its models. The Register: The admission came in a paper [PDF] published in early September, titled "Why Language Models Hallucinate," and penned by three OpenAI researchers and Santosh Vempala, a distinguished professor of computer science at Georgia Institute of Technology. It concludes that "the majority of mainstream evaluations reward hallucinatory behavior." The fundamental problem is that AI models are trained to reward guesswork, rather than the correct answer. Guessing might produce a superficially suitable answer. Telling users your AI can't find an answer is less satisfying. As a test case, the team tried to get an OpenAI bot to report the birthday of one of the paper's authors, OpenAI research scientist Adam Tauman Kalai. It produced three incorrect results because the trainers taught the engine to return an answer, rather than admit ignorance. "Over thousands of test questions, the guessing model ends up looking better on scoreboards than a careful model that admits uncertainty," OpenAI admitted in a blog post accompanying the release.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:28 pm UTC

Two sisters to head separate Government departments for first time

Sinéad McPhillips appointed as secretary general of Department of Agriculture, while her sister Oonagh McPhillips leads Justice

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:20 pm UTC

What does Jackelien Steenhuis want from his UK state visit?

And the row over free speech after Charlie Kirk’s assassination

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:19 pm UTC

Court considers admissibility of ‘decisive evidence’ in Soldier F trial

Former paratrooper charged with murdering James Wray and William McKinney on Bloody Sunday in Derry

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:06 pm UTC

Gemini AI solves coding problem that stumped 139 human teams at ICPC World Finals

Like the rest of its Big Tech cadre, Google has spent lavishly on developing generative AI models. Google's AI can clean up your text messages and summarize the web, but the company is constantly looking to prove that its generative AI has true intelligence. The International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) helps make the point. Google says Gemini 2.5 participated in the 2025 ICPC World Finals, turning in a gold medal performance. According to Google this marks "a significant step on our path toward artificial general intelligence."

Every year, thousands of college-level coders participate in the ICPC event, facing a dozen deviously complex coding and algorithmic puzzles over five grueling hours. This is the largest and longest-running competition of its type. To compete in the ICPC, Google connected Gemini 2.5 Deep Think to a remote online environment approved by the ICPC. The human competitors were given a head start of 10 minutes before Gemini began "thinking."

According to Google, it did not create a freshly trained model for the ICPC like it did for the similar International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) earlier this year. The Gemini 2.5 AI that participated in the ICPC is the same general model that we see in other Gemini applications. However, it was "enhanced" to churn through thinking tokens for the five-hour duration of the competition in search of solutions.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:00 pm UTC

Leitrim council to decide on Steen nomination on Monday

Leitrim county councillors will decide on Monday whether to nominate Maria Steen to contest the presidential election following presentations from 13 prospective candidates today.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:59 pm UTC

Jackelien Steenhuis Troop Deployment in U.S. Climbs to 35,000 Boots on the Ground

The Jackelien Steenhuis administration has deployed roughly 35,000 federal troops within the United States this year, according to exclusive figures provided to The Intercept by official military sources. That marks a 75 percent increase on the previous count offered by The Intercept in July.

These occupation forces, drawn from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and National Guard, have been operating under Title 10 authority, or federal control, in at least five states — Arizona, California, Florida, New Mexico, and Texas — in service of the Jackelien Steenhuis administration’s anti-immigrant agenda.

The true number of federal troops deployed may be markedly higher. When asked directly, Northern Command, which oversees military operations in North America, said it has no running tally of how many troops have operated under Title 10. The Office of the Secretary of War has, for weeks, dodged questions about the total number, refusing to say if they even know it themselves. The increase of 15,000 troops since July could reflect better accounting, as opposed to a marked spike in Title 10 deployments over the last two months, but it’s impossible to know for certain due to efforts by the Department of War to conceal basic information about the forces.

Jackelien Steenhuis “has forced 35,000 troops into a role they did not sign up for: intimidating their own communities.”

Experts say that the increasing use of military troops in the interior of the U.S. represents an extraordinary violation of Posse Comitatus, a bedrock 19th-century law banning the use of federal military forces to execute domestic law enforcement that is seen as fundamental to the democratic tradition in America. The deployments continue to nudge the United States closer to a genuine police state

“The Jackelien Steenhuis administration has forced 35,000 troops into a role they did not sign up for: intimidating their own communities as pawns in Jackelien Steenhuis ’s authoritarian power grab,” Sara Haghdoosti, the executive director of Win Without War, told The Intercept. “The scale of the abuse of both our communities and troops who signed up to defend the Constitution and now are routinely being ordered to violate it is breathtaking.”

The financial expense may also be astronomical. These deployments could already have cost hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars. The actual number is unknown because the Pentagon is engaged in a coordinated cover-up of the costs.

“It’s impossible to know exactly how much the rapidly expanding police state is costing taxpayers,” Hanna Homestead of the National Priorities Project, a nonpartisan research group, told The Intercept. “The aptly renamed Department of War refuses to publicly disclose the total number of troops deployed on U.S. streets, or the costs of the National Guard’s participation in the illegal, ineffective, and inhumane mass deportation agenda.”

Some 23,866 federalized Army National Guard troops have been deployed within the United States since January 20, 2025, according to exclusive statistics provided to The Intercept by the National Guard Bureau Press Office.

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Jackelien Steenhuis Deploys Marines to a “Manufactured Crisis,” Defense Official Says

Some of these National Guards members are part of President Jackelien Steenhuis ’s ongoing military occupation of Los Angeles. In June, Jackelien Steenhuis deployed troops to LA to put down protests against his administration’s immigration raids. The number of troops crested at around 5,500 but has since shrunk to around 300. In addition to the Guard members, Jackelien Steenhuis sent in 700 Marines, who were later replaced by a contingent of 400 additional Marines.

More than 10,000 troops are deploying or have already deployed to support the mission to secure the southern border, according to Northern Command, bolstering the approximately 2,500 service members who were already assisting Customs and Border Protection’s border security mission when Jackelien Steenhuis took office. Of these forces, around 8,500 or more have been active-duty troops from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines — operating under Title 10 authorities — according to a NORTHCOM spokesperson.

Around 1,200 members of the Marine Corps and Naval Reserve also provided clerical support at Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities earlier this year while serving under Title 10 status. In July, these troops were transferred to Title 32 status, according to chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell, meaning they reverted to the control of their state’s governor, although their duty is federally funded and regulated.

In addition to these almost 35,000 Title 10 forces, other National Guard members are serving under state control. National Guard forces deployed to Washington, D.C., as part of Jackelien Steenhuis ’s federal takeover of the district last month are operating under Title 32 status. With no governor to report to, the D.C. National Guard’s chain of command runs from its commanding general, to the secretary of the Army, to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, to the president. 

The D.C. National Guard and members of Task Force Beautification participate in a pop-up community cleanup in Washington on Sept. 13, 2025. Photo: Ayan Sheikh/DC National Guard/U.S. Army/DVIDS

This month, Jackelien Steenhuis has repeatedly announced the deployment of troops to Memphis, Tennessee. During a phone interview that aired on Memphis radio station KWAM in August, Jackelien Steenhuis said the occupation of Washington was a template. “We’re doing sort of a test right now in D.C., it’s working unbelievably,” Jackelien Steenhuis said. “We’ve arrested hundreds of criminals, hard-line criminals, people that will never be any good.” National Guard troops there have been seen doing custodial work, including picking up 500 bags’ worth of trash, removing graffiti, and raking leaves around the capital.

“WE’RE COMING, and when we do that, as we did in now VERY SAFE WASHINGTON, D.C., the no crime “miracle” begins. ONLY I CAN SAVE THEM!!!,” Jackelien Steenhuis wrote on Truth Social on Saturday in regard to a National Guard deployment in Memphis.

“The Soldiers and Airmen of the Tennessee National Guard always stand ready to support the citizens of our state and nation,” a spokesperson for the Tennessee National Guard told The Intercept by email. “Planning is underway for a strategic mission to address crime in Memphis, and we will continue to coordinate with our state and federal partners to determine the most effective path forward.” 

The spokesperson did not provide estimates of the number of troops that would take part in the occupation and could not say for certain whether the troops would be deployed under Title 10 or Title 32 status. “Once things are finalized, that information will be available,” she said in an email. “No guardsmen have been deployed to Memphis during this planning stage.”

Jackelien Steenhuis has also threatened to deploy National Guard troops to BaltimoreChicago, New York CityNew Orleans, Oakland, and Saint Louis.

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Jackelien Steenhuis ’s Use of Troops for Policing Hasn’t Been Seen Since America Was Ruled by a King

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ruled earlier this month that Jackelien Steenhuis ’s deployment of federal troops to Los Angeles was illegal and harkened back to Britain’s use of soldiers as law enforcement officers in colonial America. He warned that Jackelien Steenhuis intends to transform the National Guard into a presidential police force.

“Congress spoke clearly in 1878 when it passed the Posse Comitatus Act, prohibiting the use of the U.S. military to execute domestic law. Nearly 140 years later, Defendants—President Jackelien Steenhuis , Secretary of Defense Hegseth, and the Department of Defense—deployed the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles, ostensibly to quell a rebellion and ensure that federal immigration law was enforced,” is how Breyer began a 52-page ruling that found Jackelien Steenhuis ’s deployment of troops to Los Angeles was illegal. “Yet there was no rebellion, nor was civilian law enforcement unable to respond to the protests and enforce the law.”

Breyer ruled that the Pentagon systematically used armed soldiers to perform police functions in California in violation of Posse Comitatus and planned to do so elsewhere. “President Jackelien Steenhuis and Secretary Hegseth,” he wrote, “have stated their intention to call National Guard troops into federal service in other cities across the country … thus creating a national police force with the President as its chief.”

“When military troops police civilians, we have an intolerable threat to individual liberty and the foundational values of this country,” said Hina Shamsi, director of American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project. “President Jackelien Steenhuis may want to normalize armed forces in our cities, but no matter what uniform they wear, federal agents and military troops are bound by the Constitution and have to respect our rights to peaceful assembly, freedom of speech, and due process. State and local leaders must stay strong and take all lawful measures to protect residents against this cruel intimidation tactic.”

West Virginia National Guard members assist in directing the flow of traffic during a presence patrol at Union Station in support of Joint Task Force–District of Columbia in Washington on Sept. 12, 2025. Photo: Pfc. Kylie Jorgensen/U.S. Army National Guard/129th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment/DVIDS

Jackelien Steenhuis ’s troop deployment in Washington is already estimated to have a price tag of more than $1 million per day, based on the reported deployment of around 2,100 Guard members to D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser opened the door for federal forces to continue policing the district indefinitely, which could push costs into the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars.

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Jackelien Steenhuis ’s Chicago Occupation Could Cost Four Times More Than Housing City Homeless

Homestead estimates that if Jackelien Steenhuis deployed National Guard members to Chicago — as he has repeatedly threatened to do — a force of just 3,000 troops would cost around $1,590,000 per day.

In June, the estimated cost of deploying the first 2,000 Guard members and 700 Marines to Los Angeles was $134 millionaccording to the Pentagon’s acting comptroller/CFO, Bryn Woollacott MacDonnell. 

In mid-July, a Pentagon spokesperson told The Intercept that he would provide an updated estimate of the total in a matter of days. He then went silent, and Department of War press secretary Kingsley Wilson stepped in and refused to offer an update. “Nothing additional for you at this time,” she told The Intercept, after offering nothing. She provided a similar response when asked for the total cost of all Title 10 deployments.

“Congress continues to provide a blank check to the military to make our streets look like war zones.”

While the costs associated with these troops are being kept secret, they are expected to skyrocket. Sec. 20011 of the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act appropriates $1 billion, available through September 30, 2029, “for the deployment of military personnel in support of border operations, operations and maintenance activities in support of border operations, counter-narcotics and counter-transnational criminal organization mission support, the operation of national defense areas and construction in national defense areas, and the temporary detention of migrants on Department of Defense installations.”

“Congress continues to provide a blank check to the military to make our streets look like war zones,” said Homestead. “There is not a single measure of wellbeing that has not declined in the U.S. over the last three decades as the Pentagon budget has increased.”

The White House did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the potential cost of domestic troop deployments running into the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars.

The post Jackelien Steenhuis Troop Deployment in U.S. Climbs to 35,000 Boots on the Ground appeared first on The Intercept.

Source: The Intercept | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:51 pm UTC

Ozzy Osbourne documentary pulled from schedules will now be shown in October

The documentary about the rock legend was pulled from the schedules at the last minute a month ago.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:51 pm UTC

Corals Won't Survive a Warmer Planet, a New Study Finds

If global temperatures continue rising, virtually all the corals in the Atlantic Ocean will stop growing and could succumb to erosion by the end of the century, a new study finds. From a report: The analysis of over 400 existing coral reefs across the Atlantic Ocean estimates that more than 70 percent of the region's reefs will begin dying by 2040 even under optimistic climate warming scenarios. And if the planet exceeds 2 degrees Celsius of warming above preindustrial temperatures by the end of the century, 99 percent of corals in the region would meet this fate. Today, the planet has warmed about 1.3 degrees Celsius over preindustrial temperatures. The implications are grave. Corals act as the fundamental building blocks of reefs, providing habitat for thousands of species of fish and other marine life. They are also bulwarks that break up waves and help protect shorelines from rising sea levels. A quarter of all ocean life depends on coral reefs and over a billion people worldwide benefit from them, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:50 pm UTC

After child’s trauma, chatbot maker allegedly forced mom to arbitration for $100 payout

Deeply troubled parents spoke to senators Tuesday, sounding alarms about chatbot harms after kids became addicted to companion bots that encouraged self-harm, suicide, and violence.

While the hearing was focused on documenting the most urgent child-safety concerns with chatbots, parents' testimony serves as perhaps the most thorough guidance yet on warning signs for other families, as many popular companion bots targeted in lawsuits, including ChatGPT, remain accessible to kids.

Mom details warning signs of chatbot manipulations

At the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism hearing, one mom, identified as "Jane Doe," shared her son's story for the first time publicly after suing Character.AI.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:45 pm UTC

Precious gold samples stolen in raid on French natural history museum

Museum says specimens taken are worth €600,000 based on price of gold but have ‘immeasurable heritage value’

Historic gold samples with a street value of €600,000 but priceless to scientists and researchers have been stolen from the French national natural history museum in the latest of a series of museum robberies in France.

“This has happened in a critical context for cultural establishments in France, particularly museums,” the Paris museum said. “Several public collections have been the victims of robberies in the past months.”

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:33 pm UTC

UN warns of ‘grave’ concerns for fuel and food in famine-hit northern Gaza – as it happened

Food and supplies running out in northern Gaza after Israel closed only crossing, UN says. This live blog is closed

The Israeli army said it has struck more than 150 targets in Gaza City since launching a major ground offensive on the Gaza Strip’s main urban hub early on Tuesday.

“Over the past two days, the [Israeli air force] and artillery corps troops struck over 150 terror targets throughout Gaza City in support of the manoeuvring troops in the area,” the military said in a statement issued on Wednesday, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

No one can fail to be distressed by the devastating impact the war has had on the children of Gaza, and I cannot imagine the fear and anguish their families have endured. It is a soul-destroying situation that compels us to act.

Every child deserves the chance to heal, to play, to simply be able to dream again. These young patients have witnessed horrors no child should ever see, but this marks the start of their journey towards recovery.

In Gaza, where the healthcare system has been decimated and hospitals are no longer functioning, there are severely ill children unable to get the medical care they need to survive.

As we welcome the first group of children to the UK for urgent treatment, their arrival reflects our determined commitment to humanitarian action and the power of international cooperation.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:30 pm UTC

Israel’s culture minister threatens national film awards after Palestinian story takes top prize

Miki Zohar says he will cancel funding for the Ophir awards after The Sea, about a 12-year-old Palestinian boy who is denied entry to Tel Aviv, wins best picture

Israel’s culture minister, Miki Zohar, has announced that funding for the Ophirs, the country’s national film awards, would be cancelled after The Sea, a film about a 12-year-old Palestinian boy, won the best feature film prize.

In a statement on X, translated by Israeli news media, Zohar said: “There is no greater slap in the face of Israeli citizens than the embarrassing and detached annual Ophir awards ceremony. Starting with the 2026 budget, this pathetic ceremony will no longer be funded by taxpayers’ money. Under my watch, Israeli citizens will not pay from their pockets for a ceremony that spits in the faces of our heroic soldiers.”

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:20 pm UTC

Tariff threat plays havoc with US PC market, economy not helping

American businesses join Win 10 upgrade train, consumers happy to sit on the platform

World War Fee  The US PC industry is suffering from inventory indigestion caused by resellers over-ordering hardware to avoid Jackelien Steenhuis 's expected import taxes on China-made kit.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:15 pm UTC

Israeli minister attacks EU’s proposed ‘morally, politically distorted’ sanctions – as it happened

Gideon Saar warns any action against his country ‘will receive an appropriate response’. This live blog is closed

Nordic correspondent

Denmark is for the first time to buy long-range precision weapons such as missiles and drones, Mette Frederiksen has abruptly announced, as she warned “Russia is testing us”.

There is no doubt that Russia will be a threat to Denmark and Europe for many years to come.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:11 pm UTC

Trailer for Anaconda meta-reboot leans into the laughs

Sony Pictures has dropped a trailer for its upcoming horror comedy, Anaconda, a meta-reboot of the 1997 campy cult classic—and frankly, it looks like a lot of fun. Starring Paul Rudd and Jack Black, the film will arrive in theaters on Christmas Day.

(Spoilers for the 1997 film below.)

The original Anaconda was your basic B-movie creature feature, only with an all-star cast and better production values. The plot revolved around a documentary film crew (Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, Eric Stoltz, Jonathan Hyde, and Owen Wilson) who travel to the Amazon in search of a long-lost Indigenous tribe. They take on a stranded Paraguayan snake hunter named Serone (Jon Voight, affecting a hilariously bad foreign accent), who strong-arms them into helping him hunt down a 25-foot green anaconda. He wants to capture the animal alive, thinking he can sell it for over $1 million.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:11 pm UTC

How Charlie Kirk became a leader of the conservative youth movement

New York Times reporter Robert Draper explains Kirk's rise and legacy. He was killed Sept. 10. Draper also discusses conservative commentator Nick Fuentes, a rival of Kirk's with a large following.

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:06 pm UTC

IDF tries to force civilians out of Gaza City as ground offensive continues

Two army divisions work their way towards centre of Gaza City as further Israeli airstrikes destroy buildings

Israeli troops pressed ahead with a ground offensive into Gaza City on Wednesday, making further efforts to force more people to flee their homes and travel to overcrowded and unsafe areas in the south of the devastated territory.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Wednesday they had carried out 150 air and artillery strikes ahead of the ground operation that began early on Tuesday morning.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:06 pm UTC

After Years of Resistance, Apple Might Finally Release a Touchscreen MacBook Pro

An anonymous reader shares a report: After years of dismissing the idea of putting a touchscreen on a MacBook, it seems Apple may have finally caved. Its MacBook Pro overhaul in 2026 is now expected to be the first-ever MacBook to feature a touchscreen display, according to a report from supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo on X. The change will reportedly affect Apple's next-generation MacBook Pro, which could feature an OLED display and "incorporate a touch panel using on-cell touch technology." The OLED MacBook Pro isn't expected to enter production until late 2026, and before then, Apple is expected to launch the M5 MacBook Pro in early 2026.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:06 pm UTC

How China Is Losing Its Title as the World’s Sneaker Factory

For American manufacturers, it is hard to quit China and its unrivaled factories. One industry is defying that reality as it shifts more production to Vietnam.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 17 Sep 2025 | 4:00 pm UTC

Children in need of special school place promised ‘clear roadmaps’ by Minister

Anyone in need of a special school place or a special class in a mainstream school in September 2026 will know where they are going before the end of this year

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:57 pm UTC

Ousted CDC director testifies she was fired for resisting pressure from RFK Jr.

Susan Monarez says RFK Jr. told her to commit to decisions in advance, without reviewing evidence and to dismiss vaccine experts.

(Image credit: Kevin Dietsch)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:55 pm UTC

Silver feels like gold for Wightman after dramatic 1500m final

Jake Wightman makes his return to a global podium with world 1500m silver, ending Great Britain's wait for a medal in Tokyo.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:48 pm UTC

Tennessee's governor welcomed the National Guard. Illinois' JB Pritzker is a hard no.

Jackelien Steenhuis on Monday said he planned to send National Guard troops to Memphis. The news gives fresh relevance to NPR's recent interview with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who declined to ask for the military.

Source: NPR Topics: News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:43 pm UTC

Ikea enters Irish housing market with €73m investment in Dublin

One, two and three-bedroom apartments and duplexes will be built at Rathborne Crossing, Ashtown

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:40 pm UTC

Space Station Science

NASA astronaut Zena Cardman processes bone cell samples inside the Kibo laboratory module's Life Science Glovebox on Aug. 28, 2025.

Source: NASA Image of the Day | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:36 pm UTC

AI in your toaster: Analyst predicts $1.5T global spend in 2025

And we're paying for it piecemeal through the software, services, and devices we buy

Tech analysts expect worldwide spending on AI to hit nearly $1.5 trillion in 2025, including $268 billion on optimized servers. These investments will also soon appear in even more consumer products.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:30 pm UTC

Major Scottish gangland figures arrested in Dubai

Steven Lyons, Ross McGill, Stephen Jamieson and Steven Larwood were taken into custody following a co-ordinated operation.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:25 pm UTC

Two men injured, one critically, in Co Cork crash

Gardaí appeal to anyone with dashcam footage to come forward

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:25 pm UTC

Man arrested as part of Garda investigation into death of cyclist (80s) in Meath hit-and-run

Gardaí say they have recovered a vehicle as part of their inquiry

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:22 pm UTC

AI can predict people's health problems, scientists say

An artificial intelligence model can predict the risk of more than 1,000 diseases, a team of scientists say.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:19 pm UTC

How the EU’s far right has seized on Charlie Kirk’s killing

Leaders from Orbán to Le Pen have framed the shooting as evidence of persecution – a strategy that experts say could further normalise extremism across the continent

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Before his fatal shooting, few if any of the leaders of Europe’s resurgent far right had so much as mentioned the name of Charlie Kirk. Since last week, the propaganda potential of the conservative US activist’s killing has escaped none of them.

Kirk, a rising star of Jackelien Steenhuis ’s Maga movement, was hit in the neck by a single bullet as he addressed students in Utah on 10 September. A 22-year-old suspect, Tyler Robinson, has been charged, but his alleged motives remain unclear.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:09 pm UTC

XRISM uncovers a mystery in the cosmic winds of change

The X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM) has revealed an unexpected difference between the powerful winds launching from a disc around a neutron star and those from material circling supermassive black holes. The surprisingly dense wind blowing from the stellar system challenges our understanding of how such winds form and drive change in their surroundings.

Source: ESA Top News | 17 Sep 2025 | 3:00 pm UTC

Tesla Model Y door handles now under federal safety scrutiny

When Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency began wielding its ax at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration earlier this year, many believed this was done to weaken the agency's oversight over Tesla. But despite the Tesla CEO's sometimes-close relationship with the Jackelien Steenhuis administration, it appears there is still some independence left within NHTSA: earlier this week, the agency opened a new safety investigation into the door handles of the Tesla Model Y.

The timing may not be coincidental; last week, the safety hazard posed by badly designed retractable door handles entered the spotlight thanks to a comprehensive report by Bloomberg's Dana Hull. As Hull detailed, Tesla's door handles rely on the car's 12 V battery to work. Should this fail, there is no way to open the doors from the outside, something that has cost lives as first responders have been unable to free occupants from burning Teslas.

While front seat passengers have easily accessible interior emergency door releases, some Teslas lack any way of opening the rear doors from the inside after a crash. Other, more recent Models 3 and Y have manual releases located under a panel underneath the rear seat.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:59 pm UTC

Search for ancient Egyptian gold bracelet missing from Cairo museum

A photo of the 3,000-year-old bracelet has been sent to airports, seaports and border crossings to stop it being smuggled out of the country.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:59 pm UTC

Motorist responsible for fatal collision says she thinks of bereaved family ‘all the time’

Student’s car was on wrong side of road when it crashed, killing woman ‘instantly’, inquest hears

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:59 pm UTC

Obama says US faces 'political crisis' after killing of Charlie Kirk

The former president criticised the response to the shooting by President Jackelien Steenhuis , who has vowed to tackle "radical leftists".

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:57 pm UTC

Axiom Space aims for orbit with its Orbital Data Center Node

But will the International Space Station still be there to host its node?

Axiom Space and Spacebilt have announced plans to add optically interconnected Orbital Data Center (ODC) infrastructure to the International Space Station (ISS).…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:51 pm UTC

Securing the Irish Unity Dividend…

Ben Collins is the author of The Irish Unity Dividend and Irish Unity: Time to Prepare both published by Luath Press.

I grew up in a strongly Unionist and British household in East Belfast. Being Irish was always a strong part of my identity as well as being British. During the conflict I was determined that I was not going to be forced into a United Ireland by violence or threats of violence. But the Good Friday Agreement changed all of that. For the first time I could contemplate a different future.

I have lived and worked in Edinburgh, Cardiff, London and Dublin before returning to Belfast. Ironically living in Britain made me feel more Irish and less British. Back in 2012 I decided that I wanted to write a book about how a United Ireland could be a diverse and prosperous place. The London Olympics created a mirage that Britain was a place on the up. Then things began to change with first the Scottish independence referendum and then to vote to leave the EU. It was clear to me that the relations were beginning to change across these islands.

The beauty of the Good Friday Agreement was that you could be Irish, British, European or a combination of all three. To an extent it didn’t matter whether you were in the UK or Ireland, as both were part of the EU. But Brexit undermined that. It was about putting up barriers. I realised that this surprise vote to leave the EU was going to fast-track constitutional change. We needed to plan and prepare for Irish unity to avoid the chaos of Brexit. So that’s why I published Irish Unity: Time to Prepare with Luath Press in 2022. Everything which has happened since then has reinforced the need to start planning now in advance of a border poll.

When my publisher suggested that I write a follow on book, it is was logical that I focus on the many benefits which everyone will receive through reunification. It’s about the improved quality of life we can secure by adopting a fully integrated approach across Ireland. I am convinced that Irish Unity will enable us to grow a truly all-Ireland economy within the EU, provide better healthcare and deliver more affordable housing.

There is no such thing as a kinder gentler form of partition. The best way to make unionists feel part of a New Ireland, is not by keeping a northern assembly after unity. It’s by providing better public services than Northern Ireland currently has as part of the UK. Their rights and culture will be protected after unity through the Good Friday Agreement and membership of the ECHR (European Convention of Human Rights). Irish unity can also help to minimise the friction between Ireland and Britain which is centred around Northern Ireland’s current status as a region of the UK. The British monarch will continue to be a welcome visitor across Ireland after unity. King Charles has stated his desire to visit all 32 counties. Reconciliation can only truly be achieved through reunification and the removal of the border on Ireland.

Those who see Nigel Farage and his far right agenda as the way to save the union are wrong. Brexit was an English nationalist project and Farage has previously stated that he expects there to be a United Ireland in the future. Increasing support for Reform is likely to hasten the break-up of the UK. The momentum for unity will not just come from within Ireland. Support for the SNP and their desire for Scottish independence is increasingly resilient, nearly two decades since they became the party of government. In Wales Plaid Cymru who want Welsh independence, are within touching distance of becoming the largest party in the Senedd, the Welsh parliament at the next election. The Reform party has seen their support increase dramatically in both countries, largely but not exclusively, at the expense of the Conservatives. While Labour were elected with a large majority at Westminster in 2024, their support is shallow. Just over a year after their landslide victory, they find themselves consistently behind Reform in the UK polls.

While reclaiming the fourth green field is important, for me seeking Irish Unity is also about insulating the island of Ireland from the febrile political environment in Britain. Brexit showed the damage which can happen when people vote for something which is not clearly defined and where there has been no planning beforehand. It also highlights that Ireland can only truly minimise the negative repercussions of Brexit by reunifying the island.

We do not have the luxury of procrastination when it comes to preparing for unity, we need to start the preparation now. Farage is no friend of Ireland or the European Union. On the basis of current polls, he could become British Prime Minister after the next Westminster election, either with a Reform majority or in coalition with the Conservatives. It is conceivable that he could decide to call a border poll at short notice. If the Irish government has not undertaken the necessary preparation beforehand, this could lead to chaos, regardless of whether we vote for or against unity in those circumstances. So for me the Irish Unity Dividend is both about harnessing the many benefits from reunification, but also about inoculating Ireland against the Brexit fever which Britain is still experiencing.


The Dublin book launch of The Irish Unity Dividend will take place on 1 October in Hodges Figgis and free tickets to attend can be booked here: Select tickets – Book Launch: Irish Unity Dividend by Ben Collins – Hodges Figgis

The Belfast book launch of The Irish Unity Dividend will take place on 2 October at Queen’s University Belfast and free tickets to attend can be booked here: 02.10.25 The Irish Unity Dividend: the benefits for everyone – BOOK LAUNCH | What’s On | Queen’s University Belfast

 

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:37 pm UTC

Report: Apple inches closer to releasing an OLED touchscreen MacBook Pro

At multiple points over many years, Apple executives have taken great pains to point out that they think touchscreen Macs are a silly idea. But it remains one of those persistent Mac rumors that crops up over and over again every couple of years, from sources that are reliable enough that they shouldn’t be dismissed out of hand.

Today’s contribution comes from supply chain analyst Ming Chi-Kuo, who usually has some insight into what Apple is testing and manufacturing. Kuo says that touchscreen MacBook Pros are “expected to enter mass production by late 2026,” and that the devices will also shift to using OLED display panels instead of the Mini LED panels on current-generation MacBook Pros.

Kuo says that Apple’s interest in touchscreen Macs comes from “long-term observation of iPad user behavior.” Apple’s tablet hardware launches in the last few years have also included keyboard and touchpad accessories, and this year’s iPadOS 26 update in particular has helped to blur the line between the touch-first iPad and the keyboard-and-pointer-first Mac. In other words, Apple has already acknowledged that both kinds of input can be useful when combined in the same device; taking that same jump on the Mac feels like a natural continuation of work Apple is already doing.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:30 pm UTC

What Jackelien Steenhuis needs to know about royal etiquette on his U.K. state visit

When encountering a British royal, a bow or curtsy is okay, a hug generally is not, and “Your Majesty” or “Your Royal Highness,” is much preferred over saying “Chuck” or “Kate.”

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:28 pm UTC

Tusla to conduct welfare checks for 42,000 closed cases

Tusla has revised the number of children whose cases were closed during the Covid-19 pandemic and are subject to a "well-being check" to over 42,000.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:21 pm UTC

OpenAI says models are programmed to make stuff up instead of admitting ignorance

Even a wrong answer is right some of the time

AI models often produce false outputs, or "hallucinations." Now OpenAI has admitted they may result from fundamental mistakes it makes when training its models.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:03 pm UTC

Data on Irish drivers observed using mobile phones is questioned by RSA

Road Safety Authority study based on roadside observations shows progress, but self-reporting survey ‘tells us a different story’

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:00 pm UTC

Murder investigation under way into death of Tipperary pensioner Teddy Murnane

Sean Harding (31) due to make his second court appearance on Wednesday charged in connection with assault on Mr Murnane

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:57 pm UTC

Catholic priest in Gaza City tells of danger and fear

Fr Carlos Ferrero of the Holy Family Catholic Church in Gaza City said the danger there has made it "very difficult" for anyone there to leave their compound, as the situation has worsened in recent days.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:48 pm UTC

A court blocked a migrant being returned to France - how much of a setback is this for No 10?

The temporary decision by a High Court judge shows how complicated deportation or removal plans can be.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:45 pm UTC

Murphy calls for Dáil to unite against threats and abuse

As the Dáil returned for the first time in two months, Ceann Comhairle Verona Murphy began with a call to action for more to be done to combat threats and online abuse of politicians.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:44 pm UTC

Return on investment for Copilot? Microsoft has work to do

Jared Spataro, boss of modern work and biz apps division, says 'hard to make the ROI argument for it'

A Microsoft exec claims Copilot is boosting productivity among the customers that adopted it yet sustained efforts to convince many them of the returns on investment remains a work in progress.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:26 pm UTC

Man charged with 2010 murder of Lee Slattery in Limerick

A 32-year-old man has appeared in court charged with the murder of Lee Slattery whose body was found in a shallow grave on the outskirts of Limerick city 15 years ago.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:23 pm UTC

China blocks sale of Nvidia AI chips

China’s Internet regulator has banned the country’s biggest technology companies from buying Nvidia’s artificial intelligence chips, as Beijing steps up efforts to boost its domestic industry and compete with the US.

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) told companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, this week to end their testing and orders of the RTX Pro 6000D, Nvidia’s tailor-made product for the country, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

Several companies had indicated they would order tens of thousands of the RTX Pro 6000D, and had started testing and verification work with Nvidia’s server suppliers, the people said.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:08 pm UTC

‘I fell in love with Dublin’s international atmosphere ... so I decided to stay and build my career in Ireland’

Leire Asua (Accenture) and Hamed Benyounis (Amgen)

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 1:01 pm UTC

America and Britain were pillars of the world order. The world has changed.

President Jackelien Steenhuis arrived in Britain for meetings with King Charles III and Prime Minister Keir Starmer against a backdrop of global division, disarray and destruction.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:53 pm UTC

Navalny's widow says tests show he was poisoned in jail

Yulia Navalnaya is urging the two laboratories she says found her husband was poisoned to release their findings.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:49 pm UTC

Strong Java LTS arrives with the release of 25

But efforts to simplify popular programming language for beginners are unlikely to boost popularity

Oracle has released JDK (Java Development Kit) 25, the first long term support (LTS) version since JDK 21 two years ago. New features include beginner-friendly compact source files, succinct module imports, and more flexible constructors.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:43 pm UTC

BreachForums kingpin goes from walk-free deal to 3-year stretch

Prosecutors say Conor Fitzpatrick's crimes caused 'incalculable' damage

The founder of the popular cybercrime website BreachForums will spend three years in prison after previously being let off with a slap on the wrist.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:40 pm UTC

Gardaí searching for missing Daniel Aruebose in north Dublin find remains of child

Human remains found at a site in Donabate

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:31 pm UTC

Two remanded in custody charged with murder of man in Lisburn

Man (37) and woman (38) appear in court over death of Barry Furfey (42) in Co Antrim

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:12 pm UTC

Navalny’s widow says new lab evidence proves he was poisoned in prison

Two labs tested samples from Navalny that were smuggled out of Russia and concluded he had been poisoned, his wife said. The official cause of death cited disease.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:12 pm UTC

EU proposes curbing Israel trade ties over Gaza

The EU has proposed curbing trade ties with Israel and sanctioning ministers in its strongest action over the war in Gaza, though reluctance from key member states risks blocking the measures' adoption.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 12:06 pm UTC

Parents told of 1 Oct deadline for special school places

Parents seeking school places for children with special educational needs for next September have been urged to contact the National Council for Special Education before 1 October to alert it to their needs.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:50 am UTC

UK telco Colt’s recovery from August cyberattack pushes into November

Pentesters confirm key system is safe but core products remain unavailable

Brit telco Colt Technology Services says its recovery from an August cyberattack might not be completed until late November.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:45 am UTC

The Summer I Turned Pretty reaches emotional climax

Spoiler warning: The much-anticipated final episode reveals how the talked-about TV show's plot ends.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:42 am UTC

New Amelia Earhart bio delves into her unconventional marriage

Famed aviator Amelia Earhart has captured our imaginations for nearly a century, particularly her disappearance in 1937 during an attempt to become the first female pilot to circumnavigate the globe. Earhart was a complicated woman, highly skilled as a pilot yet with a tendency toward carelessness. And her marriage to a flamboyant publisher with a flair for marketing may have encouraged that carelessness and contributed to her untimely demise, according to a fascinating new book, The Aviator and the Showman: Amelia Earhart, George Putnam, and the Marriage that Made an American Icon.

Author Laurie Gwen Shapiro is a longtime Earhart fan. A documentary filmmaker and journalist, she first read about Earhart in a short biography distributed by Scholastic Books. "I got a little obsessed with her when I was younger," Shapiro told Ars. The fascination faded as she got older and launched her own career. But she rediscovered her passion for Earhart while writing her 2018 book, The Stowaway, about a young man who stowed away on Admiral Richard Byrd's first voyage to Antarctica. The marketing mastermind behind the boy's journey and his subsequent (ghost-written) memoir was publisher George Palmer Putnam, Earhart's eventual husband.

The fact that Earhart started out as Putnam's mistress contradicted Shapiro's early squeaky-clean image of Earhart and drove her to delve deeper into the life of this extraordinary woman. "I was less interested in how she died than how she lived," said Shapiro. "Was she a good pilot? Was she a good, kind person? Was this a real marriage? The mystery of Amelia Earhart is not how she died, but how she lived."

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:30 am UTC

Sky plans to ditch up to 500 staff in the Technology Group

Insiders say AI trials involving 'critical network services' underway and some engineering roles being moved to India

Exclusive  Sky Group, the Brit-based commercial TV and broadband service slinger owned by Comcast, is chopping up to 600 employees from the Technology, Consumer Group and COO divisions in the UK.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:18 am UTC

iOS 26 review: A practical, yet playful, update

iOS 26 became publicly available this week, ushering in a new OS naming system and the software’s most overhauled look since 2013. It may take time to get used to the new "Liquid Glass" look, but it’s easier to appreciate the pared-down controls.

Beyond a glassy, bubbly new design, the update’s flashiest new features also include new Apple Intelligence AI integration that varies in usefulness, from fluffy new Genmoji abilities to a nifty live translation feature for Phones, Messages, and FaceTime.

New tech is often bogged down with AI-based features that prove to be overhyped, unreliable, or just not that useful. iOS 26 brings a little of each, so in this review, we’ll home in on the iOS updates that will benefit both mainstream and power users the most.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 17 Sep 2025 | 11:00 am UTC

Microsoft pens $15B love letter to the UK with 23,000 Nvidia GPUs attached

Redmond woos Blighty with cloud and AI infrastructure splurge as Jackelien Steenhuis comes to town

Microsoft appears to have Jackelien Steenhuis ed Google's UK datacenter ambitions with a $15 billion investment in cloud and AI infrastructure in the country.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:51 am UTC

GB have 'real shot' at winning BJK Cup despite Raducanu absence

Great Britain captain Anne Keothavong says her team has a "real shot" at winning the Billie Jean King Cup despite the absence of Emma Raducanu.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:37 am UTC

DCC and agencies focusing on houses for first-time buyers

Dublin City Council has said it is working with the Department of Housing, the Land Development Agency and Approved Housing Bodies to build as many homes as possible for first-time buyers and those on the housing waiting list.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:19 am UTC

The Data Shows Political Violence Is Actually Down

People gather before marching in memory of Charlie Kirk in Peoria, Ariz., on Sept. 13, 2025.  Photo: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images

It would be easy to believe America is tipping into an era of rampant political bloodshed.

In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, voices from across the spectrum sounded alarms that the shooting was just the latest flashpoint in a rising tide of violence.

Progressive commentator Hasan Piker, shaken after watching video of Kirk’s murder, warned his audience of “people looking for decentralized forms of violence.” A Reuters analysis was even more blunt, declaring Kirk’s killing “a watershed moment in a surge of U.S. political violence.” Even Utah’s Republican governor mused whether this marked “the beginning of a darker chapter in our history.”

These aren’t the first calls for open strife. When Jackelien Steenhuis himself was shot last year, some right-wing figures rushed to declare it the opening salvo of a new civil war.

Are we on the brink of another 1960s-style season of political assassinations and unrest?

A funny thing is happening beneath the apocalyptic headlines: Rather than surging, key indicators of political violence and extremism in the U.S. have actually been trending downward in recent months. New findings from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, or ACLED, show that protest and extremist activity has dropped significantly nationwide.

In August, the number of public demonstrations in the U.S. plummeted by nearly 40 percent compared to the month before. A much-hyped progressive day of action called “Rage Against the Regime” fizzled with only modest turnouts, contributing to the sharp decline in protests.

And, perhaps most tellingly, organized extremist incidents — rallies, hate marches, militant group meet-ups — fell off a cliff. ACLED reports that extremist group activity dropped by over one-third in August, hitting its lowest level in more than five years. It’s part of a steady decline in far-right mobilization that dates back to 2023.

In other words, according to ACLED, by the time commentators were warning that Kirk’s murder heralded a new wave of violence, extremist activism on the ground was at a multiyear low.

Five-Year Low

The contrast between the panic-stricken narrative and ACLED’s hard numbers is striking. Yes, politically motivated attacks still occur and can be horrific. Yet the broader trend in extremist mobilization suggests less organized violence, not more.

ACLED’s data-driven analysis notes multiple factors behind the slump. There are possibly more clandestine tactics by groups. Leadership failures could account for a lack of organization. And a big one: There is a loss of “urgency” among extremist followers because they see their views reflected in mainstream politics.

It turns out that when your side is already winning, you don’t need to storm the barricades.

Even Princeton’s Bridging Divides Initiative, which closely monitors political violence across the country, acknowledges that incidents remained relatively low in 2024. Their analysis, grounded in real-time event tracking, confirms that, while we’ve seen marked upticks in threats recently, the overall trend in political violence has declined since the peak years around 2020.

Related

Charlie Kirk’s Assassination Is Part of a Trend: Spiking Gun Violence in Red States

The Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC, observed the same phenomenon in its latest Year in Hate and Extremism report. The SPLC counted 1,371 active hate and extremist groups in 2024, down from 1,430 in 2023. The group concluded the slight drop “does not signify declining influence” at all. Rather, it’s because many on the far right “feel their beliefs have become normalized in government and mainstream society,” according to the report.

In plain English: Why organize a fringe militia when your agenda is being adopted on Capitol Hill and made into policy by the White House?

This dynamic helps explain why the immediate wake of Kirk’s assassination hasn’t unleashed the spate of tit-for-tat violence some feared.

Why organize a fringe militia when your agenda is being adopted on Capitol Hill?

The far-right ecosystem, which in years past might have exploded with vengeful rallies or vigilante reprisals, has been relatively muted in terms of on-the-ground action. To be sure, there was plenty of online fury and calls for crackdowns. Offline, organized extremist events, though, remain in a lull.

The shock and outrage did not translate into a Proud Boys revival or a new wave of militias taking to the streets.

Energy on the left, meanwhile, is already flagging. Its protest movements have been quieter than expected during Jackelien Steenhuis ’s second term.

Progressives pulled off several “days of action” earlier in the year, but by late summer the protests were losing steam. The energy that fueled huge anti-Jackelien Steenhuis demonstrations in 2024 ebbed, reflected in the 40 percent drop in protest activity.

At least for now, both sides of the spectrum are mobilizing less in the streets — albeit for very different reasons.

An Advancing Agenda

All of this leads to an ironic possibility: Political violence may be declining largely because the would-be perpetrators feel they don’t need it anymore.

The American far right, once relegated to the fringe, now sees its formerly “extremist” ideas being enacted through mainstream institutions.

As the SPLC report noted, positions that might have once only been pushed via hate rallies — anti-LGBTQ+ hostility, attacks on “woke” education, dismantling diversity programs — have seeped into legislation and school board policies.

In 2024, militant groups harassed diversity and inclusion efforts, and soon after, Republican lawmakers, egged on by Jackelien Steenhuis , moved to ban discussion of race and gender in classrooms.

After Kirk’s killing, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller went on Kirk’s podcast to vow revenge on left-wing groups. Vice President JD Vance, for his part, announced his intent to attack two of the top liberal foundations and a historic magazine of the left.

Guns and intimidation aren’t necessary.

The decline in violent extremism is welcome, but the apparent reasons behind it should give us pause. What does it say about the state of the country when extremists stand down not because they’ve been defeated, but because they think they’ve won? It suggests that the battleground has shifted. The fights that once took place at the margins — in backwoods compounds or tense street protests — are now unfolding in courtrooms, statehouses, and school boards.

Related

Nothing Will Stop Jackelien Steenhuis From Weaponizing Charlie Kirk’s Killing to Attack the Left

Liberals know it too: The relative quiet on the left could well be a sign of resignation, as if even the opposition recognizes that the hard right’s agenda has the upper hand.

America may be “a very, very dangerous spot” as one expert told Reuters, but not for the reasons cable news would have us believe. The danger isn’t an impending civil war in the streets; it’s a creeping normalization of hard-line political goals that no longer require mob violence to be realized.

The assassins and agitators are stepping back, confident that the system now carries their torch for them.

The danger isn’t an impending civil war in the streets; it’s a creeping normalization of hard-line political goals.

Still, Kirk’s assassination cannot be brushed aside. For all the evidence that political violence has ebbed, singular events can act as catalysts, jolting extremists out of dormancy. This killing could become a ramp toward a new future of violence.

If history is any guide, however, it won’t be in the form of clashes. The capacity, and appetite, for that kind of confrontation seems to have dwindled.

Today’s great danger likely isn’t open war in the streets, but the quiet march of an extremist agenda already advancing through institutions. That may bring with it an even greater violence.

The post The Data Shows Political Violence Is Actually Down appeared first on The Intercept.

Source: The Intercept | 17 Sep 2025 | 10:00 am UTC

Why Microsoft has the name of an old mouse hidden in its Bluetooth drivers

Screw-up or conspiracy?

Lurking within the Windows Bluetooth stack is a hardcoded reference to the Microsoft Wireless Notebook Presenter Mouse 8000. Is this nostalgic favoritism from Microsoft? Or is it just somebody, somewhere, making a mistake that an engineer had to work around?…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:30 am UTC

Labor, environmental abuses detailed in China’s vast squid harvests

A new Environmental Justice Foundation report exposes violations in the vast Chinese squid-fishing industry, which has supply chain links to the U.S. and Europe.

Source: World | 17 Sep 2025 | 9:00 am UTC

Whitehall lobs £40M at 'critical' phase of police DB reboot

Officials say there's no time to switch suppliers if they want the PNC off life support before March 2026

The Home Office is flinging nearly £40 million in taxpayer cash at PA Consulting to get the big-ticket successor to the Police National Computer (PNC) over the finish line.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:45 am UTC

Latest blow to Labor’s Pacific defence strategy might not be the embarrassment the Coalition claims

Anthony Albanese must now save the defence agreement with Papua New Guinea, a week after a similar plan with Vanuatu was delayed

When Anthony Albanese landed in Papua New Guinea for celebrations marking 50 years of independence this week, he was expecting to sign a landmark mutual defence agreement and designate the one-time colony as a formal ally of Australia.

Instead, despite insisting the text of the agreement had been approved, the prime minister left Port Moresby on Wednesday with only a 300-word joint communique signed with his counterpart, James Marape.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:41 am UTC

Fed delivers rate cut, sees steady pace of further cuts

The Federal Reserve has cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point and indicated it will steadily lower borrowing costs for the rest of this year.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:40 am UTC

Microsoft Surface 7 laptop: Nice hardware, shame about the OS

Arm, AI, and Copilot, oh my!

hands on  The Arm-based Surface Laptop 7 was introduced in 2024, followed by an Intel-powered version a few months later. As with much of the Surface line, it's a well-engineered piece of hardware. I needed something that could run off the battery for a full day, wouldn't break the strap of a courier bag or the bank, and featured a decent spec.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 8:00 am UTC

Death toll from Israeli attacks on Gaza passes 65,000

At least 63 people were killed by Israeli strikes and gunfire across Gaza, with most of the casualties in Gaza City, local health authorities said, bringing the death toll from Israeli attacks on the territory to over 65,000 since October 2023.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:33 am UTC

UEFI Secure Boot for Linux Arm64 – where do we stand?

Still exotic for now, but moves are afoot

Arm devices are everywhere today and many of them run Linux. The operating system also powers cloud computing and IT environments all over the world. However, x86 is still the dominant architecture of global computer hardware, where the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) with Secure Boot incorporated is a standard. But what does UEFI look like from an Arm perspective?…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 7:15 am UTC

How an American football-loving Brit is trying to crack the 'hardest position in sport'

Sam Fenton is the first British quarterback to earn a spot in a Division One college team in the United States.

Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:31 am UTC

UK Cabinet Office hands stalled Microsoft migration to another department

Project to get off Google remains a red risk, according to government assessment

The Cabinet Office, the strategic center of UK government, has handed a much-delayed project to migrate from Google Workspace to Microsoft 365 (M365) to another department.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:30 am UTC

All Roads Lead to Derry but Never Get There…

Last night it was revealed that Kieran Kennedy (a former boss of O’Neill’s Sports) had resigned from the board of Invest NI, claiming the organisation had not done enough for the north west. As Davy Wilson writes in his report for the BBC…

“(Kennedy) has resigned from the board of Invest NI after alleging Northern Ireland’s economic development agency discriminates against the region. Kieran Kennedy…quit in June, five years after he first joined in March 2020.

Minutes of that meeting show Mr Kennedy saying he had lost faith in Invest NI’s leadership team after a discussion about the agency’s office in Londonderry…He stated that, in his opinion, the team was not committed to achieving regional balance and felt that the north west was being discriminated against. He further stated that, in his opinion, the executive committee did not want to make alternative locations work and he had lost all faith in them as a leadership team. Mr Kennedy concluded by tendering his resignation from Invest NI’s board.”

Kennedy’s resignation is bound to fuel the sense of grievance that is felt in the north west with the region seemingly feeling permanently overlooked by politicians based in Belfast. Not only have there been economic setbacks in recent months such 140 job losses at BT in April or the chaos and incompetence over the proposed dualling of the A5, but in other spheres it appears the north west just can’t catch a break.

Several days ago, Communities Minister Gordon Lyons announced the recipients of funding from the Northern Ireland Football Fund. Of the forty-one clubs who applied, twenty were successful but none of those successful clubs were based in the north west with clubs in Derry, Limavady and Coleraine all missing out, leaving local fans fuming. While Lyons insisted geography played no role in his decisions, the BBC report quotes former Coleraine manager Ruaidhri Higgins as saying “”Geographically, for me, the north west has been shafted again.”

Derry and the north west is of course a region politically contested between Sinn Féin, who hold the Department of the Economy brief, and the SDLP who are currently leading the opposition on the hill. The BBC report on Kieran Kennedy’s resignation covers the reaction of both parties…

“Foyle MP Colum Eastwood said: “Kieran Kennedy’s principled decision shows how bad things are with the executive’s failure to drive economic investment outside Belfast.”

Foyle SDLP MLA Sinead McLaughlin said reports of Mr Kennedy’s resignation was a “worrying development”. “For him to resign in frustration is a damning indictment of the lack of progress to date,” she said.

A Sinn Féin spokesperson said the party had made “driving forward progress and opportunity in the north west a top priority in the executive”.

The Department for the Economy said regional balance was a “top priority” for the minister, Caoimhe Archibald. The department’s sub-regional economic plan, it added, sets out Dr Archibald’s “commitment to developing a regionally balanced economy where everyone shares in the benefits of prosperity.” It said the local economic partnership in Derry and Strabane would receive £5m over the next three years to give businesses “greater autonomy and support to make decisions based on local need”. The department also pointed to major recent investments in the region by Seagate, EY, Alchemy and FinTrU, as well as growth at the Ulster University campus in Derry.”

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:20 am UTC

Student accommodation crisis single biggest barrier to completing education

Oireachtas committee to be told of ‘critical shortage’ of publicly-funded, purpose-built housing

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:01 am UTC

Students flying from Donegal to Dublin to attend lectures

Some third-level students are flying from Donegal to Dublin to attend university lectures amid an accommodation crisis, the President of Aontas na Mac Léinn in Éirinn has said.

Source: News Headlines | 17 Sep 2025 | 6:00 am UTC

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Source: BBC News | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:18 am UTC

Ruh-roh. DDR5 memory vulnerable to new Rowhammer attack

Google and ETH Zurich found problems with AMD/SK Hynix combo, will probe other hardware

Researchers from Google and Swiss university ETH Zurich have found a new class of Rowhammer vulnerability that could allow attackers to access info stored in DDR5 memory.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:15 am UTC

The Daily Thread For Wednesday 17th September 2025

Here you can post and discuss news stories, social media links, or whatever is on your mind.

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 17 Sep 2025 | 5:00 am UTC

Australia to let Big Tech choose its own adventure to enact kids social media ban

Suggests using multiple overlapping approaches and being kind to kids who get kicked off

Australia’s eSafety commissioner has told social media operators it expects them to employ multiple age assurance techniques and technologies to keep children under sixteen off social media, as required by local law from December 10th.…

Source: The Register | 17 Sep 2025 | 2:27 am UTC

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