Updated: Tue 24 Feb 02:32:16 GMT 2026

BBC World News
Open 
Ex-Philippine president Duterte on trial for crimes against humanity: What you need to know
Duterte is facing charges relating to a long and bloody war on drugs in which thousands were killed.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Lord Mandelson released on bail after arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office
The Metropolitan Police says a 72-year-old man has been released on bail pending further investigation.

Mail Online
Open 
Mandelson is released on bail after being quizzed by Scotland Yard's elite 'Celeb Squad': Questions over what prompted 'unusual' 4.30pm arrest at disgraced Lord's £7m home 17 days after his properties were searched over links to Epstein
Peter Mandelson has been released on bail after being quizzed late into the night over allegations he leaked sensitive information to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein during his time as business secretary.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lib Dems in bid to release files on Andrew trade role
The party wants documents on the former prince's appointment in 2001 to be published by ministers.

Mail Online
Open 
Senator warns Mexican narco-terrorists are 'hunting down Americans' in war zone Puerto Vallarta as thousands try to escape on flights
A new US-military-led task force specializing in collecting intelligence on drug cartels played a role in the Mexican military raid on Sunday that killed the Mexican drug lord known as 'El Mencho.'

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand would back removal of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from royal line of succession, says PM
Country follows Australia in saying it would support any UK government proposals to remove former prince after arrestNew Zealand has become the second Commonwealth country to back the removal of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the royal line of succession after his arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office.A spokesperson for New Zealand’s prime minister, Christopher Luxon, said on Tuesday: “If the UK government proposes to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the order of succession, New Zealand would support it.” Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Mandelson is released from custody after being quizzed by Scotland Yard's elite 'Celeb Squad': Questions over what prompted 'unusual' 4.30pm arrest at disgraced Lord's £7m home 17 days after his properties were searched over links to Epstein
Peter Mandelson has been released from custody after being quizzed late into the night over allegations he leaked sensitive information to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russian invasion reaches 4-year anniversary
Russian forces invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, and despite negotiation efforts, an end still remains elusive. Follow DW.

Mail Online
Open 
Asos co-founder's lover who was 32 years his junior speaks out in the wake of his death
Quentin Griffiths, 58, who co-founded the retail giant, is said to have fallen from the 17th floor of his condominium in Pattaya, a seaside city south of Bangkok, on February 9.

Mail Online
Open 
DOLLY BUSBY: Liberals at war with each other (and BBC) over the Tourette's sufferer who yelled N-word at black stars
Just as Michael B Jordan started to speak, a horrifying moment unfolded, one that not only threatened to ruin the event but has since caused ructions on both sides of the Atlantic...

Mail Online
Open 
OLIVIA KEMP: Vanishing A-listers and piles of uneaten food at the most sober Bafta party ever
It is an event that has dazzled A-listers with extravagant tablescapes, theatrical lighting and an unmistakable sense of occasion. But this year, the room was hardly fizzing with excitement.

Mail Online
Open 
Asos co-founder's lover who was 32 years his junior has spoken out in the wake of his death
Quentin Griffiths, 58, who co-founded the retail giant, is said to have fallen from the 17th floor of his condominium in Pattaya, a seaside city south of Bangkok, on February 9.

Mail Online
Open 
GENERAL SIR ROLY WALKER: Britain and Nato are in Putin's crosshairs. We are on a collision course with a Russia that's on a war footing
In the months leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, I was working at the Ministry of Defence. We war-gamed Putin's possible strategies in order to advise our politicians.

Mail Online
Open 
When's your Bills Freedom Day? Calculator reveals how many days you need to work this year just to cover essential household costs
The tool calculates someone's personal 'Bills Freedom Day' - the point in the year when they have earned enough money to pay for bills including energy, broadband, mobile and insurance.

Mail Online
Open 
Prue Leith, 86, confesses she's added spice to her sex life with the help of testosterone gel as she looks forward to more time with her husband after quitting Bake Off
Prue Leith has confessed she's added some spice to her sex life with the help of testosterone gel as she opened up about her marriage to husband John Playfair.

Mail Online
Open 
I gave Andrew a naked massage at Buckingham Palace... the £75 bill was paid by the Royal Family's Coutts bank cheque
The shamed former prince snuck professional masseuse Monique Giannelloni into the late Queen's official residence after she was recommended to him by Ghislaine Maxwell.

Mail Online
Open 
RICHARD PENDLEBURY: After 4 years covering this horror, I have bad dreams when I go back home. And I fear we're on the brink of a greater disaster for which we are wholly unprepared
Today is the fourth anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Foreign VIPs will arrive, pledge their support and admiration, and leave. Then missiles will fall. And Ukraine fights on alone.

Mail Online
Open 
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Novelist who backs Queen's charity says royals must go
Historical author Philippa Gregory says it's time for the monarchy to be consigned to history - even though she's one of the leading supporters of Queen Camilla's reading charity.

TechRadar News
Open 
Don’t wait for the iPhone 17e — I think the iPhone 16e at 20% off is excellent value

TechRadar News
Open 
This HBO Max drama with 98% on Rotten Tomatoes is streaming soon — and it’s a rare post-apocalyptic show done right

Digital Trends
Open 
NASA’s moon rocket is about to leave the launchpad, but it ain’t going skyward
The four astronauts preparing to end a five-decade gap in crewed lunar flights will have to wait until at least April before they can begin the Artemis II mission. During the SLS rocket’s second wet dress rehearsal last weekend, NASA discovered an issue with the flow of helium to the rocket’s upper stage. Engineers decided […]
The post NASA’s moon rocket is about to leave the launchpad, but it ain’t going skyward appeared first on Digital Trends.

Slashdot
Open 
Viral Doomsday Report Lays Bare Wall Street's Deep Anxiety About AI Future
A 7,000-word "doomsday" thought experiment from Citrini Research helped trigger an 800-point drop in the Dow, "painting a dark portrait of a future in which technological change inspires a race to the bottom in white-collar knowledge work," reports the Wall Street Journal. From the report: Concerns of hyperscalers overspending are out. Worries of software-industry disruption don't go far enough. The "global intelligence crisis" is about to hit. The new, broader question: What if AI is so bullish for the economy that it is actually bearish? "For the entirety of modern economic history, human intelligence has been the scarce input," Citrini wrote in a post it described as a scenario dated June 2028, not a prediction. "We are now experiencing the unwind of that premium."

Many of Monday's moves roughly aligned with the situation outlined by Citrini, in which fast-advancing AI tools allow spending cuts across industries, sparking mass white-collar unemployment and in turn leading to financial contagion. Software firms DataDog, CrowdStrike and Zscaler each plunged more than 9%. International Business Machines' 13% decline was its worst one-day performance since 2000. American Express, KKR and Blackstone -- all name-checked by Citrini -- tumbled. That anxiety, coupled with renewed uncertainty about trade policy from Washington, weighed down major indexes Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average led declines, falling 1.7%, or 822 points. The S&P 500 shed 1%, while the Nasdaq composite retreated 1.1%.

[...] Monday's market swings extended a run of AI-linked volatility. A small research outfit that has garnered a huge Substack following for macro and thematic stock research, Citrini said in its new post that software firms, payment processors and other companies formed "one long daisy chain of correlated bets on white-collar productivity growth" that AI is poised to disrupt. [...] Shares in DoorDash also veered 6.6% lower Monday after Citrini's Substack note called the delivery app a "poster child" for how new tools would upend companies that monetize interpersonal friction. In the research firm's scenario, AI agents would help both drivers and customers navigate food deliveries at much lower costs.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Microsoft Says Bug In Classic Outlook Hides the Mouse Pointer
joshuark quotes a report from BleepingComputer: Microsoft is investigating a known issue that causes the mouse pointer to disappear in the classic Outlook desktop email client for some users. This bug has been acknowledged almost two months after the first reports started surfacing online, with users saying that Outlook became unusable after the mouse pointer vanished while using the app.

[...] Microsoft explained in a recent support document that the mouse pointer (and in some cases the cursor) will suddenly vanish as users move it across Outlook's interface. "When using classic Outlook, you may find that the mouse pointer or mouse cursor disappears as you move the pointer over the Outlook interface," it said. "Although the mouse pointer is not there, the email in the message list will change color as you hover over it. This issue has also been reported with OneNote and other Microsoft 365 apps to a lesser degree."

Microsoft added that the Outlook team is investigating the issues and will provide updates as more information becomes available. While a timeline for a permanent fix is not yet available, Microsoft has offered three temporary workarounds that require affected users to click an email in the message list when the cursor disappears, which may cause it to reappear. Alternatively, switching to PowerPoint, clicking into an editable area, and then returning to Outlook may also restore the mouse pointer.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Troy Hunt Blog
Open 
Weekly Update 492
Presently sponsored by: Report URI: Guarding you from rogue JavaScript! Don’t get pwned; get real-time alerts & prevent breaches #SecureYourSiteThe recurring theme this week seems to be around the gap between breaches happening and individual victims finding out about them. It's tempting to blame this on the corporate victim of the breach (the hacked company), but they're simultaneously dealing with a criminal intrusion, a ransom

BBC UK News
Open 
The Papers: 'Mandelson arrested' and 'Four years of tears' in Ukraine
The arrest of Lord Mandelson on suspicion of misconduct in public office leads many of Tuesday's papers.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Children in care off school for months as school rejections stack up
Councils seek powers to require more schools to take children as heads say funding would meet needs.

ZDNet News
Open 
How the Oakley Meta smart glasses beat my Ray-Bans on a 5-mile test walk
Oakley's Meta Vanguard smart glasses combine the brand's iconic look with a plethora of AI features for athletes.

The Hill
Open 
Coast Guard investigating swastika discovered in New Jersey recruit center
The U.S. Coast Guard launched an internal investigation after a swastika was found on a bathroom wall at a primary recruit training center in New Jersey. The swastika— widely recognized as a symbol of the German Nazi Party and linked to the killing of millions of Jews — was found in the bathroom of the...

The Hill
Open 
Trump swats down reports that top general warned of Iran strike risks
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Trump swats down reports that top general warned of Iran strike risks President Trump is pushing back at reports that his top military officer advised that strikes on Iran could pose substantial risks and leave the...

The Register
Open 
Anthropic accuses China's AI labs of ripping off content - just like it did
Says DeepSeek, Moonshot, and MiniMax are using 'distillation' to gin up their own models Having built a business by remixing content created by others, Anthropic worries that Chinese AI labs are stealing its data.…

The Right Scoop
Open 
DUDE: Gavin Newsom’s comm team just told reporter to F-OFF when asked about his ‘dyslexia’
Gavin Newsom claimed that, when he told an audience he was just like them and that he couldn’t read, he was referring to his ‘dyslexia’. You didn’t give a shit about the . . .

Mail Online
Open 
Families could save £1,400 if schools ease holiday rules in 'common sense' row
To combat peak-season prices, On the Beach is calling for schools to stagger regional inset days, which could save families up to £1,400 per trip and help avoid fines for unauthorised absence.

Mail Online
Open 
How BAFTA winner Robert Aramayo's 'grounded' working class family from Hull inspired him to pursue his acting dreams - as his role in low-budget British indie film sees him topple Hollywood heavyweights
Robert's parents leapt up from their seats to celebrate, having previously described his success as 'bonkers', given he is from a 'humble little family in Hull'.

Mail Online
Open 
Why are so many US TV stars broke? As fans raise money for the families of James Van Der Beek and Eric Dane, how huge property costs and failure to negotiate lucrative contracts can leave popular actors struggling
Eric Dane and James David Van Der Beek starred on two of the biggest and most loved shows of the nineties and noughties, racking in cash from their adored roles.

Mail Online
Open 
Lin and Megan's murder was one of the UK's most brutal. Now it's being reinvestigated after 30 years - with an already notorious killer in the frame. Welcome to THE CRIME DESK
In an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, Stone said he would 'never' admit to the killings. He branded Daley a 'lying lowlife… who created a miscarriage of justice'.

Mail Online
Open 
Mandelson being quizzed into the night by Scotland Yard's elite 'Celeb Squad': Questions over what prompted 'unusual' 4.30pm arrest at disgraced Lord's £7m home 17 days after his properties were searched over links to Epstein
Peter Mandelson was being quizzed late into the night after being arrested at his London home over allegations he leaked sensitive information to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Mail Online
Open 
More than £430million spent by just ten councils to transport SEND children to schools last year - how much has YOUR local authority spent?
One local authority in England saw its spending on SEND transport soar by almost 700 per cent in a year, with another now forced to shell out up to £600 per head taking children to school.

Mail Online
Open 
Major development in Nancy Guthrie case as masked suspect was caught on doorbell camera BEFORE night of abduction
The mysterious masked figure who was seen trying to obscure Nancy Guthrie's Nest doorbell camera on the night of her abduction had apparently visited the house before.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chris Baghsarian: human remains found in search for kidnapped Sydney man, NSW police say
NSW detectives have located what they believe are human remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, 11 days after 85-year-old abducted from North Ryde homeFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastDetectives have found what they believe are human remains on Sydney’s outskirts as they search for the missing 85-year-old Chris Baghsarian.New South Wales police said on Tuesday that detectives investigating the mistaken kidnapping of Baghsarian had discovered remains near a golf club in Pitt Town about 8am on Tuesday. They said investigations into the man’s disappearance continued. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US accuses China of ‘massively’ expanding nuclear arsenal amid fears of new arms race
China has opposed the ‘smearing of its nuclear policy’ while insisting Beijing would not ‘engage in any nuclear arms race’The US has accused China of dramatically expanding its nuclear arsenal, while doubling down on claims that Beijing had conducted secret nuclear tests.Washington said the lapsing of New Start – the last treaty between top nuclear powers the US and Russia – earlier this month presented the possibility of striking a “better agreement” that included Beijing. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Killing of 'El Mencho' could impact this summer's World Cup
The Mexican authorities would've expected a violent backlash after the killing of El Mencho, one of the country's most powerful cartel bosses.

Sky News Home
Open 
Threats we face echo run-up to WWII, warns minister
Russia's invasion of Ukraine and wider threats to the UK and its allies share "a lot of similarities" with the three-year run-up to the Second World War, the armed forces minister has said.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
The Razer BlackShark V3 X takes the best gaming headset on the market and strips it down to a great-value price

Mail Online
Open 
'I abused my body in ways I'm not sure I'm proud of': Olly Alexander reveals he partied too much in his teens as he struggled to come to terms with his sexuality
Olly Alexander has revealed that he 'abused his body' and partied excessively during his teens as he struggled to come to terms with his sexuality.

Mail Online
Open 
Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle to give MPs carte blanche to discuss Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein
Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle is expected to allow MPs to discuss the King's brother in a debate as he is no longer regarded as an active member of the Royal Family.

Mail Online
Open 
Mar-a-Lago gunman Austin Tucker Martin slipped through employee exit gate in alarming security breach as new details emerge
Austin Tucker Martin got on the premises through a gate that had opened as workers at Mar-a-Lago were trying to leave.

Mail Online
Open 
We are on an inevitable collision course with Russia, Britain's Army chief warns
This is not going away however the war in Ukraine comes to an end. Unless something changes, I believe we are on a collision course with a Russia that is on a war footing.

Mail Online
Open 
'I could never in a trillion years have had this career in England': Delroy Lindo is the Lewisham-born actor in the middle of a shocking BAFTAs racial slur row who has admitted to a 'complicated' relationship with his home country
Delroy, who was born in Lewisham, has previously spoken about the impact of racism in Britain, stating it is as 'violent' as it can be in the United States.

Mail Online
Open 
Now loony Greens call for free-for-all on prostitution and porn as by-election nears
Sex work involving consenting adults 'should be decriminalised', and restrictions of sexually explicit material ended - except for those protecting children, the Green Party 's official policy states.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Mother and daughter, seven, who were killed in crash near tunnel in Surrey
Mary Michelle Devine, 43, from Portsmouth, and little Theia Papworth were killed in the single car collision near Hindhead tunnel shortly after 10am on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Cillian Murphy makes a rare red carpet appearance with artist wife Yvonne McGuinness at the BAFTAs after praising her for providing a 'safe place' away from the spotlight
The Oscar winner, 49, and the visual artist, 53, arrived hand-in-hand at the star-studded ceremony at London's Royal Festival Hall, wearing coordinating all-black outfits.

Mail Online
Open 
Soldier, 26, devastated over split from girlfriend deliberately drove into tree while on phone to her and said: 'You won't hear from me again'
Joshua Parsons, 26, a signaller, died after suffering catastrophic injuries in the late night smash as he spoke to his partner Georgia Clements.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mandelson arrested
Lord Peter Mandelson has been questioned by police after being arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Is US crime at a historic low?
BBC Verify assesses claims by the Trump administration that crime and murder in the US are at their lowest levels for 125 years.

Russia Today News
Open 
US aims to shift blame for Iran strikes onto Israel – source

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Drugs, denial and stigma: the babies and children swept up in Fiji’s HIV nightmare
Vulnerable young people, partners of drug users and victims of sexual violence also among those afflicted in world’s fastest growing HIV epidemic The night her baby’s heart stopped, Clare* blamed herself. Had she taken her out in the cold too much? Had she damaged her lungs by drinking iced water when she was pregnant? She fixated on Andi’s tiny chest, willing it to suck in air, rushing her to hospital in Fiji for the second time in as many days.All through the early hours Andi* clung to life. Doctors performed CPR several times, puncturing the month-old baby’s chest to insert a drain, removing fluid from around her lungs. “She was really, really sick and they didn’t know what was going on … she was getting weaker and weaker,” Clare says. She sat by her daughter’s bedside. She prayed. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Australian police find human remains in search for grandfather kidnapped by mistake
The 85-year-old was forcibly taken from his Sydney home by three masked men just under two weeks ago.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
GPs to get £3,000 bonus to maximise weight loss drug prescriptions
Bid to improve access to Mounjaro in England, but experts warn eligibility still tightly restricted.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Human remains found in search for kidnapped Sydney man Chris Baghsarian, police say
NSW detectives have located what they believe are human remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, 11 days after 85-year-old abducted from North Ryde homeFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastDetectives have found what they believe are human remains on Sydney’s outskirts as they search for the missing 85-year-old Chris Baghsarian.New South Wales police said on Tuesday that detectives investigating the mistaken kidnapping of Baghsarian had discovered remains near a golf club in Pitt Town about 8am on Tuesday. They said investigations into the man’s disappearance continued. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Judge blocks release of Jack Smith’s report on Trump documents case
Aileen Cannon denounces ‘brazen’ special counsel for compiling report after she had dismissed case in 2024A federal judge appointed by Donald Trump permanently barred the justice department on Monday from releasing the former special counsel Jack Smith’s report on the president’s mishandling of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago club after his first term.The ruling by US district judge Aileen Cannon marked the latest effort to stop the report from being sent to Congress or otherwise becoming publicly available. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Chocolate kept in anti-theft boxes as retailers warn it's being stolen to order
Retailers and police forces tell the BBC that thieves are targeting chocolate and selling it on.

Mail Online
Open 
Major development in Nancy Guthrie case as masked suspect was caught on doorbell camera BEFORE abduction
The mysterious masked figure who was seen trying to obscure Nancy Guthrie's Nest doorbell camera on the night of her abduction had apparently visited the house before.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Paramount Skydance reportedly increases bid for Warner Bros Discovery
Details of offer not immediately available as Paramount looks to beat rival Netflix for control of Warner BrosParamount Skydance has increased its bid for Warner Bros Discovery, Reuters reported on Monday, raising the stakes in the bidding war for the historic studio and its broadcast and cable TV assets in an effort to beat out rival suitor Netflix.It could not immediately be determined how the bid was revised. Warner Bros and Paramount declined to comment, while Netflix could not immediately be reached. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Human remains found in search for kidnapped Sydney man Chris Baghsarian, police say
NSW detectives have located what they believe are human remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, 11 days after 85-year-old abducted from North Ryde homeFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastDetectives have found what they believe are human remains on Sydney’s outskirts as they search for missing 85-year-old Chris Baghsarian.New South Wales police said on Tuesday that detectives investigating the mistaken kidnapping of Baghsarian had discovered remains near a golf club in Pitt Town at about 8am on Tuesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France blocks US ambassador’s access to ministers after he fails to show for meeting
Charles Kushner, father of president’s son-in-law Jared, had been summoned to explain US comments relating to death of far-right activistDonald Trump’s ambassador to France has been banned from meeting French government ministers after failing to show up for a meeting at the foreign ministry to explain US comments about the killing of a far-right activist.Charles Kushner, whose son Jared is married to the US president’s oldest daughter, Ivanka, was summoned to the 7pm meeting by the foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, after the US embassy in Paris reposted state department comments about the case. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Today's threats echo run-up to Second World War, warns armed forces minister
Russia's invasion of Ukraine and wider threats to the UK and its allies share "a lot of similarities" with the three-year run-up to the Second World War, the armed forces minister has said.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mandelson arrested
Peter Mandelson has been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

Cycling UK
Open 
Young people in Wales show huge support for cycling as 3 in 4 want safer street design
Three in four young people between the ages of 16-30 in Wales (74%) want to see streets redesigned to make cycling and walking safer. This is according to new research commissioned by the national cycling charity Cycling UK, ahead of May’s Senedd elections, signalling a strong appetite for safer, healthier and more affordable travel options.

TechRadar News
Open 
This new Google TV 4K box not only has Dolby Vision and Atmos, but another nice trick: you can add more storage using a microSD card

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Hims & Hers’ expansion plans — as well as its Super Bowl ad — have investors worried about profits
The wellness platform’s results arrived amid heightened legal and regulatory scrutiny over its weight-loss-drug business.

Slashdot
Open 
Trump's 'Board of Peace' Explores Stablecoin For Gaza
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Financial Times: Officials working with Donald Trump's "Board of Peace" are exploring setting up a stablecoin for Gaza as part of efforts to reshape the devastated Palestinian enclave's economy, according to five people familiar with the discussions. The talks around introducing a stablecoin -- a type of cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to a mainstream currency, such as the US dollar -- are at a preliminary stage, and many details of how one could be introduced in Gaza remain to be determined.

But officials have discussed the idea as part of their plan for the future of the enclave, where economic activity collapsed during Israel's two-year war with Hamas and the traditional banking and payments system has been severely impaired. A person familiar with the project said the stablecoin was expected to be tied to the US dollar, with the hope that Gulf Arab and Palestinian companies with expertise in the field of digital currencies will help spearhead the effort. "This will not be a 'Gaza Coin' or a new Palestinian currency, but a means to allow Gazans to transact digitally," the person said.

Work on the idea is being led by Liran Tancman, an Israeli tech entrepreneur and former reservist who is now working as an unpaid adviser to Trump's "Board of Peace," the US-led body tasked with rebuilding Gaza, according to two people familiar with the matter. [...] According to the person familiar with the project, the "Board of Peace" and NCAG will decide on the stablecoin's regulatory framework and access, although "nothing definitive" has yet been finalized. Speaking at a meeting of the "Board of Peace" in Washington last week, Tancman said the NCAG was working on building "a secure digital backbone, an open platform enabling e-payments, financial services, e-learning, and healthcare with user control over data", but did not elaborate.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
Artemis mission to the moon, briefly back on schedule, delayed again
The Artemis II mission has been delayed again, just days after a successful test put the launch back on track. The mission to send astronauts around the moon has already been delayed twice — first by weather, then by hydrogen leaks that scrubbed a planned February 8th launch. — Read the rest
The post Artemis mission to the moon, briefly back on schedule, delayed again appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
'Very, very, very worrying' — teen cannabis use doubles psychosis risk, study finds
A study tracking 460,000 teenagers in Kaiser Permanente's Northern California system until age 25 found that cannabis users faced double the odds of being diagnosed with bipolar disorder or a psychotic disorder like schizophrenia. The JAMA Health Forum study was designed to address the chicken-and-egg problem that has dogged earlier research: the team excluded any teen who already had mental health symptoms before using cannabis, NPR reported. — Read the rest
The post 'Very, very, very worrying' — teen cannabis use doubles psychosis risk, study finds appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Your brain can crack a new language's patterns in three days. Fluency takes 64 weeks.
A journalist with no Portuguese spent 30 minutes a day matching spoken words to animated scenes on a screen. By day three, she was scoring above 90 percent. Lancaster University linguist Patrick Rebuschat says the brain does this through cross-situational learning — a statistical trick it's been running since infancy, tracking which sounds keep appearing alongside which objects, BBC Future reports. — Read the rest
The post Your brain can crack a new language's patterns in three days. Fluency takes 64 weeks. appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Dolly Parton is the ideal nihilist
Dolly Parton was stuck in a hotel room on a liquid diet, miserable, listening to her band have fun in the restaurant below. She couldn't eat. She couldn't just sit there feeling sorry for herself. So she wrote two hit songs instead. — Read the rest
The post Dolly Parton is the ideal nihilist appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Epstein files show Lutnick and pedophile co-invested in ad-tech firm in 2018
Three years after Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick says he severed his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, someone using the initials "HWL" — Lutnick's middle name is William — emailed the pedophile on May 28, 2018, to discuss the revenue prospects of a shared investment. — Read the rest
The post Epstein files show Lutnick and pedophile co-invested in ad-tech firm in 2018 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Over 18,000 bots amplified Nicki Minaj's pro-Trump posts on X
On December 26, more than half the accounts commenting on Nicki Minaj's political posts on X were fake. A 24-page analysis by Cyabra, an Israeli disinformation detection firm, found over 18,000 coordinated bot accounts amplifying the rapper's conservative content between November and late December, Politico reported. — Read the rest
The post Over 18,000 bots amplified Nicki Minaj's pro-Trump posts on X appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Supreme Court will decide if pot smokers can own guns
The NRA and NORML don't agree on much, but both want the justices to invalidate the federal ban on gun ownership by marijuana users. Oral arguments in United States v. Hemani are set for March 2.
The statute — 18 USC 922(g)(3) — bars gun possession by anyone who is an "unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance." — Read the rest
The post Supreme Court will decide if pot smokers can own guns appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US AI giant accuses Chinese rivals of mass data theft
Anthropic says three Chinese firms used ‘distillation’ technique to extract information from its Claude chatbotUS artificial intelligence company Anthropic said on Monday it had uncovered campaigns by three Chinese AI firms to illicitly extract capabilities from its Claude chatbot, in what it described as industrial-scale intellectual property theft. OpenAI leveled similar charges last month.Anthropic said DeepSeek, Moonshot AI and MiniMax used a technique known as “distillation” – using outputs from a more powerful AI system to rapidly boost the performance of a less capable one. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Human remains found in search for kidnapped Sydney man Chris Baghsarian, police say
NSW detectives have located what they believe are human remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, 11 days after 85-year-old abducted from North Ryde homeFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastDetectives have found what they believe to be human remains on Sydney’s outskirts as they searched for missing 85-year-old Chris Baghsarian.New South Wales police said on Tuesday that detectives investigating the mistaken kidnapping of Baghsarian had discovered remains near a golf club in Pitt Town at about 8am on Tuesday. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
First British baby born using transplanted womb from deceased donor
Grace Bell, who was born without a viable womb, says her little boy is "simply a miracle".

UK Government News
Open 
Highest ever courts funding deal agreed to deliver faster, fairer justice for victims
Criminal Crown Courts in England and Wales will be funded to hear as many cases as possible next year to deliver faster and fairer justice for victims.

UK Government News
Open 
UK NSC consultation on prostate cancer screening closes
The 12-week public consultation that opened on Friday 28 November 2025 has closed.

UK Government News
Open 
UK steps up support for Ukraine four years on from Putin's full-scale invasion
UK boosting support for Ukraine four years after Putin’s full-scale invasion with new military and humanitarian support.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Dozens Dead After Mexican Special Forces Kill Cartel Boss "El Mencho" As U.S. Braces For Spillover
Dozens Dead After Mexican Special Forces Kill Cartel Boss "El Mencho" As U.S. Braces For Spillover

Update (1710ET):

Mexican authorities said 62 people, including civilians and troops, were killed after Mexican Army Special Forces, assisted by U.S. intelligence, carried out a daring raid that decapitated the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) by killing its leader, Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes.


Officials say at least 62 people died in the raid that caught “El Mencho,” longtime head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, and violence that followed. This @vantortech satellite image of yesterday shows thick smoke across Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. More in thread.… pic.twitter.com/Cztlz8IWGY
— Christiaan Triebert (@trbrtc) February 23, 2026
Here are the latest casualty figures from the raid and the chaos that followed (courtesy of The New York Times):


Mexican officials said they had arrested 70 people and killed 34 people suspected of being cartel members in the chaos on Sunday, while 25 members of the National Guard were killed. The dead also included a state prosecutor, a security guard, and a civilian, officials said. Local news outlets reported the civilian was a pregnant woman who had been caught in a shootout.


In response, the Mexican government deployed an additional 2,500 troops last night in Jalisco State and neighboring states. Combined with the 7,000 troops already stationed there, over 10,000 troops are now deployed to stop further CJNG attacks.



Earlier, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered the state's Department of Public Safety to boost security operations along the border to "prevent spillover activity" from Mexico into the U.S.

Related: Mexico's Cartel Decapitation Strike Fallout: "Not The End, Just The Beginning"

*   *   * 

The Sunday killing of Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, the leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), by Mexican security forces unleashed coordinated cartel retaliation attacks, driving rapid instability across Guadalajara (Jalisco's capital) and spilling into high-traffic resort areas, including Puerto Vallarta.

CNN reported that the US provided intelligence support to Mexican Army Special Forces, aided by aircraft and the National Guard's Immediate Reaction Force, during the operation to capture Oseguera. The operation, however, devolved into a fierce firefight with CJNG operatives and El Mencho that ultimately resulted in his death.

Almost immediately after El Mencho's death, Guadalajara, Mexico's third-largest city and the capital of Jalisco State, plunged into instant chaos as CJNG foot soldiers sparked narco-terrorism operations.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026
This violence spread into popular beach resort towns across Mexico, as gunmen torched retail shops, gas stations, and vehicles, and blockaded highways.


🚨Update: Fighting between Mexican military forces and Narco Terrorist Cartels after major Drug Overlord killed in joint operation with the United States. All Americans across Mexico are ordered to shelter in place. Major battles are being fought everywhere as Soldiers and Police… pic.twitter.com/nQySP7opgC
— US Homeland Security News (@defense_civil25) February 22, 2026
The popular tourist town of Puerto Vallarta was partially set on fire as American visitors watched in horror. The US Embassy issued a "shelter in place" order for the region, and airlines canceled flights to Guadalajara's international airport amid the chaos.


En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026

pic.twitter.com/2SPKp6ejq2
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026
This military operation in the state of Jalisco casts a negative light on the region, which is scheduled to host four matches of the 2026 soccer World Cup in June.


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
A key question is whether CJNG can survive. Its future depends on how quickly it appoints a successor; if not, the cartel may fragment as internal power struggles begin.

Two questions:


The first question concerns CJNG's survivability. It will hinge on how quickly the group can appoint a successor; if it fails to do so, the cartel could splinter as internal power struggles intensify.


A second question is whether Mexico's military can sustain a multi-front fight, as it now faces both CJNG and the Sinaloa Cartel.

"This is undoubtedly the most important blow that has been dealt to drug trafficking in Mexico since drug trafficking existed in Mexico," Eduardo Guerrero, a former Mexican security official and cartel expert, told the New York Times.

"Never in Mexico has there been an organization with the presence, territorial control or political penetration that the Jalisco New Generation Cartel has," Guerrero added. "The cartels we had in Mexico were more regional in nature."

On Sunday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote on X that the US provided "support to the Mexican government" to assist in the operation against CJNG.

"Last year, President Trump rightfully designated the Jalisco New Generation Cartel as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, because that's exactly what it is. In this operation, three additional cartel members were killed, three were wounded, and two were arrested," Leavitt said.

She noted, "President Trump has been very clear: the United States will ensure narcoterrorists sending deadly drugs to our homeland are forced to face the wrath of justice they have long deserved."


The United States provided intelligence support to the Mexican government in order to assist with an operation in Talpalpa, Jalisco, Mexico, in which Nemesio ‘El Mencho’ Oseguera Cervantes, an infamous drug lord and leader within the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was eliminated.… https://t.co/iKxsAMmnLN
— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) February 23, 2026
El Mencho's death could elevate near-term spillover risks into the U.S., especially given the Biden-Harris regime's years of facilitating an illegal alien invasion on the Homeland.


A reminder that a vast majority of the millions who crossed the border illegally during the Biden administration were lining the pockets of cartels like CJNG, paying thousands, sometimes tens of thousands of $ per head to be smuggled into the Unites States. Color coded cartel… pic.twitter.com/fJiw8hgtSE
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) February 22, 2026
The Trump administration has sought to address the national-security fallout by ramping up deportation operations, but legal challenges from unhinged left-wing judges have complicated efforts.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 17:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score

California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) needs to work on his pandering skills - after telling a crowd of black people that he's just like them because he can't read and got a low SAT score. 



"I’m not trying to impress you, I’m just trying to impress upon you, ‘I’m like you. I’m not better than you.’ I’m a 960 SAT guy," Newsom told Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickins during a Sunday night event promoting his new book. 

"And I’m not trying to offend anyone," the potential 2028 Democratic contender continued. "I’m not trying to act all there if you got 940 … You’ve never seen me read a speech because I cannot read a speech."

Of note, the average SAT score for blacks is a 907 out of a possible 1600, according to 2024 College Board data, while white SAT takers received an average of 1083. 

Watch:


Gov. Newsom to a black crowd in GA: "I am like you. I'm a 960 SAT guy. I can't read." pic.twitter.com/4Gk0WKbIYz
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.

But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship.

“I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter. “The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.”

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.


Gavin "I Grew Up Poor" Newsom was in the SF Chronicle 1991 "Children of the Rich" pic.twitter.com/zhFE8vsN3Y
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026
But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship. “I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter.

“The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.” The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”


Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read.
I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t.
I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow. https://t.co/EsfKeZjWmi
— Congressman Randy Fine (@RepFine) February 23, 2026
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”


His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read.
This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.
Do you wanna know the craziest part of this footage that… https://t.co/llo1k7F7wB
— Nicki Minaj (@NICKIMINAJ) February 23, 2026
Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.” “Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.


Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028 https://t.co/ijXw9HjOLL pic.twitter.com/vTKDSDcMUp
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) February 23, 2026
The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”

Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.”

“Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.

Newsom hit back, pulling the dyslexia card like a little hctib.


You didn’t give a shit about the President of the United States of America posting an ape video of President Obama or calling African nations shitholes — but you’re going to call me racist for talking about my lifelong struggle with dyslexia?
Spare me your fake fucking outrage,… https://t.co/ABNZJQJLcj
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) February 23, 2026



But wait:


Sooooo pic.twitter.com/ZV3gS7VNvy
— AmericanMemes 47 (@americanme67626) February 23, 2026

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 17:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
EU Says Trump's Tariff Workaround Violates Trade Deal
EU Says Trump's Tariff Workaround Violates Trade Deal

Update (1715ET): Europe is now getting 'legal' over the whole thing - claiming that Trump's new tariff workaround violates levels permitted in their trade agreement, Bloomberg reports.


The European Commission, which handles trade matters for the bloc, told lawmakers Monday that the new global tariff will be added to levies that are already in place, according to Bernd Lange, chair of the European Parliament’s trade committee. The new cumulative rate means some goods would be above the 15% ceiling the EU and US agreed to in their trade deal.

Under Trump’s new tariff program, some products including butter, plastics, textiles and chemicals would have levies above that 15% ceiling, according to people familiar with the commission’s assessment. The new global tariffs can stay in place for as many as 150 days. 


*  *  *

Update (9:40am ET): In response to the EU's decision to freeze ratification of Trump's landmark deal, the US president has come out swinging and on Truth Social threatened any countries that "play games" with the supreme court decision that they "will be met with a much higher tariff." It just isn't clear what the procedure for these much higher tariffs - aside from Section 122 which is limited to 150 days - will be now that IEEPA has been ruled unconstitutional.



Earlier:

In the aftermath of Friday's SCOTUS decision to reverse Trump's tariff policy, one lingering question is what happens to the bilateral trade deals Trump struck with various countries (and which supposedly would lead to hundreds of billions of fresh investment into the US). Well, in the case of the EU we no longer have to wonder:

The morning, the European Union said it would freeze the ratification process of its trade deal with the US and was seeking more details from the Trump administration on its new tariff program. Zeljana Zovko, the lead trade negotiator in the European People’s Party group on the US deal, said in an interview with Bloomberg that “we have no other option” but to delay the approval process to seek clarity on the situation. 

The main political groups in the European Parliament say they’ll suspend legislative work on approving the trade deal on Monday, days after the US Supreme Court struck down Trump’s use of an emergency-powers law to impose his so-called reciprocal tariffs around the world.

The center-right EPP, which is the largest political bloc in parliament, will be joined by parties including the Socialists & Democrats and the liberal Renew group to back freezing the process. 

According to Bloomberg, Bernd Lange - chairman of the parliament’s trade committee - called an emergency meeting later Monday to reassess the EU-US trade accord. He said over the weekend that parliament should delay work on the trade accord until the EU receives more clarity on the new tariffs. EU ambassadors will also meet Monday afternoon to discuss the US trade relationship.

Trump’s announcement following the court decision to impose a 10% global tariff, which he then increased to 15%, left many questions unanswered for American trading partners, stirring up more economic turbulence and uncertainty about the US policy.

As a reminder, the deal struck last summer between Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen would impose a 15% tariff rate on most EU exports to the US while removing tariffs on American industrial goods heading into the bloc. The US would also continue to impose a 50% tariff on European steel and aluminum imports. The bloc agreed to the lopsided deal in the hopes of avoiding a full-blown trade war with Washington and retaining US security backing, particularly with regards to Ukraine. Parliament had been aiming to ratify the agreement in March.

The trade deal had already faced a rocky path to ratification. After the initial agreement, the US expanded its 50% metals tariff to hundreds of additional products, angering EU lawmakers and European officials. Trump’s Greenland threats amplified that frustration, leading some to call for the deal to be canceled.

EU lawmakers froze the approval process once before, after Trump threatened to annex Greenland. After Trump backed down from his push to annex Greenland, a Danish territory, EU lawmakers briefly restarted the trade deal ratification process. But they also introduced changes such as a sunset clause, meaning that even if parliament ultimately approves the agreement, it will have to go back to other EU institutions for further negotiations. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 17:17

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Is China Really Dumping US Treasuries?
Is China Really Dumping US Treasuries?

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

“China is dumping US Treasuries to get out of the dollar.” This claim has been circulating the mainstream feeds lately, with the narrative that the “end of the dollar is near,” or “the US will lose its funding base” and the “bond yields will surge.” But are those claims valid? Such is what we will explore in more detail.



Let’s start with the chart that has everyone concerned. As shown, China’s holdings of US Treasury bonds have fallen from nearly $1.2 trillion to $600 billion, or a 50% decline. On the surface, you can certainly understand the reasons for concern, as the decline in holdings over the last decade supports a clean storyline.



However, the problem is the step between observation and conclusion. A lower line item for “China, Mainland” does not equal a forced sale, it does not prove intent, nor does it prove a structural exit. What it does show is a lack of understanding about the dynamics of reserve currency management, and, in the case of China, the need to protect those reserves.

Let’s start with the Treasury Department, which states that the holdings tables are built “primarily on the basis of custodial data.” That phrase matters. Custodial data records where securities are held for settlement and safekeeping. Critically, the custodian is not the same as the beneficial owner, and that distinction undermines the headline narrative.

The Treasury’s own FAQ is the most important in this particular narrative:


“If a Treasury security purchased by a foreign resident is held in a custodial account in a third country, the true country of ownership will not be reflected.”


Read that sentence again.

The system is designed to track where the bonds sit, not whose balance sheet carries the risk. This is crucially important when it comes to the narrative that China is dumping its bond holdings and moving away from the dollar.

For those jumping to that conclusion, they did not take the time to ask the right question: “Where did the custody shift to?” That question matters for investors because it changes the risk assessment. If China were liquidating, you would expect pressure across Treasury auctions, persistent stress on dealer balance sheets, and visible strain in dollar funding markets. While those episodes occur from time to time, often tied to Fed policy or risk shocks, there is no clear connection to the “China dumping” storyline.

A better way to approach the claim is to follow the settlement trail, which takes us to the Belgium and Luxembourg connection.

The Belgium and Luxembourg Connection

Over the last decade, geopolitical risk has been rising. Heavy sanctions have been imposed on Iran and Russia, assets frozen or seized, and political pressure brought to bear. If you are a country with significant US dollar reserves and face the risk of sanctions or seizure, what measures could you take to limit that risk? Here is a good example:


“Policymakers [in Beijing] are mindful of the precedent set in 2022, when the US and its allies froze about $300 billion of Russia’s central bank reserves after the invasion of Ukraine. The worry is that if tensions were to escalate, the US could — in an extreme scenario — restrict access to China’s state and privately held dollar assets in a similar fashion.” – Bloomberg


It is critical to understand the two main economic reasons that China buys and holds US Treasuries. The most important reason is that China wants its currency, the yuan, pegged to the dollar, a practice common among many countries since the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944. A dollar-pegged yuan helps keep down the cost of Chinese exports, particularly to the US, its largest customer, which the Chinese government believes makes it stronger in international markets. Secondly, dollar-pegging adds stability to the yuan because the dollar is still seen as the safest currency in the world. To conduct trade on a global scale, they hold their reserves in US Treasuries, gold, or the dollar itself.

However, just because China owns U.S. Treasuries does not mean it must have custodial holdings in the U.S. Look at the same holdings table and focus on Belgium and Luxembourg. In the November 2025 snapshot, Belgium shows about $481 billion in Treasury holdings, and Luxembourg shows about $425 billion. Those are massive totals for very small countries that are not building reserves at that scale.



In reality, Luxembourg and Belgium are “hosting custody” for China. Just for reference look at the chart of US Treasury holdings of China and Belgium. Over the same period, while China’s holdings fell by $600 billion, Belgiums rose by $500 billion.



This is why the Treasury’s FAQ points directly to this issue and calls out “major financial centers,” such as Luxembourg and Belgium, as the source of “custodial bias.” The chart below adjusts China’s treasury holdings for its “custodial” accounts, showing that its holdings of US Treasuries are essentially the same as in 2011.



This is not a conspiracy. It is plumbing. One of the primary reasons that China uses Belgium for custodial purposes, besides avoiding geopolitical risk, is that the Euroclear Bank is based there and sits at the center of cross-border settlement and collateral mobility. Clearstream’s international depository is based in Luxembourg and serves the same global institutional client base. When a central bank or a state institution wants to hold a large Treasury portfolio with flexible settlement and collateral options, these hubs help address operational challenges.

With this understanding, it should be clear that the “China is dumping bonds” narrative is incomplete. However, it is the problem that arises when individuals seeking to spin a narrative for headlines, clicks, or views focus on one line item and ignore the framework.

Brad Setser at the Council on Foreign Relations has repeatedly made the point that the reported data understate China’s dollar bond exposure due to offshore custodians and portfolio shifts across dollar instruments. In his words, “China isn’t shifting away from the dollar or dollar bonds.”

That leads to the next question: why would China shift custody at all?

Why Is China Using Other Countries to Buy and Hold Treasuries

We already touched on avoiding geopolitical risk, but there are four practical reasons for China to shift custodial holdings, none of which requires an exit from US bonds.


Settlement efficiency and scale: Large reserve portfolios require scale, operational redundancy, and deep settlement connectivity. European custody hubs provide that. Euroclear’s work on US Treasury DVP repo settlement is a signal of where institutions want improved collateral movement and repo settlement workflows. When the infrastructure improves, demand follows. Holding through a hub often reduces friction.


Collateral mobility and financing optionality: Treasuries are collateral. They are not only an investment. They are a financing tool. A portfolio held at a hub links more easily into repo markets, securities lending, and collateral transformation. That matters for institutions managing liquidity. If you want the option to raise dollars quickly against Treasury collateral, the custody venue matters.


Risk management after sanctions shocks: Following the freezing of Russian reserve assets in 2022, reserve managers began reassessing legal and operational exposures. The Financial Times has reported extensively on Euroclear’s central role in the custody of frozen Russian assets and the policy debates surrounding them. The lesson for global reserve managers is straightforward. Jurisdiction, legal perimeter, and operational touchpoints matter. Shifting custody and settlement routes is one response.


Data optics and portfolio composition: The Treasury table is widely quoted. It is also widely misunderstood. A shift from direct custody into a third country changes what the table shows. Some investors read the table as a loyalty scoreboard, but that interpretation is wrong. There is also a composition component. A holder can reduce Treasury holdings while raising exposure to other dollar assets, such as gold, agency debt or deposits, while staying inside the dollar system. That can reduce the “Treasuries only” line item without reducing dollar exposure.

So when you see “China, Mainland” drift lower, the right response is to think in layers: 1) Custody, 2) Instrument mix, 3) Funding and collateral function, and 4) Geopolitical risk management.

Put those together, and the incentive to use Belgium and Luxembourg is clear. The goal is not a panic move to “dedollarize” the US, which would harm the Chinese economy. Rather, it is to gain operational efficiency and optionality in a world where finance and politics collide more often.

Now step back and ask the investor question: What does this mean for you and your portfolio?

How Investors Should View US Treasury Bonds in Portfolios

Investors should treat Treasuries as a tool, not a referendum on geopolitics. However, it is critical to your portfolio outcome to understand the entire context of how the “financial plumbing” operates.

As such, investors should start with the role Treasuries play in global markets. US Treasuries:


Anchor dollar risk-free pricing.


Sit at the core of repo and collateral systems.


Serve as a settlement asset during stress.

Those functions do not disappear because one country adjusts custody venues.

Secondly, focus on the real drivers of Treasury returns. The return of US Treasuries is driven by expectations for economic growth and inflation over time. Federal Reserve policy drives the front end of the interest rate curve. Economic growth and inflation drive the long end. The chart shows a strong correlation between the composite of GDP, inflation, and interest rates. Those factors matter more than headlines about one foreign holder.



Next, as an investor, you should build your Treasury investment exposure based on objectives, rather than narratives. If you need:


Liquidity and drawdown control hold more short to intermediate-term Treasuries, which often serve as portfolio ballast during equity stress.


Income with controlled volatility, a ladder across the front-to-intermediate curve, helps manage reinvestment risk.


To adjust for inflation uncertainty, blend nominal Treasuries with TIPS.

Lastly, avoid the common mistake of basing bond decisions on some misguided narrative. However, US Treasuries are not risk-free in price. As such, investors must focus on the risks that matter for their bond holdings.


Duration risk


Inflation risk


Policy risk

The “China dumping” narrative is not a risk worth worrying about.

Focus on what matters by aligning duration and inflation sensitivity with your time horizon and risk tolerance. Treat headlines as noise, and Treasuries as a portfolio instrument built for cash flow, liquidity, and risk control. If you do that, you will be much better off.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 17:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Begins Evacuating Some Personnel From Beirut Embassy As Iran War Looms
US Begins Evacuating Some Personnel From Beirut Embassy As Iran War Looms

When it comes to the Middle East and rising tensions, the most watched US diplomatic compound in the whole region is the American embassy in Beirut.

When things get hot, or America is at war, the threat level is always raised here first - given also that it has in the past been attacked, especially in the early 1980s with suicide bombings.

Now with potential war with Iran looming, the US State Department is taking no chances, also given Iran's main proxy group, Lebanese Hezbollah, is very active in the capital. If the US were to attack Tehran, it's entirely possible that Hezbollah could in turn hit American interests in Lebanon.
The sprawling new US Embassy in Beirut, via Fox News.

On Monday, a senior State Dept official conformed the order has gone out for the departure of non-emergency personnel at the embassy in Beirut.

"We continuously assess the security environment, and based on our latest review, we determined it prudent to reduce our footprint to essential personnel," the US official told Al Jazeera.

"The Embassy remains operational with core staff in place," the source detailed. "This is a temporary measure intended to ensure the safety of our personnel while maintaining our ability to operate and assist US citizens."

Again, the heightened precautions are seen as especially necessary in a place like Beirut, which decades ago even saw the American ambassador assassinated. According to a US State Dept outline of past events:


Deteriorating security conditions during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war resulted in a gradual reduction of Embassy functions and the departure of dependents and many staff. Ambassador Meloy was assassinated in 1976.

In the early hours of October 23, 1983, a suicide bomber attacked members of the Multinational Force, peacekeepers at the U.S. Marine barracks and the French paratrooper barracks.  241 American marines, sailors and soldiers died, and 128 were wounded.

Following an April 1983 suicide bomb attack on the Embassy in Beirut, in which 49 Embassy staff were killed and 34 were injured, the Embassy relocated to Awkar, north of the capital. A second bombing there, in September 1984, killed 11 and injured 58. In September 1989, the Embassy closed and all American staff were evacuated, due to security threats. The Embassy re-opened in November 1990.


The embassy has endured long periods of time in the last many decades when it had reduced staff or wasn't at fully normal operations, with the State Dept saying that over years it has "undergone an incremental process of reestablishing normal functions."


‼️BREAKING IN BEIRUT‼️: U.S. State Department has issued an evacuation order for non-essential personnel and their families at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, as confirmed by a senior official on Monday.
👉 Secretary of State Marco Rubio's planned trip to Israel remains uncertain… pic.twitter.com/OWJojB00cA
— The Rubber Duck ™ (@TheRubberDuck79) February 23, 2026
The last time there was a major security incident was in June 2024, when a gunman was shot by Lebanese security forces after the armed man fired at the US Embassy. At least one embassy security guard was injured in the attack. It was a suspected terror operation by the Islamic State, based on evidence at the scene.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 18:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
What The FBI Is Investigating In Criminal Probe Of 2020 Election
What The FBI Is Investigating In Criminal Probe Of 2020 Election

Authored by Petr Svab via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

After the election offices of Georgia’s most populous county were raided last month, the FBI has disclosed information indicating where its investigation is heading.
FBI agents are seen at the facility in Union City, Ga., on Jan. 28, 2026.

Federal laws may have been broken during the 2020 election according to the affidavit supporting the court-approved raid. Yet the breadth of the materials seized shows the FBI may be able to check the integrity of the ballots more broadly, uncovering further issues or putting speculation to bed.

President Donald Trump’s campaign challenged the Georgia election most vigorously, as he lost the state to President Joe Biden by fewer than 12,000 votes according to the official tally. The legal challenges failed. Instead, Trump was indicted based on rationale that his efforts to challenge the election results were allegedly executed with corrupt intent. The case was dismissed after he became president again in 2025.

The renewed investigation now targeting Fulton County, which covers the broader Atlanta area, uses a rationale analogous to the case against Trump. The affidavit states that if known irregularities in the election were intentional, such acts would be criminal.

On Jan. 28, agents seized some 700 boxes of election records, including physical ballots from the 2020 election. County officials have since filed a lawsuit seeking to have the materials returned.

The issues detailed in the affidavit were largely discovered years ago by concerned citizens using data obtained through freedom of information requests or litigation. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who was responsible for overseeing the election and is running for governor of the state, has dismissed the issues as administrative and human errors too small to affect the election’s result.

The FBI, however, has a different perspective.

“If these deficiencies were the result of intentional action, it would be a violation of federal law regardless of whether the failure to retain records or the deprivation of a fair tabulation of a vote was outcome determinative for any particular election or race,” reads the affidavit signed by FBI Special Agent Hugh Evans.

Raffensperger has repeatedly stressed that the 2020 votes were counted three times, including a hand recount and a machine recount.

However, many of the deficiencies outlined in the affidavit happened during these recounts.
The Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center is seen in Union City, Ga., on Jan. 28, 2026.

The Original Count

Vote counting in Georgia starts by law on election day. Fulton County had more than half a million ballots to tabulate—almost 90 percent cast early or by mail. The result was announced several days later: Biden won the county by 26-point margin.

One issue with the results was a lack of receipts. Each tabulator machine should be “closed” at polls closing and tabulator tape should be printed out to show how many ballots and votes for each candidate were counted. Then, the tape should be signed by the poll manager and two witnesses.

Yet tabulator tapes for more than 300,000 votes weren’t signed, and some were missing altogether, wrote Evans, referring to an analysis by Clay Parikh, a voting machine security expert.

Raffensperger said that was merely administrative oversight, as the vote tallies aren’t recorded on the tape alone. They are also preserved on memory cards in the machines.

But Parikh’s analysis went deeper.

“Parikh identified one tabulator that was used to close out 15 tabulator machines from 12 different locations. In addition, the poll closing time and report printed times on several closing tabulator tapes were close enough in time that Parikh believed someone had to have manipulated the times on the reports,” Evans wrote.

“Parikh believed this showed that the memory cards were removed from the original tabulator and put in another tabulator to print out the closing tabulator tapes.”
Employees of the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections process ballots in Atlanta on Nov. 4, 2020. Vote counting in Georgia starts, by law, on election day. Fulton County had more than half a million ballots to tabulate—almost 90 percent cast early or by mail. Brandon Bell/Reuters

The tabulators also have “protective counters” that track how many ballots have been scanned on them over their lifetime.

“The protective counters on at least five tabulator tapes from the same unit were identical,” Parikh found, according to Evans. “Some of the reported ballots scanned exceeded the protective counter number.”

“This indicated to Parikh that no ballots were ever scanned on these machines and that the numbers generated from those ballots were done so by placing an unencrypted memory card into the unit to generate the closing tape,” Evans wrote.

“This would have allowed an opportunity for the tabulation to be tampered with.”

The tabulators are supposed to scan each ballot, creating a digital record. But the majority of the images from the original in-person voting count have not been preserved by the county, Evans said. At the time, the county was not legally required to preserve them, but it’s not clear why they were discarded to begin with.

“This is another impediment to ruling out non-criminal explanations for the activities during the election,” the affidavit said.

Hand Recount

On Nov. 11, 2020, Raffensperger announced a Risk Limiting Audit. Because the race was so close, it meant recounting all the ballots by hand, according to state law. The ballots were counted in batches and the final tally for each batch was supposed to be put into an electronic auditing system called “Arlo.”

Several people who participated in the audit said they witnessed suspicious occurrences, including a batch of 110 ballots that contained 107 featuring votes for exactly the same candidates. The bubbles on them were filled exactly the same and the paper felt different from other ballots, the participants said. The ballots were marked as absentee but lacked creases from being folded in a return envelope.

It’s possible such “pristine” ballots can be created by duplication, where a damaged ballot is copied on a new one. But those should be clearly marked as “duplicate,” and the original needs to be preserved, Evans said.
Cyber Ninjas CEO Doug Logan (L), whose Florida-based consultancy oversaw a 2020 election ballot audit ordered by the Arizona Senate, speaks at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix on April 22, 2021. Ross D. Franklin/AP Photo

One of the witnesses, who had been a poll manager for 25 years, also remembered a batch of about 60 ballots marked as coming from a senior living center. She “believed these ballots should have been folded as well but were not,” the affidavit said.

Yet another witness, one of the Fulton County Commissioners, was a poll worker at the time. When helping test the voting machines prior to the election, she saw a pile of unsecured papers used to print testing ballots.

“She stated she could have printed any ballot she wanted,” Evans wrote.

She also saw some people “printing random ballots” and managed to rip some up, according to Evans

“She was not sure the reason they were printing ballots as all the test ballots had already been printed.”

None of the witnesses in the affidavit were identified by name.

Evans also mentioned a complaint submitted to Georgia Governor Brian Kemp by chemical engineer Joseph Rossi, alleging inconsistencies in the hand recounts results for dozens of ballot batches. Kemp’s office independently verified the allegations, concluded they were factual, and passed them on to the State Election Board for an investigation, which was eventually conducted by Raffensperger’s office.

Raffensperger dismissed those as human errors during data entry. But some of them raise the question of how such a specific error could have been made.
Members of an adjudication review panel examine scanned absentee ballots at the Fulton County Election Preparation Center in Atlanta on Nov. 4, 2020. Because the race was too close, on Nov. 11, 2020, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger announced a risk-limiting audit requiring a full hand recount under state law. Jessica McGowan/Getty Images

For example, one batch was reported as 200 votes for Biden and zero for any other candidate. But when Kemp’s office checked the ballot images for that batch, it showed 85 votes for Biden, 12 for Trump, and three for other candidates.

Another batch was reported as 150 votes for Biden and zero for other candidates. In fact, the batch contained 97 votes for Biden, eight for Trump, and one for a third-party candidate.

There were two more batches reported each as 100 votes for Biden and zero for others. In fact, one had 87 votes for Biden and 10 for Trump; the other had 74 for Biden and 25 for Trump.

Read the rest here...

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 18:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Dominates Global Data Center Population
US Dominates Global Data Center Population

Data centers power everything from streaming and cloud storage to the AI systems reshaping industries. When it comes to scale, one country stands far ahead.

The U.S. has 3,960 data centers in this dataset - more than the next 14 countries combined.

The map below, via Visual Capitalist's Niccolo Conte, based on data from Data Center Map, counts operational facilities by country, from small cloud hubs to sprawling colocation campuses. While totals vary by methodology, the concentration of infrastructure in a few major economies is unmistakable.



U.S. Leads by a Wide Margin

With nearly four thousand data centers in this dataset, the U.S. is the world’s largest data center market.

Country
Data Centers
🇺🇸 USA
3,960
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
498
🇩🇪 Germany
470
🇨🇳 China
365
🇫🇷 France
335
🇨🇦 Canada
285
🇮🇳 India
275
🇦🇺 Australia
268
🇯🇵 Japan
249
🇮🇹 Italy
206
🇧🇷 Brazil
198
🇪🇸 Spain
189
🇳🇱 The Netherlands
186
🇮🇩 Indonesia
184
🇷🇺 Russia
178
🇮🇪 Ireland
128
🇨🇭 Switzerland
113
🇸🇪 Sweden
110
🇲🇾 Malaysia
109
🇵🇱 Poland
97
🇫🇮 Finland
90
🇳🇴 Norway
87
🇰🇷 South Korea
86
🇭🇰 Hong Kong
85
🇩🇰 Denmark
81
🇹🇷 Turkey
76
🇨🇱 Chile
66
🇸🇬 Singapore
65
🇮🇱 Israel
65
🇷🇴 Romania
63
🇲🇽 Mexico
62
🇿🇦 South Africa
61
🇹🇭 Thailand
59
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia
58
🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates
57
🇳🇿 New Zealand
57
🇨🇿 Czech Republic
54
🇦🇹 Austria
53
🇧🇪 Belgium
48
🇵🇹 Portugal
44
🇦🇷 Argentina
43
🇨🇴 Colombia
41
🇻🇳 Vietnam
41
🇺🇦 Ukraine
37
🇹🇼 Taiwan
37
🇵🇭 Philippines
36
🇧🇬 Bulgaria
31
🇵🇰 Pakistan
30
🇬🇷 Greece
25
🇱🇻 Latvia
24
🇳🇬 Nigeria
23
🇮🇷 Iran
20
🇸🇮 Slovenia
20
🇱🇹 Lithuania
19
🇰🇪 Kenya
19
🇨🇾 Cyprus
18
🇭🇺 Hungary
17
🇵🇦 Panama
17
🇴🇲 Oman
16
🇱🇺 Luxembourg
16
🇰🇿 Kazakhstan
15
🇧🇩 Bangladesh
15
🇭🇷 Croatia
15
🇲🇦 Morocco
14
🇵🇪 Peru
14
🇷🇸 Serbia
13
🇪🇬 Egypt
13
🇸🇰 Slovakia
13
🇪🇪 Estonia
12
🇮🇸 Iceland
12
🇨🇷 Costa Rica
12
🇹🇿 Tanzania
11
🇶🇦 Qatar
11
🇦🇴 Angola
10
🇳🇵 Nepal
10
🇰🇭 Cambodia
10
🇲🇹 Malta
10
🇲🇺 Mauritius
10
🇺🇾 Uruguay
10
🇪🇨 Ecuador
9
🇬🇭 Ghana
8
🇵🇷 Puerto Rico
8
🇯🇴 Jordan
8
🇧🇭 Bahrain
8
🇵🇾 Paraguay
7
🇬🇹 Guatemala
7
🇲🇳 Mongolia
7
🇸🇳 Senegal
7
🇲🇰 Macedonia
7
🇻🇪 Venezuela
7
🇱🇮 Liechtenstein
7
🇪🇹 Ethiopia
6
🇺🇿 Uzbekistan
6
🇲🇩 Moldova
6
🇨🇮 Ivory Coast
6
🇲🇿 Mozambique
6
🇬🇮 Gibraltar
6
🇩🇿 Algeria
6
🇮🇲 Isle of Man
6
🇱🇾 Libya
6
🇧🇼 Botswana
5
🇧🇴 Bolivia
5
🇹🇹 Trinidad and Tobago
5
🇲🇲 Myanmar
5
🇷🇪 Reunion
5
🇰🇼 Kuwait
5
🇯🇪 Jersey
5
🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina
4
🇱🇰 Sri Lanka
4
🇨🇩 DR Congo
4
🇺🇬 Uganda
4
🇹🇳 Tunisia
4
🇦🇱 Albania
4
🇭🇳 Honduras
4
🇬🇪 Georgia
4
🇧🇸 Bahamas
4
🇧🇳 Brunei
4
🇬🇺 Guam
3
🇸🇻 El Salvador
3
🇳🇨 New Caledonia
3
🇩🇴 Dominican Republic
3
🇲🇬 Madagascar
3
🇲🇨 Monaco
3
🇩🇯 Djibouti
3
🇨🇼 Curacao
3
🇷🇼 Rwanda
3
🇿🇲 Zambia
3
🇰🇬 Kyrgyzstan
3
🇳🇮 Nicaragua
3
🇦🇿 Azerbaijan
3
🇧🇹 Bhutan
3
🇬🇬 Guernsey
3
🇲🇻 Maldives
3
🇦🇩 Andorra
3
🇿🇼 Zimbabwe
3
🇦🇲 Armenia
2
🇳🇦 Namibia
2
🇵🇫 French Polynesia
2
🇧🇾 Belarus
2
🇹🇬 Togo
2
🇨🇲 Cameroon
2
🇯🇲 Jamaica
2
🇦🇫 Afghanistan
2
🇧🇲 Bermuda
2
🇱🇦 Laos
2
🇱🇧 Lebanon
2
🇸🇩 Sudan
2
🇰🇾 Cayman Islands
2
🇸🇷 Suriname
2
🇬🇱 Greenland
2
🇱🇸 Lesotho
2
🇾🇹 Mayotte
1
🇮🇶 Iraq
1
🇬🇾 Guyana
1
🇸🇾 Syria
1
🇲🇶 Martinique
1
🇬🇳 Guinea
1
🇧🇫 Burkina Faso
1
🇲🇴 Macau
1
🇬🇫 French Guiana
1
🇲🇼 Malawi
1
🇵🇬 Papua New Guinea
1
🇨🇬 Republic of the Congo
1
🇵🇸 Palestine
1
🇬🇦 Gabon
1
🇲🇱 Mali
1
🇬🇶 Equatorial Guinea
1
🇸🇿 Eswatini
1
🇽🇰 Kosovo
1
🇸🇧 Solomon Islands
1
🇸🇨 Seychelles
1
🇸🇱 Sierra Leone
1
🇸🇴 Somalia
1
🇻🇮 US Virgin Islands
1
This U.S. dominance reflects heavy investment by major cloud providers and tech companies. Years of hyperscaler investment help explain why much of the world’s cloud and AI capacity is built in the country.

Some other industry estimates place the U.S. total above 5,000 facilities, reflecting differences in how data centers are defined and counted.

Europe’s Strong Presence

Europe represents the second-largest concentration of data centers globally. The United Kingdom, Germany, and France each have hundreds of data centers. These nations host key internet exchange points and serve as hubs for multinational cloud and IT services.

Other countries like the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden also maintain strong data center footprints.

Growing Markets in Asia and Beyond

Asia’s footprint is expanding rapidly, led by China, Japan, and India. Rising digital demand and cloud adoption are driving continued expansion across major Asian markets.

Emerging economies also appear on the list, including Indonesia, Malaysia, and South Korea. Meanwhile, smaller countries like Singapore and Hong Kong punch above their weight due to strategic connectivity and business-friendly environments.

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Charted: The Jobs Most Exposed to Generative AI on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 18:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
President Trump 'Curious' Why Iran Hasn't 'Capitulated'
President Trump 'Curious' Why Iran Hasn't 'Capitulated'

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

US envoy Steve Witkoff said in an interview with Fox News that aired on Sunday that President Trump was "curious" that Iran hasn't "capitulated" to US demands due to the major US military buildup in the Middle East and threats of war.

"I don’t want to use the word frustrated because [Trump] understands he has plenty of alternatives, but he’s curious, he’s curious as to why they haven’t, I don’t want to use the word capitulated, but why they haven’t capitulated," Witkoff told Fox News host Lara Trump, the president’s daughter-in-law.
West Asia News Agency/Reuters

"Why, under this sort of pressure, with the amount of sea power, naval power, that we have over there, why they haven’t come to us and said, 'we profess that we don’t want a [nuclear] weapon, so here’s what we’re prepared to do,' yet it’s hard to get them to that point," Witkoff added.

Tehran's official position is that it doesn’t seek nuclear weapons and that the development of such weapons is banned by a fatwa issued by Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Iranian leaders have repeatedly "professed" that they don’t seek a nuclear bomb.

According to media reports, Iran has offered a deal that would involve it suspending its uranium enrichment program for three to five years and later restarting it at a civilian-grade level, far below the 90% needed for weapons-grade, as part of a joint nuclear program with regional countries.

Iran has also publicly offered to dilute its stockpile of uranium enriched at 60%, though it's likely buried underground following the US airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.


Witkoff isn't acting like a diplomat trying to reach a deal. Seems more like he's trying to get the public primed for war. https://t.co/L3wCkm8DA5
— Dave DeCamp (@DecampDave) February 22, 2026
Despite the US bombing those facilities, which forcibly suspended Iran’s nuclear enrichment, and President Trump's insistence that the US "obliterated" Iran’s nuclear program, Witkoff made the false claim that Iran could have uranium to make a bomb within one week.

"They’re probably a week away from having industrial-bomb-making material," Witkoff claimed, facing no pushback from Lara Trump. The US envoy also confirmed that he recently met with Reza Pahlavi, the son of the Iranian Shah who was overthrown in 1979, as the Trump administration has made clear its ultimate goal is regime change in Tehran.

Even the Jerusalem Post contradicted Witkoff's claim...



Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Sunday that he expects to hold another round of negotiations with Witkoff and Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law, this Thursday in Geneva.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 19:15

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Hashgraph Launches TrackTrace for EU Compliance
The Hashgraph Group says it has launched a new service, TrackTrace, to support compliance within the European Union. According to a release, TrackTrace is an enterprise solution for supply chain operations that delineates origin sourcing and carbon emissions. Within the EU, this type of data is... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Spot Bitcoin ETFs Extend Outflow Streak to 5 Weeks, Longest Since Early 2025 : Analysis
US Bitcoin / cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds (ETFs) experienced continued pressure during the recent Presidents’ Day holiday-shortened trading week, with significant net outflows reported across major products. According to data tracked by SoSoValue, spot Bitcoin ETFs saw approximately $316 million in net withdrawals. This marked the... Read More

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11064 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance Guildford (THGI ) , Swansea Main (SWSX ) (New)
Our supplier is performing maintenance during this period.

Services should be considered at risk during the maintenance window, and may be affected during this time.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 3rd Mar 2026 00:05

End: Tue, 3rd Mar 2026 06:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 23:55

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Planned

The Hill
Open 
Trump changes to Black history exhibits spark fears of self-censorship, loss of information
The Trump administration is looking to change how Black history is presented at the park sites and museums under its influence. President Trump, who has eyes on the nation's 250th birthday this summer, says historical sites focus too much on the issue of slavery instead of the “success” of the country. His administration has been accused of whitewashing...

The Hill
Open 
Pentagon raises concerns about ROTOR Act implementing DC crash reforms
The Pentagon on Monday raised what it said were “significant” concerns over an aviation safety bill set to be taken up by the House this week, an about-face from its support of the legislation when the Senate passed it unanimously in December. The Rotorcraft Operations Transparency and Oversight Reform (ROTOR) Act — meant to address...

The Hill
Open 
Park ranger fired for hanging trans pride flag sues Interior Department
A former National Park Service (NPS) ranger who was fired last year for hanging a transgender pride flag in Yosemite National Park sued multiple federal agencies Monday over their termination, arguing it violated their First Amendment rights.  The lawsuit, filed by Dr. Shannon “SJ” Joslin in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia,...

The Hill
Open 
Maher on Trump's account of dinner together: 'Bulls---'
Comedian Bill Maher on Friday responded to a post from President Trump criticizing him after their dinner in the Oval Office last year. Trump diagnosed Maher with "Trump Derangement Syndrome" and described the comedian as someone who was “extremely nervous" and "had ZERO confidence” in himself in a Truth Social post. The president added that...

The Hill
Open 
Coast Guard investigating swastika discovered in New Jersey recruit center
The U.S. Coast Guard launched an internal investigation after a swastika was found on a bathroom wall at a primary recruit training center in New Jersey. The swastika - widely recognized as a symbol of the German Nazi Party and linked to the killing of millions of Jews - was found in the bathroom of...

The Register
Open 
IBM stock dives after Anthropic points out AI can rewrite COBOL fast
Big Blue has been saying this itself since 2013 IBM’s share price slumped by 13 percent on Monday, seemingly caused by investors reacting to an Anthropic blog post that points out its Claude Code tools can accelerate refactoring of apps written in the ancient COBOL language.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Punch the Baby Monkey’s Ikea Plushie Is Selling for Hundreds on eBay
Viral videos have caused the stuffed animal to sell out.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Chip Roy confirms the Senate has the votes to pass the SAVE Act
Rep. Chip Roy, the author of the SAVE Act in the House, confirmed on Laura Ingram’s show tonight that they do in fact have the votes in the Senate to pass the . . .

CNET News
Open 
Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2026 Is Days Away: Galaxy S26 Rumors, How to Watch and More
Samsung's event is on Wednesday in San Francisco, and we're expecting the Galaxy S26, S26 Plus and S26 Ultra to be announced.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: CDU faces opposition over sick notes proposal
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's party wants to end the option of employees getting a sick note by phone. Its coalition partner, however, opposes the proposal.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two Commonwealth countries back plans to remove Andrew from line of succession
The governments of Australia and New Zealand have thrown their weight behind plans to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the royal line of succession.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Launches New 'Sales Coach' App
Apple today debuted a new Sales Coach app for the iPhone and the iPad, replacing the former SEED app. Designed for Apple Store and Apple Authorized Service Provider (AASP) employees, Sales Coach provides training resources and information useful for Apple device sales.





Sales Coach is available for ‌Apple Store‌ and AASP employees worldwide, and Apple has released it as an update to the former SEED app. Those who have the SEED app will see it change to Sales Coach when installing the latest update. Sales Coach is not a publicly available app.



Compared to the SEED app, Sales Coach adopts Apple's updated Liquid Glass design, and it will include a new AI chatbot that will answer product-related questions. The chatbot can be accessed through an upcoming "Ask" tab, and it is similar to the chatbot in the Apple Support app. Employees will be able to get instant information on specific ‌iPhone‌ capabilities, details on how different software features work, and more, across all of Apple's products.



Apple doesn't appear to have rolled out the chatbot just yet, but we learned about it when we we first shared details about the Sales Coach app earlier this month. Sales Coach is also available on the web at salescoach.apple.com.This article, 'Apple Launches New 'Sales Coach' App' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
What to Expect From the iPhone 17e Launching in March 2026
We've got just over a week to go until Apple's "Special Experience" on March 4, and we're expecting to see the iPhone 17e announced during the week of the event. The ‌iPhone‌ 17e will be the first update to the new low-cost iPhone 16e that Apple unveiled in February 2025.





Design

The ‌iPhone‌ 17e will look a lot like the ‌iPhone 16e‌, featuring the same 6.1-inch display size, single-lens rear camera, and black and white color options.



Display

The ‌iPhone‌ 17e is expected to feature the same display panel as the ‌iPhone 16e‌, which means it will be limited to a 60Hz refresh rate. Apple brought 120Hz ProMotion refresh rates to the standard iPhone 17 in 2025, but the same technology is not expected for the more affordable ‌iPhone‌ 17e.



The ‌iPhone‌ 17e will continue to be Apple's only new release ‌iPhone‌ without 120Hz support.



120Hz refresh rates provide video improvements and smoother scrolling when viewing webpages.



The ‌iPhone 16e‌ does not have always-on display technology, and that's not likely to change with the ‌iPhone‌ 17e. To support always-on, the ‌iPhone‌ 17e would need an OLED display with 1-nit minimum brightness, which is limited to Apple's more expensive iPhones. HDR and brightness are also lacking compared to Apple's flagship lineup.



Dynamic Island

The ‌iPhone 16e‌ uses the notch that Apple has eliminated in its newer flagship iPhones, but the ‌iPhone‌ 17e could eliminate it. Some rumors suggest that the ‌iPhone‌ 17e will have a Dynamic Island instead of a notch, giving it an updated look.





The ‌Dynamic Island‌ is a pill-shaped cutout on the ‌iPhone‌'s display that houses the TrueDepth camera system and the front-facing camera. It takes up less display area than the notch, and it is better integrated into the ‌iPhone‌.



While some rumors indicate we could get a ‌Dynamic Island‌, other rumors suggest the ‌iPhone‌ 17e will continue to use a notch, so the ‌Dynamic Island‌ upgrade isn't a guarantee.



A19 Chip

The ‌iPhone‌ 17e will use Apple's A19 chip, which is the same chip that's in the ‌iPhone 17‌. The A19 chip is built on an upgraded N3P 3-nanometer process, offering a 5 to 10 percent performance improvement over the A18 chip.



Apple could be planning to use a downclocked version of the A19 chip in the ‌iPhone‌ 17e, and if that's the case, its performance won't quite match the ‌iPhone 17‌'s performance.



The A18 chip that Apple used in the ‌iPhone 16e‌ had a 4-core GPU instead of a 5-core GPU like the version from the iPhone 16, so the ‌iPhone‌ 17e could get a similar GPU downgrade.



Aside from the improved CPU and GPU, the A19 has an updated display engine, image signal processor, and Neural Engine for improved AI performance. Every GPU core features a Neural Accelerator to boost the performance of local AI models.



We are expecting the ‌iPhone‌ 17e to continue to include 8GB RAM like the ‌iPhone 16e‌. Apple's other models have 12GB.

MagSafe Compatibility

The ‌iPhone 16e‌ does not have a magnetic ring for MagSafe charging, but the ‌iPhone‌ 17e is expected to get a ‌MagSafe‌ upgrade.



Apple's iPhones have used ‌MagSafe‌ since the ‌iPhone‌ 12, so there are a wide array of ‌MagSafe‌ cases and accessories. The ‌iPhone 16e‌ is not compatible with these accessories, which is a major limitation.



Since it doesn't have ‌MagSafe‌, the ‌iPhone 16e‌ is limited to 7.5W wireless charging speeds. ‌MagSafe‌ would upgrade that to at least 15W. The current ‌iPhone 17‌ models can charge at 25W over ‌MagSafe‌, though the iPhone Air is limited to 20W.



Camera

The ‌iPhone‌ 17e is expected to have a single 48-megapixel Wide Angle camera at the back, with no upgrade rumored. The ‌iPhone 16e‌ doesn't have a Camera Control button, and there's no sign that Apple plans to bring it to the ‌iPhone‌ 17e, either.



The ‌iPhone 17‌ models got an upgraded 18-megapixel Center Stage front-facing camera, but rumors suggest the ‌iPhone‌ 17e will continue to use the same 12-megapixel front-facing camera as the ‌iPhone 16e‌.



Modem

The ‌iPhone‌ 17e will adopt Apple's C1X modem, the modem chip that Apple first debuted in the ‌iPhone Air‌. The C1X modem is faster and more efficient than the C1 modem that Apple used in the ‌iPhone 16e‌.



Apple says the C1X modem is up to 2x faster than the C1, and it is far more energy efficient than Qualcomm modems.



N1 Chip

Apple could update the ‌iPhone 17‌ models with Apple's Wi-Fi and Bluetooth "N1" networking chip, bringing speed and efficiency improvements, plus Thread support. Leaked Apple code suggests the chip will not be included in the ‌iPhone‌ 17e in order to keep costs down, but recent rumors indicate Apple plans to include it.



Pricing

The ‌iPhone 16e‌ is priced starting at $599, and no price changes are expected for the ‌iPhone‌ 17e.



Launch Date

Apple is holding a "Special Experience" event on March 4, and we are expecting the ‌iPhone‌ 17e to launch during that same week.This article, 'What to Expect From the iPhone 17e Launching in March 2026' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
Man Utd’s £207m strike force pays dividends with goal to echo glory years
Man Utd’s £207m strike force pays dividends with goal to echo glory years

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer considers striking back against Trump's 'obnoxious' new tariffs - with motorbikes and bourbon among the possible targets
Ministers were left scrambling to get clarification from the White House after President Trump announced a new 10 per cent 'global tariff' on Friday only to raise it to 15 per cent the following day.

Mail Online
Open 
ECHR is putting rights of British citizens 'beneath those of criminals', Reform warns
Zia Yusuf said his party would withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to stop the rights of foreign criminals being 'prioritised' over British people.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside Michael B. Jordan's 'disgusted' reaction to shocking BAFTAs N-word slur as insiders scramble to contain fallout
Michael B. Jordan was left 'disgusted' after a racial slur was shouted from the audience while he and costar Delroy Lindo were presenting on stage at the BAFTA Film Awards.

Mail Online
Open 
Without new evidence from Epstein's alleged victims, claims of trafficking via UK airports 'are set to fail'
Sources have revealed the police effort into examining Epstein-related allegations, including claims that he trafficked women via UK airports and RAF bases, will stall without new evidence.

Mail Online
Open 
'Fear has become part of the job': Shop staff face 1,600 acts of violence or abuse a day with a weapon wielded more than once an hour
And the report by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) found there were 118 incidents of physical violence a day with 36 involving a weapon - more than one an hour.

Mail Online
Open 
Meet Hugo! Baby boy becomes first child in the UK to be born to a mother who received a womb from a dead donor
Hugo Powell was delivered by C-section at Queen Charlotte's and Chelsea Hospital, London, in December, weighing 6lb 13oz (3.1kg).

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Dirty Business: This sewage scandal drama will leave you feeling sick with anger
David Thewlis and Jason Watkins play a pair of crusading friends in an Oxfordshire village, in Dirty Business, based on a true story.

Mail Online
Open 
Taxpayers 'paid for Andrew's massages': Ex-civil servants tell of shock at being ordered to sign off royal's lavish expenses
Whitehall officials were said to have been left horrified over Andrew's excessive spending on flights, hotel rooms and charges including spa treatments when representing the UK.

Mail Online
Open 
New Zealand Prime Minister joins Australian leader and says he too will back any plan to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from line of succession
It comes as British ministers are understood to be considering legislation to remove Andrew from the line of succession once a police investigation has concluded.

Mail Online
Open 
Joe Biden's inner circle worries as 'incurable' cancer is making him even more frail
Members of former President Joe Biden's inner circle are concerned that the 83-year-old Democrat is showing the strain of cancer treatment while still appearing publicly.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Move over stoics! Why we should all embrace nihilism – and discover what really matters in life | Gemma Parker
Nietzsche condemned anyone offering ‘answers’ or ‘solace’ – but engaging with nihilism can teach us to face the discomfort of a potentially meaningless existenceGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailA trick I developed in the late stages of my first pregnancy to forestall inquiries, concern, recommendations and advice about having a baby was to refer to her impending birth as “the apocalypse”.“I don’t know,” I’d shrug. “We’ll see what things look like after the apocalypse.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Sesko and Lammens allow Man Utd to dream of Champions League
Striker Benjamin Sesko and goalkeeper Senne Lammens are the key figures as Manchester United gain a hugely valuable Premier League win at Everton.

Mail Online
Open 
Charities call for prostate cancer ruling to be overturned after review finds decision to deny screening to most men was flawed
The UK National Screening Committee issued draft guidance in November saying the routine checks should only be offered in very limited circumstances.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Mother and daughter, seven, who were killed in crash near tunnel in Surrey
Mary Michelle Devine, 43, from Portsmouth, and Theia Papworth were killed in the single car collision near Hindhead tunnel shortly after 10am on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
GPs will receive bonuses worth millions of pounds if they prescribe fat jabs to their most obese patients
The deal will see a typical GP practice pocket an extra £3,000 a year for doling out Mounjaro to at least eight in ten eligible people on its list.

Mail Online
Open 
Special needs spending won't be reined in for a decade despite reforms to cut costs, admits Bridget Phillipson
The revelation came in the Education Secretary's long-awaited schools white paper, which also contained a number of 'class warfare' measures.

Mail Online
Open 
Over half of councils STILL failing to comply with 'crystal clear' Supreme Court biological sex ruling almost a year after landmark judgment
Some 159 of the 317 councils in England are still 'waiting for guidance', despite the Equalities Minister saying that the ruling was 'crystal, crystal clear'.

Mail Online
Open 
Coronation Street star Katy Cavanagh proudly poses with her Hollywood star sons Noah and Jacobi Jupe at LFW Burberry show
The soap icon, 52, beamed from ear to ear as she attended the star-studded runway event, held at Old Billingsgate, during the busy London Fashion Week.

Mail Online
Open 
Fantastic Four star Ioan Gruffudd claims ex-wife Alice Evans threatened to 'Amber Heard' his life and career as explosive nine-day trial kicks off
As day one of their explosive nine-day trial kicks off, Ioan Gruffudd told the court about his ex-wife's social media posts and how they impacted his life and relationship with his daughters.

Mail Online
Open 
Samie Elishi and Ciaran Davies are crowned the WINNERS of Love Island: All Stars 2026 as Millie Court and Zac Woodworth finish in second place
The winners of Love Island: All Stars 2026 have been revealed after a fraught series packed with rows, scandals and drama. 

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: Bridget smiled! It was like seeing a moose in the last furlong at the Grand National
Scary Bridget came to the Commons to present her expensive, complicated reforms to the mad world of special needs teaching. Then a terrifying thing happened: she cracked a hesitant, unfamiliar smile.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Miracle' as baby boy born from dead donor womb transplant
A baby boy has become the first child in Britain to be born to a mother with a womb transplanted from a deceased donor.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Orbital space race heats up in Arctic north
Europe lags far behind the US and China in orbital space launches, but new facilities are opening up.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Progress on gender equality at top of UK’s biggest firms ‘achingly slow’
Average number of female FTSE 100 CEOs stalled at nine last year, the same number as 2024, review saysCampaigners have bemoaned the “achingly slow” progress made on gender equality at the top of Britain’s biggest businesses, as research showed blue-chip firms had missed key targets and there were only nine female bosses at FTSE 100 companies.The average number of female FTSE 100 chief executives did not move last year, according to the government-backed FTSE Women Leaders Review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Supersub Benjamin Sesko fires Manchester United past Everton and into top four
Sir Jim Ratcliffe must be seriously conflicted, among other things. Manchester United’s advance towards the riches of the Champions League gathered momentum at Everton thanks to Slovenia’s Benjamin Sesko, Brazil’s Matheus Cunha and Belgium’s Senne Lammens. While United’s largest single shareholder creates division, the unity of Michael Carrick’s diverse team proved invaluable at Hill Dickinson Stadium.Sesko made a telling impact off the bench for the second game in succession to secure a slender but precious victory in the race for Champions League qualification. Having preserved Carrick’s unbeaten record as United manager last time out at West Ham, the expensive summer signing delivered victory with a clinical finish to take his team fourth in the table, three points clear of Chelsea and ­Liverpool. Carrick now has five wins and one draw from his six games at the helm. His audition for the permanent job could not have gone much better thus far. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Emily in Paris star Lily Collins to play Audrey Hepburn in film about Breakfast at Tiffany’s
Collins ‘honoured and ecstatic’ to play Hepburn, in film charting the dramatic making of the 1961 romantic comedyLily Collins, the star of Netflix hit Emily in Paris, has been cast to play Audrey Hepburn in a new film about the making of her 1961 romantic comedy Breakfast at Tiffany’s.The as-yet-untitled film will be based on Sam Wasson’s nonfiction book Fifth Avenue, 5 AM: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the Dawn of the Modern Woman, with a script written by Alena Smith, creator of the Apple TV series Dickinson. No director has been announced yet. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tributes paid to ‘very loving and caring’ British hiker killed in Nepal bus crash
Dominic Ethan Stewart was among 19 killed when vehicle veered off road and plunged down mountainsideTributes have been paid to a young British hiker who was among 19 people killed when a packed passenger bus veered off a treacherous stretch of road and plunged 200 metres down a steep mountainside in Nepal.Twenty-five others were injured in the pre-dawn crash in the Himalayan foothills on Monday. The bus was carrying 44 people, including a number of tourists. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
David Lammy lifts cap on court sitting days in effort to cut backlog of cases
Criminal barristers welcome justice secretary’s move to remove limit on hearing days at crown courts in England and WalesA cap on court sitting days is to be lifted as the government seeks to ease the cases backlog, David Lammy has announced.The justice secretary and deputy prime minister said every crown court in England and Wales would be funded to hear more cases in the next financial year. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'A conman stole my money and bought his wife a 10-carat diamond ring'
US victims have lost hundreds of thousands of dollars to a gang of UK and Irish nationals, known as The Travelling Conmen.

Ars Technica
Open 
Panasonic, the former plasma king, will no longer make its own TVs

Ars Technica
Open 
Data center builders thought farmers would willingly sell land, learn otherwise

Ars Technica
Open 
Pentagon buyer: We're happy with our launch industry, but payloads are lagging

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Start Your Surround Sound Journey With $50 off This Klipsch Soundbar
This soundbar is just the beginning, with the option to add wireless bookshelf speakers or a subwoofer.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Canada seeks answers from OpenAI for failing to alert police after suspending school shooter’s account
Company had suspended account of Tumbler Ridge shooter in June 2025 over ‘furtherance of violent activities’Canada’s artificial intelligence minister says he has summoned representatives from the technology company OpenAI after the company declined to alert police after suspending the account of a user who became the perpetrator of one of the country’s worst-ever school shootings.Evan Solomon says he is “deeply disturbed” by reports that the company, which operates the popular ChatGPT chatbot, suspended the account of Jesse Van Rootselaar over the “furtherance of violent activities” in June 2025 but did not reach out to Canadian law enforcement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is matter for MPs, says No 10
Prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand say they would not object to his removal from royal succession lineA parliamentary inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is a matter for MPs, Downing Street has said, as ministers faced a new push to uncover details about the former prince’s role as a trade envoy.It comes as the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, wrote to Keir Starmer to say his country would have no objection to Mountbatten-Windsor being removed from the royal line of succession. Later, a spokesperson for New Zealand’s prime minister, Christopher Luxon, said his country would also support the proposals. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Human remains found in search for kidnapped Sydney man Chris Baghsarian, police say
NSW detectives have located what they believe are human remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, 11 days after 85-year-old abducted from North Ryde homeDetectives have found what they believe to be human remains on Sydney’s outskirts as they searched for missing 85-year-old Chris Baghsarian.New South Wales police said on Tuesday that detectives investigating the mistaken kidnapping of Baghsarian had discovered remains near a golf club in Pitt Town at about 8am on Tuesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Supersub Benjamin Sesko fires Manchester United past Everton and into top four
Sir Jim Ratcliffe must be seriously conflicted, among other things. Manchester United’s advance towards the riches of the Champions League gathered momentum at Everton thanks to Slovenia’s Benjamin Sesko, Brazil’s Matheus Cunha and Belgium’s Senne Lammens. While United’s largest single shareholder creates division, the unity of Michael Carrick’s diverse team proved invaluable at Hill Dickinson Stadium.Sesko made a telling impact off the bench for the second game in succession to secure a slender but precious victory in the race for Champions League qualification. Having preserved Carrick’s unbeaten record as United manager last time out at West Ham, the expensive summer signing delivered victory with a clinical finish to take his team fourth in the table, three points clear of Chelsea and Liverpool. Carrick now has five wins and one draw from his six games at the helm. His audition for the permanent job could not have gone much better thus far. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Why the Baftas must get rid of their two-hour delay and broadcast live
Last night made clear that broadcasting a partially redacted version long after the winners have been announced doesn’t work for anyoneBBC apologises again for Baftas N-word incident as show removed from iPlayer for re-editWith N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the footBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy The team responsible for editing the Baftas have an absurdly thankless task. In theory, the ceremony is supposed to start at 5pm and end around two hours later. They make a few judicious cuts here and there, and air the thing more or less as it happened on BBC One between 7pm and 9pm.But that is never what happens. Awards shows rarely start on time, usually because the A-listers – permanently locked in a terminal status battle of red carpet chicken – don’t turn up until the very last second. And then things overrun. Speeches go long, unexpected winners have to clamber down from the back of the auditorium, so many people die during winter that the in memoriam segment takes up more time than anyone expected. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘No surprise’: Robert Aramayo’s teachers knew Bafta winner was destined for great things
Awarded best actor and rising star for role as man with Tourette syndrome in I Swear the 33-year-old was ‘mesmerising’ even when learning his craft in HullWhat is Tourette syndrome, what are tics and what happened at the Baftas?Standing on stage, barely holding back tears and struggling to express his startled elation at being named best actor at last night’s Bafta awards in London, the first words to leave Robert Aramayo’s mouth were “wow”.His next few words, chosen after a brief and only half successful attempt to compose himself, were “I absolutely can’t believe this.” And how could he. Aramayo, 33, had not only unexpectedly beaten the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio and Timothée Chalamet to capture his grand prize, but had also collected the rising star award earlier in the evening, becoming the first actor or actress in history to win both awards on the same night. It was, in his own words, unbelievable. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russian invasion reaches 4-year anniversary
Russian forces invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022 and despite negotiation efforts, an end still remains elusive. Follow DW.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Landmark royal commission into antisemitism prompted by Bondi shooting begins
The inquiry comes after 15 people were killed and dozens hurt when two gunmen opened fire at a Jewish event.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is matter for MPs, says No 10
Anthony Albanese says Australia would not object to his removal from royal succession lineA parliamentary inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is a matter for MPs, Downing Street has said, as ministers faced a new push to uncover details about the former prince’s role as a trade envoy.It comes as the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, wrote to Keir Starmer to say his country would have no objection to Mountbatten-Windsor being removed from the royal line of succession. Later, a spokesperson for New Zealand’s prime minister, Christopher Luxon, said his country would also support the proposals. Continue reading...

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Did a blog post just cause software stocks to lose more than $200 billion in market cap?
For investors to wade back into the software sector, they “want and need to see the stocks stop trading down on new AI headlines,” one analyst says.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Jobs and CPI reports are not being politically manipulated, government’s statistics chief says
The temporary chief of the U.S. agency that produces critical economic reports on jobs, unemployment and inflation says the data is not being manipulated or influenced by politicians.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Uber’s latest effort to become a super app is all about parking
Uber on Monday said it had agreed to buy the parking-reservations app SpotHero, a move that will allow people to book parking reservations on the Uber app.

Slashdot
Open 
Panasonic Will No Longer Make Its Own TVs
Panasonic is handing over the manufacturing, marketing, and sales of its TVs to Shenzhen-based Skyworth, effectively exiting in-house TV production. Ars Technica reports: Skyworth is a Shenzhen-headquartered TV brand. The company claims to be "a top three global provider of the Android TV platform." In July, research firm Omdia reported that Skyworth was one of the top-five TV brands by sales revenue in Q1 2025; however, Skyworth hasn't been able to maintain that position regularly. Panasonic made its announcement at a "launch event," FlatpanelsHD reported today. During the event, a Panasonic representative reportedly said: "Under the agreement the new partner will lead sales, marketing, and logistics across the region, while Panasonic provide expertise and quality assurance to uphold its renowned audiovisual standards with full joint development on top-end OLED models."

Panasonic also said that it will provide support "for all Panasonic TVs sold up to March 2026 and all those available from April." Skyworth-made Panasonic TVs will be sold in the US and Europe. In the latter geography, the companies are aiming for double-digit market share. [...] The news means there's virtually no TV production happening in Japan anymore, as other Japanese companies, like Sharp, Toshiba, Hitachi, and Pioneer, have already exited TV production. Earlier this year, Sony announced that it was ceding control of its TV hardware business to TCL.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
OpenAI Calls In the Consultants For Its Enterprise Push
OpenAI has formed a multi-year "Frontier Alliance" with four consulting heavyweights to accelerate enterprise adoption of its no-code AI agent platform, OpenAI Frontier. TechCrunch reports: The alliance includes multi-year partnerships between OpenAI and four major consulting firms, Boston Consulting Group (BCG), McKinsey, Accenture and Capgemini, to sell its enterprise products. OpenAI's Forward Deployed Engineering team will work with the consulting giants to help them implement OpenAI's enterprise-focused technologies like OpenAI Frontier into customers' tech stacks.

The company launched OpenAI Frontier in early February. The no-code open software allows users to build, deploy, and manage AI agents both built on OpenAI's AI models and beyond. OpenAI argues in its latest announcement that consultants are the right avenue to get enterprises on board.

"AI alone does not drive transformation. It must be linked to strategy, built into redesigned processes, and adopted at scale with aligned incentives and culture to deliver sustained outcomes," BCG CEO Christoph Schweizer said in OpenAI's blog post. "Our expanded partnership combines OpenAI's Frontier platform with BCG's deep industry, functional, and tech expertise and BCG X's build-and-scale capabilities to drive measurable impact with safeguards from day one."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
Chemist James Schlatter licked powder off his finger in 1965, accidentally discovering aspartame.
Aspartame, the ubiquitous and controversial sugar substitute, was discovered by accident. Chemist James Schlatter was researching possible ulcer medications in 1965 when he accidentally tasted the compound he was working on.
According to Nautilus,

While testing compounds for this medication, he licked a white powder off of his finger as he picked up a piece of paper—a blatant violation of work safety regulations.

— Read the rest
The post Chemist James Schlatter licked powder off his finger in 1965, accidentally discovering aspartame. appeared first on Boing Boing.

Mail Online
Open 
Body of kidnapped grandfather Chris Baghsarian is found - after he was tortured in a case of mistaken identity
The body of kidnapped grandfather Chris Baghsarian has been found near a golf course in Sydney's north-west.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to blur your home on Google Street View - and why you should do it ASAP
Blurring your house on Street View isn't just about privacy. Here's why it's become a trend and what to know before you try it.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
NTSB Releases Docket & Probable Cause on 2024 Hawker 900XP Stall Test Accident in Colorado
Probable cause, investigative data, photos, and video now available from the NTSB on the 2024 Hawker 900XP stall test accident in Colorado after maintenance

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11063 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Chesterfield (SLCD) (New)
Our supplier is performing maintenance during this period.

Services should be considered at risk during the maintenance window, and may be affected during this time.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 24th Feb 2026 00:05

End: Tue, 24th Feb 2026 06:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 23:35

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Planned

The Hill
Open 
Gorsuch takes aim at fellow Supreme Court justices in tariff decision
Beneath the surface of the Supreme Court’s tariff decision, Justice Neil Gorsuch had choice words for his colleagues. In a solo opinion, Gorsuch called out his fellow justices for their inconsistent application of a controversial legal doctrine in decisions invalidating former President Obama’s environmental regulation to former President Biden’s student debt relief and now, President...

The Hill
Open 
Maryland sues DHS, Noem over ICE detention facility
Maryland filed a lawsuit on Monday against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem over a new detention facility in the state. Attorney General Anthony G. Brown said the Trump administration “secretly” purchased an 825,000-square-foot warehouse in Washington County near Williamsport for the purpose of...

The Hill
Open 
Trump refutes reports that top Gen. Dan Caine warned of Iran strike risks
President Trump refuted reports Monday that Gen. Dan Caine, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has advised the president and other top officials that military action in Iran could pose substantial risks and leave the U.S. entwined in a prolonged conflict in the Middle East.  “Numerous stories from the Fake News Media have...

The Hill
Open 
Peter Attia departs CBS News after communications with Epstein surface
Wellness and anti-aging doctor Peter Attia is leaving CBS News after communications he had with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were brought to light, The Hill confirmed on Monday. Attia, who built a brand and made a name for himself in media working on longevity medicine, was announced as a contributor for CBS in...

The Hill
Open 
SCOTUS to consider tossing climate suit 
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story SCOTUS to consider tossing climate suit The Supreme Court will consider a bid from oil companies to toss out a locality’s climate change lawsuit against the companies. © Greg Nash The justices decided to take up a request from ExxonMobil and Suncor to toss...

The Hill
Open 
DHS leans into tech
{beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story DHS tech buildout sparks backlash from Democrats The Trump administration’s deployment of a wide range of technologies to support its sweeping deportation push and respond to those protesting immigration raids is sparking pushback among Democrats and civil liberties advocates, who fear it may be abusing its power as...

The Hill
Open 
Trump changes to Black history exhibits spark fears of self-censorship, loss of information
The Trump administration is looking to change how Black history is presented at the park sites and museums under its influence.   President Trump, who has eyes on the nation's 250th birthday this summer, says historical sites focus too much on the issue of slavery instead the “success” of the country. His administration is accused of whitewashing the history...

The Hill
Open 
Trump puts Iran's leader in double bind: Capitulation or risk of war
Iran's supreme leader is facing one of the most consequential decisions of his more than 30 years in power this week: strike a deal with President Trump to severely limit the country's nuclear program or risk an all-out war with the United States and Israel. Isolated and informed by decades of experience in waiting out...

The Hill
Open 
Pentagon raises concerns about ROTOR Act implementing DC crash reforms
The Pentagon on Monday raised what it said were “significant” concerns over an aviation safety bill set to be taken up by the House this week, an about face from its support of the legislation when the Senate passed it unanimously in December. The Rotorcraft Operations Transparency and Oversight Reform Act - meant to address...

The Hill
Open 
Park ranger fired for hanging trans Pride flag sues Interior Department
A former National Park Service (NPS) ranger who was fired last year for hanging a transgender pride flag in Yosemite National Park sued multiple federal agencies Monday over their termination, arguing it violated their First Amendment rights.  The lawsuit, filed by Dr. Shannon “SJ” Joslin in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, said...

The Register
Open 
ICE watchers say agents used software to threaten and follow them home
'This is a warning. We know you live right here' Two US residents have sued several Homeland Security agencies and officials, including Secretary Kristi Noem, for allegedly using surveillance tools to harass them, branding them as "domestic terrorists," and even showing up at their homes based on license-plate recognition. …

Gizmodo
Open 
Did Meta Just Accidentally Prove Smart Glasses Are a Liability?
Mark Zuckerberg traipsed into court with Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses on and got a scolding.

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon to Sink $12 Billion Into Data Centers as Wall Street (and Everyone Else) Turns Against AI Spending
Surely they can just spend their way out.

Gizmodo
Open 
Lego’s Smart Play Bricks Sound Awful
Lego's controversial wave of tech-enhanced 'Star Wars' sets are getting into people's hands, and showing the premium being paid isn't quite worth it.

Gizmodo
Open 
An AI Thought Experiment on Substack Is Sending The Stock Market Spiraling
AI is coming for everything, Wall Street seems to believe.

Gizmodo
Open 
Lamborghini Has Been Planning an EV for Years. It’s Just Been Cancelled
EVs in their current form do not deliver the "specific emotional connection" Lamborghini says its cars need.

CNET News
Open 
Microsoft Researchers Figure Out How to Store Data Inside Glass Using Lasers
The researchers say the data could be retrieved from the glass in 10,000 years.

CNET News
Open 
Nothing Teases 4A Phone: No Pink Option, but a Brand-New Glyph
The British company gives a sneak preview of its new phone ahead of its March 5 launch.

CNET News
Open 
This AI Tool Doesn't Help With Homework. It Does It for You
Einstein is a new AI tool that can watch lecture videos, read essays, write papers, complete quizzes and basically take your class for you.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US AI giant accuses Chinese rivals of mass data theft
Anthropic says three Chinese firms used ‘distillation’ technique to extract information from its Claude chatbotUS artificial intelligence company Anthropic said on Monday it had uncovered campaigns by three Chinese AI firms to illicitly extract capabilities from its Claude chatbot, in what it described as industrial-scale intellectual property theft. OpenAI leveled similar charges last month.Anthropic said DeepSeek, Moonshot AI, and MiniMax used a technique known as “distillation” – using outputs from a more powerful AI system to rapidly boost the performance of a less capable one. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
As we enter the age of the AI-rranged marriage, here’s why I hate Fate | Van Badham
When the most profound human emotion becomes an automated transaction in an online shop, the techlords have wonThe Guardian reported on the arrival of “Fate” and, friends, I laughed. Or maybe I cried.It’s apparently the first “agentic AI dating app”. An AI personality named “Fate” interviews users, runs data matches on their hopes and dreams, then suggests five potential matches based on the hard data of observable complementary language patterning, “No swiping involved!”. Continue reading...

Telegraph
Open 
Sesko winner gives Man Utd another reason to award Carrick permanent job
Sesko winner gives Man Utd another reason to award Carrick permanent job

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao to fight in September rematch on Netflix
40-something fighters will meet in Las VegasMayweather won previous encounter in 2015Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao will face each other on 19 September in Las Vegas in a rematch of one of the biggest fights in boxing history.Their first fight, in 2015, was generally seen as a tame affair with both fighters past their peaks. September’s bout, which will be streamed live on Netflix, is likely to be of a lower quality. Mayweather and Pacquiao will be 49 and 47 respectively when they fight. Mayweather’s last professional fight, which preserved his unbeaten record, came in 2017, although that was a glorified exhibition against UFC star Conor McGregor. Pacquiao fought for the WBC welterweight championship last year, but is far from the force he was in his prime. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Supersub Benjamin Sesko fires Manchester United past Everton and into top four
Sir Jim Ratcliffe must be seriously conflicted. Manchester United’s advance towards the riches of the Champions League continued to gather pace under Michael Carrick thanks to the impact of Slovenia’s Benjamin Sesko for the second game in succession. The summer signing came off the bench to condemn Everton to another home defeat with a clinical finish and lift United to fourth in the table, only three points behind Aston Villa.Sesko, who preserved Carrick’s unbeaten record as United manager last time out at West Ham, was again their saviour to settle a hard-fought contest with David Moyes’s side. It is now five wins and one draw from Carrick’s six games in charge. The audition for the permanent job could not have gone much better thus far. Continue reading...

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
The Razer BlackShark V3 X takes the best gaming headset on the market and strips it down to under $100

Sky News Home
Open 
Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Peter Mandelson has been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

Techdirt
Open 
How Copyright Litigation Over Anne Frank’s Diary Could Impact The Fate Of VPNs In The EU
“The Diary of a Young Girl” is a Dutch language diary written by the young Jewish writer Anne Frank while she was in hiding for two years with her family during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Although the diary and Anne Frank’s death in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp are well known, few are aware that the text has […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England expected to field second-string XV against Fiji due to travel schedule chaos
Nations Championship involves 25,000-mile itineraryEngland to split squad in July and leave a team to face FijiEngland have been handed a gruelling 25,000-mile travel itinerary for their inaugural Nations ­Championship fixtures in July and are expected to split their squad and field a weakened team against Fiji as a result.As revealed exclusively by the Guardian, England’s match against Fiji – the week after they face South Africa in Johannesburg and the week before playing away in Argentina – will be staged at Everton’s new Hill Dickinson Stadium. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
World Nature Photography awards 2026 – in pictures
The World Nature Photography awards have announced the winners for 2026 and Australian Jono Allen has taken out the top prize Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Canada seeks answers from OpenAI for failing to alert police after suspending school shooter’s account
Company had suspended account of Tumbler Ridge shooter in June 2025 over ‘furtherance of violent activities’Canada’s artificial intelligence minister says he has summoned representatives from the technology company OpenAI after the company declined to alert police after suspending the account of a user who became the perpetrator of one of the country’s the worst-ever school shootings.Evan Solomon says he is “deeply disturbed” by reports the company, which operates the popular ChatGPT chatbot, suspended the account of Jesse Van Rootselaar over the “furtherance of violent activities” in June 2025 but did not reach out to Canadian law enforcement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France bans US envoy after no-show at meeting over killing of activist
Charles Kushner had been summoned to explain comments relating to the killing of far-right activist Quentin DeranqueDonald Trump’s ambassador to Paris has been banned from meeting French government ministers after failing to show up for a meeting at the foreign ministry to explain US comments about the killing of a far-right activist.Charles Kushner, whose son Jared is married to the US president’s oldest daughter, Ivanka, was summoned to the 7pm meeting by the foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, after the US embassy in Paris reposted state department comments about the case. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
What happened to Arlene? The 30-year mystery of a murder without a body
Arlene Fraser's husband Nat is serving life for murder - but her family is still seeking answers about what happened to her body.

Mail Online
Open 
Everton vs Manchester United - Premier League RECAP: Latest score, team news and updates as Benjamin Sesko comes off bench to score winner
Re-live Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Everton hosted Manchester United at the Hill Dickinson Stadium in the Premier League.

BBC World News
Open 
French minister moves to block US envoy Kushner from government access
The minister says Charles Kushner, father of Trump's son-in-law Jared, had failed to explain US comments about violence in France.

Sky News Home
Open 
Violence triggered by killing of notorious Mexican drug lord could hit the World Cup
The Mexican authorities would've expected a violent backlash after the killing of El Mencho, one of the country's most powerful cartel bosses.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
6 Best Duffel Bags We Tested While Traveling (2026)
Need to schlep some stuff? Consider these field-tested duffel bags. The Eastpak Duffel Pack S Tarp Black2 is our top pick.

F1 Technical
Open 
How did Alpine's liveries evolve over the past seasons?
Few teams in modern Formula 1 have embraced visual identity as boldly as Alpine. Across five seasons, the French outfit has treated fans to a dynamic, ever‑shifting palette of blues, pinks, and sponsor‑driven accents that reflect both brand strategy and the team’s evolving ambitions.

TechRadar News
Open 
Olaf is hosting a drawing class at Disney World — and animators will teach you to draw him and other classic characters

TechRadar News
Open 
Technics just added its famed ΔΣ direct drive tech to a turntable that won't cost thousands — and I want one

TechRadar News
Open 
Before Cerebras, there was Amdahl: How legendary US engineer was way ahead of his time with wafer-scale integration and plotted supercomputer performance for the humble PC 43 years ago

TechRadar News
Open 
Forget the wooden ruler — I measured the Blizzard of 2026 with my iPhone

Digital Trends
Open 
A cash bounty is daring hackers to stop Ring cameras from sharing data with Amazon
Privacy-focused hackers are being offered cash to modify Ring cameras so they work locally without sending data to Amazon, reflecting growing unease over how home surveillance data is collected and used.
The post A cash bounty is daring hackers to stop Ring cameras from sharing data with Amazon appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here’s what airlines, hotels and Airbnb actually owe travelers stranded in Mexico
U.S. airlines canceled flights to and from the Mexican cities of Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara on Monday amid cartel-related violence over the weekend, leaving tourists stranded.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Novo Nordisk’s stock closes at 4-year low after its next-gen weight-loss drug lost to Lilly’s in Phase 3 trial
Novo Nordisk shares were under pressure on Monday as the struggling Danish pharmaceutical said a head-to-head study found a drug in development didn’t cut as much weight as an Eli Lilly product.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
IBM’s stock heads for worst month in 34 years — and Anthropic is partly to blame
IBM’s stock ended Monday down 13% as Anthropic’s Claude Code threatens to dismantle a critical part of its business.

Slashdot
Open 
ASML Unveils EUV Light Source Advance That Could Yield 50% More Chips By 2030
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Researchers at ASML Holding say they have found a way to boost the power of the light source in a key chip making machine to turn out up to 50% more chips by decade's end, to help retain the Dutch company's edge over emerging U.S. and Chinese rivals. ASML is the world's only maker of commercial extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machines, a critical tool for chipmakers such as TSMC, Intel and others in producing advanced computing chips. "It's not a parlor trick or something like this, where we demonstrate for a very short time that it can work," Michael Purvis, ASML's lead technologist for its EUV source light, said in an interview. "It's a system that can produce 1,000 watts under all the same requirements that you could see at a customer," he added, speaking at the company's California facilities near San Diego. [...]

With the technological advance revealed on Monday, which is being reported here for the first time, ASML aims to outdistance any would-be rivals by improving the most technologically challenging aspect of the machines. This is the quest to generate EUV light with the right power and properties to turn out chips at high volume. The company's researchers have found a way to boost the power of the EUV light source to 1,000 watts from 600 watts now. The chief advantage is that greater power translates into the ability to make more chips every hour, helping to lower the cost of each. Chips are printed similar to a photograph, where the EUV light is shone on a silicon wafer coated with special chemicals called a photoresist. With a more powerful EUV light source, chip factories need shorter exposure times. "We'd like to make sure that our customers can keep on using EUV at a much lower cost," Teun van Gogh, executive vice president for the NXE line of EUV machines at ASML, told Reuters. Van Gogh said customers should be able to process about 330 silicon wafers an hour on each machine by the end of the decade, up from 220 now. Depending on the size of a chip, each wafer can hold anywhere from scores to thousands of the devices.

ASML got the power boost by doubling down on an approach that already places its machines among the most complex inventions of humans. To produce light with a wavelength of 13.5 nanometers, ASML's machine shoots a stream of molten droplets of tin through a chamber, where a massive carbon dioxide laser heats them into plasma. This is a superheated state of matter in which the tin droplets become hotter than the sun and emit EUV light, to be collected by precision optic equipment supplied by Germany's Carl Zeiss AG and fed into the machine to print chips. The key advancements in Monday's disclosure involved doubling the number of tin drops to about 100,000 every second, and shaping them into plasma using two smaller laser bursts, as opposed to today's machines that use a single shaping burst. [...] ASML believes the techniques it used to hit 1,000 watts will unlock continued advances in the future, Purvis said, adding, "We see a reasonably clear path toward 1,500 watts, and no fundamental reason why we couldn't get to 2,000 watts."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
In uncertain times don't pay monthly for Office 365
TL;DR: Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows is available for $39.97 (MSRP $219.99), giving you the complete desktop suite with a one-time purchase.
When everything feels unpredictable, the last thing most people want is another recurring charge quietly hitting their account. — Read the rest
The post In uncertain times don't pay monthly for Office 365 appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC World News
Open 
More than 5,000 flights cancelled as US east coast digs out of record snow
A major snowstorm walloped the US north-east, causing disruptions for millions and thousands of flight cancellations.

The Aviationist
Open 
B-2 Spirit Flies with Adaptable Communications Suite 4.0
The Adaptable Communications Suite will allow the B-2A Spirit to operate efficiently within the Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control environment. Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) has announced that a B-2A Spirit stealth bomber of the U.S. Air Force has flown for the first time with the Adaptable Communications Suite (ACS) 4.0. The milestone is part […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Super-sub Sesko earns Man Utd win at Everton
Watch Premier League highlights as Manchester United earn a narrow win over Everton thanks to a goal from substitute Benjamin Sesko.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
IBM Plunges After Anthropic's Latest Update Takes On COBOL
IBM Plunges After Anthropic's Latest Update Takes On COBOL

After disrupting countless Software/SaaS/finance/real estate/broker sectors, Anthropic's Claude is now going after targeted companies. 

A little before 2pm ET, Bloomberg sent out a headline that Anthropic's Claude has found yet another skillset:

*ANTHROPIC SAYS CLAUDE CODE CAN AUTOMATE COBOL MODERNIZATION
A herd of panicked IBM longs flooded to the Claude blog to read more on what is happening. Here's what it found (excerpted): 


COBOL is everywhere. It handles an estimated 95% of ATM transactions in the US. Hundreds of billions of lines of COBOL run in production every day, powering critical systems in finance, airlines, and government.

Despite that, the number of people who understand it shrinks every year.

The developers who built these systems retired years ago, and the institutional knowledge they carried left with them. Production code has been modified repeatedly over decades, but the documentation hasn't kept up. Meanwhile, we aren't exactly minting replacements—COBOL is taught at only a handful of universities, and finding engineers who can read it gets harder every quarter.

Given these roadblocks, how can organizations modernize their systems without losing the reliability, availability, and data they’ve accumulated over decades? And without breaking anything?

* * * 

How AI changes COBOL modernization

AI excels at streamlining the tasks that once made COBOL modernization cost-prohibitive. With it, your team can focus on strategy, risk assessment, and business logic while AI automates the code analysis and implementation.

* * * 

Start your COBOL modernization

The approach outlined above works for COBOL systems of any size. Tools like Claude Code can automate much of the exploration and analysis work described, giving your team the comprehensive understanding they need to plan and execute migrations confidently.

Start with a single component or workflow that has clear boundaries and moderate complexity. Use AI to analyze and document it thoroughly, plan the modernization with your engineers, implement incrementally with testing at each step, and validate carefully.  This will build organizational confidence and surface adjustments needed for your systems.


In kneejerk reaction, IBM stock, already down sharply on the day, and tumbling 20% from its all time highs just earlier this month, plunged $15 to the lowest level since Liberation Day, briefly dipping below $230...



... as the market realized that it is the latest target of the Claude disruption train. You see, Common Business-Oriented Language (COBOL)  is a high-level, English-like compiled programming language developed specifically for business data processing, via IBM. As such, anything that disrupts this lucrative ecosystem created by IBM (code COBOL, then sell consultancy contracts to adjust the code which virtually nobody knows how to use), would immediately smash IBM stock... and that's precisely what happened. 

Which begs the question: after various Claude updates caused hundreds of billions in market cap damage in the past 3 weeks, is the company's strategy to keep rolling incremental disruption updates becoming Antrhopic's self-funding strategy. After all, if Dario Amodei had bought puts on IBM, and the dozens of companies that have plunge dmore than double digits in recent weeks, he would have made billions, certainly enough to fund his company for months if not years. 

And if not Anthropic, when will OpenAI - which needs capital much more badly than its enterprise-focused peer - do the same? 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 14:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Khamenei Prepares Secretive Succession Plan In Case He's Assassinated 
Khamenei Prepares Secretive Succession Plan In Case He's Assassinated 

As US carriers deploy in the Mideast region and with tense nuclear talks inching forward in Geneva, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is reportedly taking Washington threats of assassination very seriously.

According to a Sunday report by The New York Times, Khamenei has quietly established detailed succession plans and emergency chains of command in the event he - or other top regime figures - are killed in potential US or Israeli strikes.
 Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's grandson, Hassan Khomeini stands next to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/Via Reuters

The contingency blueprint, drafted amid escalating threats and last month's nationwide unrest, is said to ensure continuity of power under wartime conditions. Central to that plan is the elevation of longtime insider Ali Larijani.

The report says that at the height of the protests and amid mounting US military pressure, Khamenei tapped Larijani - a former Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) commander and political heavyweight - to assume a dominant governing role, effectively sidelining President Masoud Pezeshkian and consolidating crisis management under a trusted loyalist.

NY Times writes, "Ayatollah Khamenei has instructed Mr. Larijani and a handful of other close political and military associates to ensure that the Islamic Republic survives not only American and Israeli bombs, but also any assassination attempts on its top leadership, including on Ayatollah Khamenei himself, according to the six senior officials and the Guards members."

Nasser Imani, a conservative analyst close to the government, told the outlet over the phone: "The supreme leader fully trusts Larijani. He believes Larijani is the man for this sensitive juncture because of his political track record, sharp mind and knowledge."

Imani added: "He relies on him for reports on the situation and pragmatic advice. Larijani’s role will be very pronounced during war."

According to more details of the emergency wartime succession planning:


According to the six senior officials and the Guards members, Ayatollah Khamenei has issued a series of directives. He has named four layers of succession for each of the military command and government roles that he personally appoints.

He has also told everyone in leadership roles to name up to four replacements and has delegated responsibilities to a tight circle of confidants to make decisions in case communications with him are disrupted or he is killed.


The Times claims Larijani had overseen the crackdown on demonstrators and coordinated closely with Moscow, and may have even had serious input in how to deal on the diplomatic front with Washington.


It remains something of a mystery how Ali Larijani was disqualified from Iran’s presidential race by the Guardian Council, only to reemerge as — effectively second-in-command today!
🤷🏻 pic.twitter.com/KbUVXbMWDH
— Potkin Azarmehr (@potkazar) February 23, 2026
"Mr. Larijani comes from an elite political and religious family, and for 12 years, he was the speaker of Parliament," the publication adds. "In 2021, he was put in charge of negotiating a 25-year comprehensive strategic deal with China worth billions."

Tehran is justifiably worried given the June war saw several assassinations of top military officials amid the bombing chaos. Also, high on Iranians' minds remains the Trump-ordered assassination of IRGC Quds force chief Qasem Soleimani, killed by a targeted drone strike on January 3, 2020 outside Baghdad international airport.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 15:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
What Causes Stagflation?
What Causes Stagflation?

Authored by Frank Shostak via The Mises Institute,

In the late 1960’s Edmund Phelps and Milton Friedman challenged the popular view that there can be a sustainable trade-off between inflation and unemployment. In fact, over time, according to Friedman, expansionary central bank policies set the platform for lower economic growth and a higher rate of inflation (i.e., stagflation). A famous case of stagflation occurred during the 1974-75 period. In March 1975, industrial production fell by nearly 13 percent year-on-year while the yearly growth rate of the consumer price index (CPI) jumped to around 12 percent.



Friedman’s Explanation of Stagflation

Starting from a situation of equality between the current and the expected rate of inflation, the central bank decides to attempt to increase the economic growth rate by increasing the growth rate of money supply. As a result, a greater supply of money enters the economy and each individual now has more money at his disposal. According to Friedman, because of this increase, every individual is of the view that he has become wealthier. This raises the demand for goods and services, which, in turn, sets in motion an increase in the production of goods and services.

Following this, producers’ demand increases for workers and subsequently the unemployment rate falls to below the equilibrium rate, which both Phelps and Friedman labeled as the “natural rate.” Once the unemployment rate declines to below the natural rate, this starts to exert an upward pressure on price inflation. Consequently, individuals start to realize that there was a general loosening in the monetary policy. As a result, individuals are beginning to realize that their previous increase in purchasing power is actually dwindling. Hence, according to Friedman, people start forming higher inflation expectations.

All this in turn works to weaken the overall demand for goods and services. A weakening in the overall demand slows down the production of goods and services. As a result, the unemployment rate moves higher. Observe that—with respect to the unemployment rate and economic growth—we are now back to where we were prior to the central bank’s decision to loosen its monetary stance but with a much higher price inflation.

What we have here is a decline in the production of goods and services—an increase in the unemployment rate—and an increase in price inflation (i.e., we have stagflation). From this, Friedman has concluded that, as long as the increase in the money supply is unexpected, the central bank can engineer an increase in the economic growth rate. However, once individuals learn about the increase in the money supply and assess the implications of this increase, they adjust their conduct accordingly. Therefore, the stimulatory effect to the economy because of the increase in the money supply growth rate disappears.

In order to overcome this hurdle and strengthen economic growth, the central bank would have to surprise individuals by means of a much higher growth rate of the monetary inflation. However, after a time lag, individuals are likely to learn about this increase and adjust their conduct accordingly. Hence, the stimulatory effect of the higher growth rate of money supply on economic growth is likely to vanish again and all that will remain is much higher price inflation.

From this, Friedman concluded that—through expansionary monetary policy—the central bank can only temporarily generate economic growth. Over time, however, such policies are likely to result in higher price inflation. Hence, according to Friedman, there is no long-term trade-off between inflation and unemployment.

Why Expected Money Growth Undermines Economic Growth

In a market economy, a producer usually exchanges his goods and services for money. He then exchanges the money received for the goods and services of other producers. Alternatively, we can say that an exchange of something for something takes place by means of money.

Things are, however, not quite the same once money is generated out of “thin air” by inflation because of the expansionary central bank policies. Once inflation is employed, it sets in motion an exchange of nothing for something. This amounts to a diversion of resources from wealth-generators to the holders of the newly-generated money. In the process, wealth-generators are left with fewer resources at their disposal, which, in turn, weakens their ability to grow the economy.

An exchange of nothing for something, which sets the diversion of resources, will take place regardless of whether the increase in money supply is expected or unexpected. This means that, contrary to Friedman, even if the money growth is expected it will undermine economic growth. Now, if unexpected monetary policies can cause economic growth, why not constantly surprise individuals and cause economic growth?

What Causes Stagflation?

Increases in the money supply set in motion an exchange of nothing for something. This diverts resources from wealth-generators to non-wealth generators. Consequently, this weakens the wealth-formation process and, in turn, weakens economic growth.

What we have here is a situation whereby increases in money supply undermine the process of wealth-generation, thus hurting economic growth. At the same time, we have more money per goods. This means that the prices of goods are likely higher than before the increase in money supply took place. Hence, what we have here is an increase in prices of goods and a weakening in economic growth. This is branded, by popular description, as stagflation.

Stagflation emerges because of the increase in the money supply. Hence, whenever the central bank adopts an expansionary monetary stance, it also sets in motion stagflation in the months ahead. The fact that, over time, an inflationary expansion of money and credit may not always manifest through visible stagflation does not refute what we have concluded with respect to the consequences of increases in the monetary pumping on economic growth and prices.

What matters for the state of an economy is not the manifestation of stagflation—higher prices and higher unemployment—but increases in the money supply. It is inflationary increases in the money supply that undermine the process of wealth generation. The severity of stagflation is dependent upon the state voluntary, private savings. If savings are declining, then a visible decline in economic activity is likely to ensue. Moreover, on account of past monetary inflation and the consequent increase in price inflation, we will often see visible stagflation. Conversely, if savings are still growing, economic activity is likely to follow suit. Given the rising momentum of prices, we will have a positive correlation between economic activity and price inflation.

The symptoms of stagflation are not visible here because of increasing savings. We can conclude that, if on account of past monetary inflation, we do not observe the symptoms of stagflation this may imply that savings are still growing. Conversely, if we can observe the symptoms of stagflation, then it is most likely that the pool of savings is declining.

Conclusion

Increases in money supply set in motion an exchange of nothing for something. This diverts resources from wealth-generators to non-wealth-generators. Consequently, this weakens the wealth-generation process and, in turn, the pace of economic activity. When money enters goods markets, it means that we have more money per goods. This means that the prices of goods will tend to increase. Hence, what we have here is the increase in goods prices and a weakening in economic growth. This is what stagflation is all about. We suggest that the outcome of monetary inflation is always stagflation. It is not always visible though. As the pool of voluntary savings comes under pressure, the phenomenon of stagflation tends to become more visible.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 15:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mexico's Cartel Decapitation Strike Fallout: "Not The End, Just The Beginning"
Mexico's Cartel Decapitation Strike Fallout: "Not The End, Just The Beginning"

Mexican journalist Luis Cárdenas, listed as a journalist at MVS Noticias and a contributor to El Universal and El Heraldo de México, spoke with security analyst Oscar Balmen about the Mexican Army Special Forces' decapitation strike against the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) by killing Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes.

Balmen explained to Cárdenas that CJNG "is designed to survive without El Mencho."



Cárdenas listed key takeaways from his discussion:


The fall of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes does not mean the end of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel: it is a transnational criminal structure with a franchise model and regional autonomy.


The more than 250 blockades after the operation were not aimed at rescuing him, but were a "criminal résumé": plaza bosses flexing muscle to dispute the leadership.






The risk is not immediate, warns Balmen: the rearrangement can take weeks or months to explode, as happened after the capture of Ismael Zambada García; an internal struggle is coming that could fragment or pulverize the cartel.


“El CJNG es una empresa diseñada para sobrevivir sin el Mencho”: @oscarbalmen
🔴 La caída de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes no significa el fin del Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación: es una estructura criminal transnacional con modelo de franquicias y autonomía regional.
🔴 Los más… pic.twitter.com/fQ95Rf8cy6
— LuisCardenasMX (@LuisCardenasMx) February 23, 2026
Earlier, Mexico's Secretary of Defense, Ricardo Trevilla, revealed new details at a press conference about the Mexican Army Special Forces raid to capture El Mencho. He said, "El Mencho was captured in a cabin area near his hideout." However, El Mencho later died in a firefight with the military.


📺 TV en DIRECTO | El secretario de Defensa de México, Ricardo Trevilla, revela cómo fue capturado El Mencho en una zona de cabañas cercana a su escondite https://t.co/33JHgvIVcn pic.twitter.com/Q3VruSWm3k
— EL PAÍS (@el_pais) February 23, 2026
Trevilla offered condolences to the families of military members who lost their lives in the mission to decapitate CJNG.


#Mañanera 🔴Con la voz entrecortada, Trevilla Trejo, titular de la Defensa, dio el pésame a las familias de los compañeros que perdieron la vida en el operativo contra ‘El Mencho’.
Señaló que su personal realizó una operación exitosa y mostró la fortaleza del Estado mexicano.… pic.twitter.com/NRSy0vaIC4
— REFORMA (@Reforma) February 23, 2026
He acknowledged that the operation against El Mencho can be viewed from "different perspectives," but he said the Mexican Army has completed its mission.


El general Ricardo Trevilla Trejo reconoce que la operación contra "El Mencho" se puede ver desde "diferentes ópticas", pero defiende que el Ejército mexicano cumplió su misión. https://t.co/alf8Xgf8wb
— Jesús García 🐦 (@JesusGar) February 23, 2026
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum also spoke at the press conference, praising the military for the arrest of El Mencho.


“México tiene Fuerzas Armadas Extraordinarias”.
Reconocimiento presidencial al Ejército, Guardia Nacional y Fuerza Aérea por la detención de “El Mencho”.
Más en https://t.co/BjdELZkpfR pic.twitter.com/W0dWPTD0lL
— Joaquín López-Dóriga (@lopezdoriga) February 23, 2026
"The government of Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum knew that the 'elimination' of El Mencho would trigger a massive terrorist reaction," research analyst Miguel Alfonso Meza of Defensorxs wrote on X.

Meza continued:


One day after the assassination of El Mencho, the repercussions are:



Collective trauma in the population and hundreds of deadly and economic victims.


A predictable internal dispute within the CJNG and the prolonged bleeding it will cause.


The elimination of El Mencho as a potential witness to point out all the politicians and businessmen who protected him, as well as a source of information to dismantle his cartel.


The establishment of a de facto (military) state of exception in several regions of the country.


The international perception that Mexico is at war and incapable of guaranteeing security against the cartels, just over 3 months before the World Cup.


And fuel for Trump's interventionist discourse (even though the operation was joint, Mexico will pay the political cost).


Was there any alternative? Yes. There were far better alternatives.


Arresting the most important witness in history instead of assassinating him.

If what matters is dismantling organized crime and its political complicities, El Mencho was one of the most valuable pieces to achieve it. By killing him, they eliminated one of the most important sources of information and, with that, covered up for hundreds of accomplices. They also lost the opportunity to obtain information about how the CJNG operates in order to use it to combat it.


Dismantling the CJNG instead of beheading it.

Despite the fact that Mexico and the US know perfectly well that the logic of beheading cartels has failed because it has only increased chaos and violence, they continue to apply it to the letter. And they don't do it for strategic reasons, but for political banality: they want to hang the medal of eliminating a big capo. That medal does nothing to help the population. The death of El Mencho is not the death of the CJNG. That organization maintains the same resources and territorial control yesterday and today. That organization is the one that uses terror to control territory. That organization is still alive and strong: so much so that it can activate simultaneous attacks in 20 states. Now, what they have achieved is for the CJNG to shift to its most violent version and experiment with systematic terrorism applied as retaliation against the State and the population. Instead of cutting off one head of the hydra, they should have dismantled and financially and structurally strangled the Jalisco Cartel. They should have weakened and reduced it in order to capture its leader in a controllable scenario, not in one where the authorities are clearly incapable of containing the spread of terror.


Inhibiting terrorism and protecting the population.

The government of @Claudiashein was clearly incapable and negligent in the face of the CJNG's terrorist reaction. The attacks did not just spread throughout the country: their government kept us in an information blackout and left us abandoned.


Meza warned:


The assassination of El Mencho marks the rest of @Claudiashein's government: a president who decided to expose millions of Mexicans to unleashed terrorism. However, this is not the end of the story. It is only the beginning.


What could come next are spillover risks to the US.



Will Freeman, a fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, has warned... 


🇲🇽 Researcher from Council on Foreign Relations, Freeman says cartel had prepared a "civil war plan" in advance in case of El Mencho's death:
"Mexican drug cartel 'New Generation Jalisco' had a plan in case of a violation of red lines. The murder of a drug lord is precisely one… https://t.co/EPQqTjuTjK pic.twitter.com/FcYZXCacE8
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) February 23, 2026
In a viral post, X user Anonymous Hispano cited a 4chan post from "LONG LIVE EL MENCHO" warning of a "Mexican Civil War," claiming the cartel is enraged and has entered "insurgency mode," starting with a takeover of Jalisco and preparing "inevitable" actions on US soil.


🔴 Un usuario que se hace llamar LONG LIVE EL MENCHO colocó en [Rule 1] un escalofriante aviso en el que afirma que, aunque El Mencho ya no era dirigente activo del CJNG por su avanzada edad, el cártel está muy enojado y ha entrado en "modo insurgencia", comenzando por adueñarse… pic.twitter.com/GHTTRYCJy8
— Anonymous Hispano (@anonopshispano) February 23, 2026
Meanwhile...


BREAKING: The odds of a ground operation in Mexico are soaring.
19% chance it happens by next month. pic.twitter.com/GcfiTHOakl
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) February 23, 2026
Even before Mexico's decapitation strike on CJNG, the US military, special operations, and intelligence agencies had been posturing for a cartel fight, expanding intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions from spy aircraft to drones, and bolstering border and Caribbean forces. We suspect the National Guard deployments in certain US cities were a national security precaution rather than the headline story of cleaning up violent crime in Democratic-run cities. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 15:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Intel Aided Mexican Special Forces In "El Mencho" Kill As Spillover Risks Rise
US Intel Aided Mexican Special Forces In "El Mencho" Kill As Spillover Risks Rise

The Sunday killing of Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, the leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), by Mexican security forces unleashed coordinated cartel retaliation attacks, driving rapid instability across Guadalajara (Jalisco's capital) and spilling into high-traffic resort areas, including Puerto Vallarta.

CNN reported that the US provided intelligence support to Mexican Army Special Forces, aided by aircraft and the National Guard's Immediate Reaction Force, during the operation to capture Oseguera. The operation, however, devolved into a fierce firefight with CJNG operatives and El Mencho that ultimately resulted in his death.

Almost immediately after El Mencho's death, Guadalajara, Mexico's third-largest city and the capital of Jalisco State, plunged into instant chaos as CJNG foot soldiers sparked narco-terrorism operations.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026
This violence spread into popular beach resort towns across Mexico, as gunmen torched retail shops, gas stations, and vehicles, and blockaded highways.


🚨Update: Fighting between Mexican military forces and Narco Terrorist Cartels after major Drug Overlord killed in joint operation with the United States. All Americans across Mexico are ordered to shelter in place. Major battles are being fought everywhere as Soldiers and Police… pic.twitter.com/nQySP7opgC
— US Homeland Security News (@defense_civil25) February 22, 2026
The popular tourist town of Puerto Vallarta was partially set on fire as American visitors watched in horror. The US Embassy issued a "shelter in place" order for the region, and airlines canceled flights to Guadalajara's international airport amid the chaos.


En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026

pic.twitter.com/2SPKp6ejq2
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026
This military operation in the state of Jalisco casts a negative light on the region, which is scheduled to host four matches of the 2026 soccer World Cup in June.


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
A key question is whether CJNG can survive. Its future depends on how quickly it appoints a successor; if not, the cartel may fragment as internal power struggles begin.

Two questions:


The first question concerns CJNG's survivability. It will hinge on how quickly the group can appoint a successor; if it fails to do so, the cartel could splinter as internal power struggles intensify.


A second question is whether Mexico's military can sustain a multi-front fight, as it now faces both CJNG and the Sinaloa Cartel.

"This is undoubtedly the most important blow that has been dealt to drug trafficking in Mexico since drug trafficking existed in Mexico," Eduardo Guerrero, a former Mexican security official and cartel expert, told the New York Times.

"Never in Mexico has there been an organization with the presence, territorial control or political penetration that the Jalisco New Generation Cartel has," Guerrero added. "The cartels we had in Mexico were more regional in nature."

On Sunday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote on X that the US provided "support to the Mexican government" to assist in the operation against CJNG.

"Last year, President Trump rightfully designated the Jalisco New Generation Cartel as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, because that's exactly what it is. In this operation, three additional cartel members were killed, three were wounded, and two were arrested," Leavitt said.

She noted, "President Trump has been very clear: the United States will ensure narcoterrorists sending deadly drugs to our homeland are forced to face the wrath of justice they have long deserved."


The United States provided intelligence support to the Mexican government in order to assist with an operation in Talpalpa, Jalisco, Mexico, in which Nemesio ‘El Mencho’ Oseguera Cervantes, an infamous drug lord and leader within the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was eliminated.… https://t.co/iKxsAMmnLN
— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) February 23, 2026
El Mencho's death could elevate near-term spillover risks into the U.S., especially given the Biden-Harris regime's years of facilitating an illegal alien invasion on the Homeland.


A reminder that a vast majority of the millions who crossed the border illegally during the Biden administration were lining the pockets of cartels like CJNG, paying thousands, sometimes tens of thousands of $ per head to be smuggled into the Unites States. Color coded cartel… pic.twitter.com/fJiw8hgtSE
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) February 22, 2026
The Trump administration has sought to address the national-security fallout by ramping up deportation operations, but legal challenges from unhinged left-wing judges have complicated efforts.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 15:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Weapons-Grade Mind-F**kery": A Campaign Of Bad Faith And Ill Will
"Weapons-Grade Mind-F**kery": A Campaign Of Bad Faith And Ill Will

Authored by James Howard Kunstler,


“The SAVE Act can pass today under existing procedure. The obstacle is not the filibuster. It is the habit of surrendering to a myth."

- Alex Muse on X


Lunacy proceeds from crime. In case you wonder why half the country has gone crazy, seek no further than Susan Rice’s stark warning to the other half of the country that is not crazy.

Ms. Rice was Barack Obama’s National Security Advisor and then “Joe Biden’s” Domestic Policy Advisor. She did a podcast last week with Preet Bharaha, former US Attorney in the SDNY, now a private lawyer with the Beltway law firm WilmerHale. Her message to Trump supporters: We’re coming after you when we’re back in power. “Revenge is a dish best served cold.”


WEAPONIZATION: Susan Rice lays out her vision of a post-Trump America where supporters are rounded up and sent to reeducation camps or prisons. pic.twitter.com/IyEPXx4G9T
— @amuse (@amuse) February 20, 2026
It was an important signal and it got a lot of people’s attention. It telegraphed the fear running through the Lefty-left that their crimes against the country are being tallied, carefully catalogued, and presented to a grand jury in Florida.

The crimes are bundled as a multifaceted conspiracy to overthrow the US government.

Pretty serious.

Sedition and Treason.

Susan Rice knows what she (and others) did.

First, in the frantic days between Nov. 3, 2016 and January 20, 2017, Barack Obama’s White House cooked up the Russia collusion hoax with John Brennan’s CIA, James Comey’s FBI, and Loretta Lynch’s DOJ. Ms. Rice, who was in on it, notoriously wrote a CYA memo memorializing the meetings and planted it in her office desk to be easily discovered by the new Trump admin. The memo stated that “every aspect of this issue is handled by the intelligence and law enforcement communities ‘by the book’.” Of course, that was exactly the opposite of what really happened. The mischief emanating from it has run for ten years, crime upon crime upon crime.

Secondly, and surely less-known to the American public, was Ms. Rice’s role as Domestic Policy Advisor under “Joe Biden.” Her actual job from 2021 to 2023 was to serve as a conduit for Barack Obama to run “Joe Biden’s” White House, along with Jake Sullivan and Tony Blinken. During those years, the public rarely (if ever) saw Susan Rice. She avoided the news media and did not make public statements or appearances at White House events. The news media were happy to ignore her. They knew exactly what she was up to.

The prime concerns of this cabal were to protect the image (cover up the crimes) of Barack Obama and his associates, to cover up the criminal degeneracy of the Biden family, and to get the Democrat Party back in power by utterly destroying Donald Trump and the populist revolt he headed.

Everything done in “Joe Biden’s” name during those years was to guarantee his party’s return to power, especially the deluge of illegal aliens across the border to pad the census for congressional districts and provide millions of future voters indebted to the party for letting them in (and giving them tons of freebies when they got here. . . phones, housing, food, walking-around money).

Meanwhile, the Democrats erected an immense scaffold of NGOs to funnel taxpayer money into salaries for their corps of political activists — outfits such as Stacey Abrams’ empire of grift in Georgia, the national networks of Antifa and BLM street-fighters, and the matrix of Somali social service fraud in Minnesota and Maine.

This created a huge parasitical patronage class, basically a national racketeering operation.

Eventually all the NGO grift became an end in itself — the Democrats animating principle: grift for grift’s sake, power to just keep it all going and continue to cover up the crime behind it.

The vital component to all this was weapons-grade mind-fuckery to produce a fog of war that would keep the American public utterly bamboozled, unable to comprehend what was happening amid gales of hoaxes, ops, and scams. The Covid-19 caper was the doozy. We still don’t know definitively if the mRNA vaccine program was a deliberate depopulation project, but it kind of looked like it, while plenty of messaging from global institutions — from the Gates Foundation to the WEF to the UN — was pretty explicit about getting rid of useless eaters. On top of all that, throw in the trashing of Western Civ’s industrial economies with “green” trickery, adding another layer of anxiety onto a sore-beset citizenry.

Of course, despite their best efforts — and it was a mighty crusade of bad faith and ill will — the Democrats failed to vanquish Mr. Trump, a strange miracle itself suggesting some sort of divine intervention. The question now is, will Mr. Trump be able to vanquish them? It begins to look like he might, with plenty of help from the Democrats themselves, who have reached a pitch of madness rarely seen in human societies.

Their latest prank: a boycott of the State of the Union speech to Congress.

So far, seven senators and nine congresspersons have promised to bail on the speech, led ostensibly by Senator Adam Schiff of California, a liar so prodigious and fertile that it can be truly said he never uttered an honest word including “yes,” “no,” and “maybe.” This faction will gather on the mall instead and hurl objurgations at the Capitol rotunda.

All that’s needed to finish them off, really, is passage of the SAVE Act so that voters will be required to prove their identity and citizenship, and absentee ballots will be restricted to the old rules about being too sick to get to the poling place, or else out of the country.

Last week, staffers behind the walking mummy, Mitch McConnell, prevented the bill from reaching the Senate floor with some procedural rigmarole.

Mr. Trump must call them out, and call out Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), too, for dragging his feet on whatever’s necessary to pass the SAVE Act.

The country demands honest elections, and one way or another they’ll get them.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Strike Debate Erupts: Joint Chiefs Chair Allegedly Resists, Trump Fires Back
Iran Strike Debate Erupts: Joint Chiefs Chair Allegedly Resists, Trump Fires Back

Military generals tend to be much more realistic about the potential negative consequences of going to war, as well as difficulties and challenges, over and against the often more hawkish policy-makers.

Currently, Pentagon generals appear to be belatedly speaking up, as Washington beats the drums of war on Iran. The Walls Street Journal reports Monday, "The Pentagon is raising concerns to President Trump about an extended military campaign against Iran, advising that war plans being considered carry risks including U.S. and allied casualties, depleted air defenses and an overtaxed force." This is increasingly looking like a military buildup in search of a political and strategic rationale.
United States Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine, via AP

Of course, also not too distant in the collective memory of top brass is the disastrous 2003 Iraq invasion, which led to two decade long extremely difficult and bloody occupation and quagmire. 

The Bush administration had essentially said it would be a cake walk, with then-US Vice President Dick Cheney famously telling NBC's Meet the Press in March 2003: "I think things have gotten so bad inside Iraq, from the standpoint of the Iraqi people, my belief is we will, in fact, be greeted as liberators."

Some remnant Neocons, who of course never learn their lesson - such as Senator Lindsey Graham - are currently trying to a paint a similar picture with Iran in 2026. Graham and even some within the Trump administration are arguing for full regime change. 

Removing the Ayatollah would more than likely require a ground invasion. But there will be significant hurdles with even just an air war, and it's no less than the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine issuing these dire warnings. According to a paraphrase and outline of what's being freshly reported by WSJ:


1) Caine warned that the war plans under consideration carry a high risk of significant American and allied casualties.

2) He cautioned that a multi-day campaign would exhaust air-defense munitions and other limited-supply items, which are critical for protecting regional partners like Israel if Iran retaliates.

3) An intensive operation against Iran could deplete stockpiles to a level that would complicate U.S. readiness for a potential future conflict with China.

4) He described the potential campaign as one that could "stretch the military thin" and leave forces "overtaxed".

5) Caine's gave "high likelihood of success" reassurances before the January 2026 mission to apprehend Nicolas Maduro, he has been unable to provide similar guarantees regarding a large-scale strike on Iran.


President Trump has not made up his mind, the report says, but also: "Officials say the issues raised by Caine, widely seen as a trusted aide by Trump, and others will be a factor in the president’s decision on whether to attack Iran and how."

Iran is prepared to make any strikes, however 'limited' they might be, into something costly for US forces. Already Tehran has said it would unleash ballistic missiles and drones on US bases in the region. Israel could come under fire too.

Iran's Foreign Ministry has said Monday that any American military action, even on a small scale, would be seen as an act of war and unwarranted aggression. "And any state would react to an act of aggression as part of its inherent right of self-defense, ferociously. So that’s what we would do," ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said at a briefing in Tehran.

Within hours after the WSJ report being out, President Trump slammed it as fake news, and has assured that if the decision to strike Iran is given by him as Commander-in-Chief, Caine will be fully supportive and ready...



Might Gen. Caine's arguments from a place of caution win out? There's a strong chance that he is speaking some sanity into Trump, who himself had repeatedly vowed on the campaign trail no more dumb regime change wars in the Middle East.

White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly has been quoted as saying: "General Caine is a talented and highly valued member of President Trump’s national security team. The president listens to a host of opinions on any given issue and decides based on what is best for U.S. national security." 

* * *

Meanwhile, Hegseth on the hilarious Pentagon/DOD activity 'pizza tracker' as an indicator of imminent war chances: "I've thought of just ordering lots of pizza on random nights just to throw everybody off."


PETER DOOCY: "There is an account on X that tries to forecast military action based on how busy the pizza places are around the Pentagon... Have you guys thought about maybe just going to the cafeteria?"
SECRETARY HEGSETH: "I'm aware of that account. I hadn't thought of just… pic.twitter.com/rLiA5bzMuT
— Vivek Sen (@Vivek4real_) February 22, 2026

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 16:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"The World Is In Peril": Anthropic's Safety Boss Quits
"The World Is In Peril": Anthropic's Safety Boss Quits

Authored by Kay Rubacek via The Epoch Times,

Most people have never heard of Mrinank Sharma. That is part of the problem.

Earlier this month, Sharma resigned from Anthropic, one of the most influential artificial intelligence companies in the world.



He had led its Safeguards Research Team, the group responsible for ensuring that Anthropic’s AI could not be used to help engineer a biological weapon.

His final project was a study of how AI systems distort the way people perceive reality. It was serious, consequential work for humankind.

His resignation letter was seen more than 14 million times on X.

It opened with the words, “the world is in peril.”

And it ended with a poem and by announcing that he was leaving one of the most consequential jobs in artificial intelligence to pursue a poetry degree. Yes, you read that right: peril and poetry.

The poem he quoted is, “The Way It Is,” by the American poet William Stafford.

It speaks of a thread that runs through a life—a thread that goes among things that change, but does not change itself. While you hold it, you cannot get lost. Tragedies happen. People suffer and grow old. Time unfolds, and nothing stops it. And the final line: you don’t ever let go of the thread.

Although he didn’t state it explicitly, I argue that that thread is morality. It is the enduring sense that some things are right and some things are wrong—not because a law says so, and not because it is profitable, but because human beings, at their best, have just always known it.

Sharma spent two years watching that thread being let go under pressure, in rooms the public is never shown.

His letter said:

“Throughout my time here, I’ve repeatedly seen how hard it is to truly let our values govern our actions.

“I’ve seen this within myself, within the organization, where we constantly face pressures to set aside what matters most, and throughout broader society, too.”

He wrote that humanity is approaching a threshold where “our wisdom must grow in equal measure to our capacity to affect the world, lest we face the consequences.”

He wanted to contribute in a way that felt fully in his integrity and to devote himself to what he called “the practice of courageous speech.”

A man who built defenses against bioterrorism concluded that the most important thing he could do next was learn to speak with honesty and courage.

That is a major signal about what is happening behind closed doors in AI research and development.

Many experts have compared the development of AI to the development of the atomic bomb. The Manhattan Project was built in total secrecy. The public had no knowledge of it, no voice in how it was used, and no say in what came after. When it was over, some of the scientists who built it spent the rest of their lives in anguish. Several walked away during the project itself.

Sharma was not alone. Numerous safety researchers have walked off AI projects from multiple companies. These departures may be the only signals we, the public, have, because almost everything else about AI development is happening beyond public view. The internal debates, the safety trade-offs, the negotiations over what this technology will and will not be permitted to do—none of it is being shared with the people whose lives it will most profoundly shape. We are not part of this conversation. We are being presented with outcomes and told to adapt.

John Adams wrote that the Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people, and is wholly inadequate for any other. George Washington warned that liberty cannot survive the loss of shared moral principles. The founders studied the collapse of republics throughout history and arrived at the same conclusion: The machinery of freedom requires a moral people to sustain it. Laws and institutions are not enough on their own. They depend on citizens and leaders who hold themselves to something that exists before the law and above it.

That is the thread of human society, and no AI system holds it. If people allow AI to replace the question of right and wrong with the measure of what is legal and permitted, the machine will carry that measure forward at a scale and speed that no previous generation has had to reckon with.

As Sharma ended his resignation letter, “You don’t ever let go of the thread.”

We are at a crossroads not unlike the one the atomic scientists faced.

Sharma’s resignation was a signal.

The wave of departures before and after it are signals.

The reported tensions between AI companies and government over where moral limits should be drawn are also signals.

Together, they are pointing at something the public has not yet been fully invited to consider: that the most important questions about this technology are being worked out without us, and that the thread of morality, which has always required people to hold it by choice, needs to be part of that conversation.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 17:00

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Hound of the Baskervilles review – boutique Sherlock gets laughs but fails to solve the real mystery
New Vic, Newcastle-under-Lyme The cast in this four-person capsule telling of the Conan Doyle thriller bring vigour and charm but it’s hard to discern any point to the exerciseTo get the measure of how tiresome this Sherlock Holmes adaptation is, you just have to think of its antecedents. The joke is that there are only four actors to represent the famous detective, his sidekick John Watson, various members of the Baskerville family, plus servants, neighbours and yokels, not to mention number 221B Baker Street, windswept moorland a country pile. The impossibility of achieving such a task comes at the expense of theatre itself: the shaky props, the hasty costume changes and the over-stretched stage manager.Laughing at the medium is an old idea. But when, say, Victoria Wood did it in Acorn Antiques, she had a reason. Yes, daytime TV soaps were an easy target for satire, but a target nonetheless. And when the National Theatre of Brent attempted two-man epics such as Wagner’s Ring Cycle or The Messiah, the crazy ambition was funny in itself. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
Why I swapped Wi-Fi for MoCA - the low-cost networking fix for dead zones
MoCA 2.5 is a recommended alternative to Wi-Fi networks that leverage old coaxial cables to enable high-speed internet.

ZDNet News
Open 
I let Roborock's first self-cleaning roller mop vacuum clean my hardwood floors, and it delivered
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is Roborock's first venture into the self-cleaning roller mop space, and it's nearly perfect. Nearly.

ZDNet News
Open 
Aferiy P280 review: A multifunctional power station that I'd use for emergency backup
The Aferiy P280 is engineered to be the perfect power hub for your RV or home backup.

ZDNet News
Open 
I stopped using my Apple's Watch dock after trying this Scosche keychain charger
The Scosche WatchIt keychain is ideal for those who want to ensure their Apple Watch and AirPods are always charged.

The Hill
Open 
Witkoff says Iran 'a week away' from nuclear bombmaking material
Special envoy Steve Witkoff says Iran is a “week away” from developing nuclear bombmaking material through uranium enrichment.  Witkoff said Iran's enrichment level has reached “60 percent.” "They’re probably a week away from having industrial-grade bombmaking material,” the special envoy said during a Saturday appearance on Fox News’s “My View with Lara Trump."  Typically, uranium...

The Hill
Open 
Seven moments that stand out from Gavin Newsom’s new memoir
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new book Young Man in a Hurry is out on Tuesday. In the memoir -- one of the most anticipated in the political cycle -- Newsom, a frontrunner in the 2028 presidential race, seeks to introduce himself to voters and define himself before his opponents do. Here are seven things that stand out: Struggles with...

The Hill
Open 
Nicki Minaj, Tim Scott knock Newsom over SAT remarks in Atlanta
Rapper Nicki Minaj and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) on Monday knocked California Gov. Gavin Newsom over his SAT remarks at an event in Atlanta previewing the release of his memoir, "Young Man in a Hurry." "I'm not trying to impress you. I'm just trying to impress upon you I'm like you. I'm no better than...

The Hill
Open 
ICE whistleblower accuses agency of 'deficient, defective and broken' training amid hiring surge
A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) whistleblower accused the agency of lying about shortchanging its training, including legal training over whether they are permitted to use deadly force, amid a hiring surge of new officers. Ryan Schwank, a former lawyer for ICE, said training for new officers has been pared down to the point...

The Hill
Open 
Senate Democrat: Trump has 'no intention of following' Constitution on tariffs
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) said President Trump has “no intention of following” the Constitution when it comes to tariffs, comments that came in the wake of a Supreme Court decision Friday that rejected the authority for many of Trump’s expansive tariffs. “He has no intention of following the spirit or the letter of the Constitution....

The Hill
Open 
Interior scales back environmental regulations for public lands
The Interior Department, which is in charge of the nation’s public lands and waters, has completed a major scaling back of its environmental regulations. The department, which also oversees activities including drilling and mining on the nation’s lands and in its waters, has rescinded more than 80 percent of its previous environmental regulations under the...

The Hill
Open 
Bhattacharya’s dual role draws anxieties 
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care   The Big Story Bhattacharya’s dual role draws anxieties National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Jay Bhattacharya’s influence over public health has grown two-fold now that he’s assumed temporary control over the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). And former staffers are raising...

The Hill
Open 
France bars US ambassador Kushner from meeting government officials  
The French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs has barred U.S. Ambassador to France and Monaco Charles Kushner from meeting with government officials. A French official told The Hill Monday that Kushner did not show up to the foreign ministry when he was summoned, a breach of diplomatic protocol.  As a result, Kushner is now...

The Hill
Open 
Gorsuch takes aim at fellow Supreme Court justices in tariff decision
Beneath the surface of the Supreme Court’s tariff decision, Justice Neil Gorsuch had choice words for his colleagues. In a solo opinion, Gorsuch called out his fellow justices for their inconsistent application of a controversial legal doctrine in decisions invalidating President Obama’s environmental regulation to President Biden’s student debt relief and now, President Trump’s tariffs. ...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's tariff Plan B
Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy   The Big Story Trump plots new tariffs after Supreme Court loss President Trump is rushing to rebuild his tariff wall after the Supreme Court struck down a pillar of his trade agenda by ruling his use of the International...

The Register
Open 
Every day in every way, passwords are getting worse and worse
The only good password is no password at all opinion  Passwords turn 65 this year. They became a feature of computer users' lives in 1961, with MIT's Compatible Time-Sharing System (CTSS). Before then, sysops were real sysops. All jobs went through them, one at a time, and access by others was forbidden by laws written on blocks of stone.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Wild Study Proposes Possible Link Between Solar Flares and Earthquakes
Researchers say a deadly earthquake in Japan and 2023’s most powerful solar flare occurring back-to-back can’t be a coincidence—but other experts say it probably was.

Gizmodo
Open 
Reckless YouTuber Threatens Fabric of Reality by Wiring Together 400 Car Batteries
"Mom, the guy next door is doing nuclear fusion again!"

Gizmodo
Open 
Bitcoin Miner Bitdeer Tells Market Not to Worry After Selling Entire Crypto Stash
Bitdeer's decision "should not be a concern for the broader market," it says.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Second ‘Scream’ Trilogy Originally Went Very Differently
Kevin Williamson, series co-creator and 'Scream 7' director, just revealed his version of the story after 'Scream 4.'

Gizmodo
Open 
After a Near-Perfect Test, NASA’s Artemis 2 Rocket Is Rolling Back to the Garage
NASA has delayed the launch of this historic mission to April, but repairs could take even longer.

Gizmodo
Open 
Dark Sky’s Creators Are Back With a New Weather App
The new Acme Weather app includes alternate forecasts predictions.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Everything New in iOS 26.4 Beta 2
Testing on the iOS 26.4 update is continuing, and Apple released the second beta today. The main new feature is an expansion of RCS encryption testing, but there are a few other small tweaks.





End-to-End Encryption RCS Testing

With the second beta of iOS 26.4, Apple is testing end-to-end encryption for text messages sent between iPhones and Android devices.







End-to-end encrypted messages can now be sent to an Android user, and if encryption is enabled, there will be a lock icon on the message. Encrypted conversations are not available for all devices or carriers during the texting period. iOS users will need to have iOS 26.4, and Android users need the latest version of Google Messages.



Apple does not plan to implement end-to-end ‌RCS‌ encryption in iOS 26.4, but it will come later this year.



Home Screen

The "Edit" menu on the Home Screen uses more transparent Liquid Glass.





Games App

In the Games app, the search bar has moved from the bottom of the display to the top of the display.





App Store and Apple Music

For the account hub options for the App Store and Apple Music, the "Apple Account" wording is now left aligned and has the same rainbow logo as the Apple Account in the Settings app





Accessibility

Under the Display and Text size section of Accessibility, there's a new "Reduce Highlighting Effects" option.





Software Build Numbers

When you're updating to a new iOS update in iOS 26.4, you can tap on the name to see the build number.



Beta Updates

Apple made a change to how betas work in iOS 26.4. If you are have betas toggled on but don't install any betas for a four month period, Apple will automatically switch you to the public release audience.





No Emoji

There are still no new emoji characters, despite signs of them found in the code in the first beta of iOS 26.4.



Playlist Playground

Playlist Playground is still limited to the U.S. and not available in Europe and other countries.



More New Features

We have a list of all the new features that were found in the first beta in our iOS 26.4 feature guide.Related Roundups: iOS 26, iPadOS 26Related Forum: iOS 26This article, 'Everything New in iOS 26.4 Beta 2' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Russia Today News
Open 
Hungary vetoes €90 billion EU loan for Ukraine

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Supersub Benjamin Sesko fires Manchester United past Everton and into top four
Sir Jim Ratcliffe must be seriously conflicted. Manchester United’s advance towards the riches of the Champions League continued to gather pace under Michael Carrick thanks to the impact of Slovenia’s Benjamin Sesko for the second game in succession. The summer signing came off the bench to condemn Everton to another home defeat with a clinical finish and lift United to fourth in the table, only three points behind Aston Villa.Sesko, who preserved Carrick’s unbeaten record as United manager last time out at West Ham, was again their savour to settle a hard-fought contest with David Moyes’s side. It is now five wins and one draw from Carrick’s six games in charge. The audition for the permanent job could not have gone much better thus far. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dirty Business review – if this doesn’t incite righteous anger over our filthy water then nothing will
Based on the true story of amateur sleuths appalled at the dumping of sewage in our rivers, this drama starring David Thewlis is a blast of controlled fury – and could become the next Mr Bates vs the Post OfficeWe know, because ITV’s Mr Bates vs the Post Office showed us, that television drama can suddenly intensify public disgust at a scandal, forcing official attitudes to change. Will Dirty Business, Joseph Bullman’s drama-documentary on the great English and Welsh water pollution shame – whose storylines are based on real-life events – be another TV show that moves the needle? If this doesn’t do it, perhaps nothing will: this is a fist in the face, a blast of controlled fury that mounts an unanswerable case for the prosecution.The Cotswolds, 2016. Two neighbours, recently retired and hungry for a project, notice brown murk in the previously beautiful River Windrush. By profession, Ashley Smith (David Thewlis) was a real-life “Line of Duty” cop investigating corrupt cops, while Peter Hammond (Jason Watkins) was an Oxford maths professor. Together they look into a curious dumping of sewage and, when the explanation given by the privatised local water company doesn’t add up, they dig in. Ash’s infallible nose for dishonesty, married with the algorithm Peter devises to find patterns in confusing data, builds a picture of water infrastructure destroyed by three decades of underinvestment, leading to environmental calamity on a staggering scale across the country, with thousands of instances of rivers and seas tainted by untreated sewage. Real footage, shot by campaigners to show the extent of the damage, is woven into the drama. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Burberry is back on brand as a purveyor of the classic British coat
Designer Daniel Lee’s trenchcoats and bomber jackets fizz with urban energy in collection that embraces bad weatherIn a winter of record-breaking rain, Burberry – purveyor of the stalwart British coat – is back in the zeitgeist. A season of downpours has provided an apt backdrop for a return to form, as the brand re-entered the FTSE 100 last autumn after an ignominious year out of the charts.The classic check scarf was ranked the fourth hottest fashion item in the last quarter of 2025 on the search, sales and social media metrics of the Lyst index, with overall demand for the brand up 239% year on year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
It hurt when the N-word was shouted out at the Baftas – because we are also hearing it so much outside | Nadine White
I was disturbed, but I wasn’t shocked. It’s a bigger problem that in these toxic times, so many of us endure this and other slurs in our daily livesAt the outset of the Baftas, the gilded crowd anticipated historic wins, emotional speeches and enjoying the familiar glow of a cultural institution congratulating itself on progress – whether fully warranted or not.Then, as proceedings began and as Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, two of the leading actors of our time, stood on stage, there was the N-word – shouted from the audience by John Davidson, a Tourette syndrome campaigner who also lives with TS and is the inspiration for the Bafta-winning film I Swear.Nadine White is a journalist and film-makerDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Reform vows to overhaul pension schemes for new local government workers
Reform plans to end more generous defined benefit pension schemes for new local government workers if it wins office

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US ambassador to Paris banned from meeting French ministers after no-show
Charles Kushner had been summoned to explain comments relating to the killing of far-right activist Quentin DeranqueDonald Trump’s ambassador to Paris has been banned from meeting French government ministers after failing to show up for a meeting at the foreign ministry to explain US comments about the killing of a far-right activist.Charles Kushner, whose son Jared is married to the US president’s oldest daughter, Ivanka, was summoned to the 7pm meeting by the foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, after the US embassy in Paris reposted state department comments about the case. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'I don't want him going abroad to die' says mum of son's assisted dying wish
Shelley Herniman was against Noah's wish for an assisted death but his suffering changed her mind.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine four years on: As Putin's cruel, wicked bid to conquer the country marches on, those who fled to the safety of Britain await the uncertain day they can return
Four years ago today, on a cold wintery morning, the life of every person in Ukraine changed irreversibly.   

Mail Online
Open 
Everton vs Manchester United - Premier League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Benjamin Sesko comes off bench to score winner
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Everton host Manchester United at the Hill Dickinson Stadium in the Premier League.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nick Reiner pleads not guilty in his parents’ killings
Reiner, 32, charged with two counts of first-degree murder after parents were stabbed to death in DecemberNick Reiner pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder in the killing of his parents Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner.His new attorney, public defender Kimberly Greene, entered the plea during arraignment in the case on Monday morning, while Reiner was behind glass in the Los Angeles courtroom. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Romeo Beckham walks the Burberry runway while his girlfriend Kim Turnbull AND ex Mia Regan watch on as they lead the star-studded front row at London Fashion Week
The model, 23, was among a slew of stars at the glitzy event in the capital, and he showed off his fashion prowess as he took to the catwalk.

Mail Online
Open 
Congressman's aide who set herself on fire after their 'affair' accused her own husband of adultery on her death bed… and left him one haunting last message
Regina Aviles, 35, died in the hospital in September 2025, a day after dousing herself in gasoline and taking a lighter to her clothes in a desperate act.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment brazen pickpockets steal £450 from carer grandmother outside busy high street shop
CCTV footage given to the Daily Mail shows two women targeting Elaine Parkes, 66, as she was looking at a box of goods outside MC Bargains in Acocks Green just after midday on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
Man is charged with murder more than three years after 13-week-old baby boy died
Tyla Wharmby, 24, was charged with murder and causing grievous bodily harm with intent today as part of a Kent Police investigation into the death.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price, 47, finally confirms she isn't pregnant after sparking weeks of speculation she is expecting a child with her new husband Lee Andrews
The former glamour model, 47, has finally confirmed she isn't pregnant after sparking speculation she was expecting her sixth child with her new husband.

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner, 28, appears to debut stunning new cosmetic transformation: 'It really suits her'
Kylie Jenner appeared to be sporting an entirely new look as she accompanied boyfriend Timothee Chalamet to the British Academy Film Awards in London on Sunday night.

Mail Online
Open 
Declassified CIA files reveal chilling blueprint to manipulate Americans' minds through covert drugging with vaccines
A newly released CIA file has exposed a top secret program that developed methods to control behavior using drugs in food, cigarettes and even vaccines.

Mail Online
Open 
Team USA women's hockey stars turn down White House invite amid controversy over Trump's call with the men
Both gold medal-winning teams have been invited to the event by the President after their stunning triumphs in Italy but it now appears that only the men will be there.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Constitution Hill’s win at Southwell showed the way to a brighter future for racing
The crowd of twentysomethings may not have impressed grizzled veterans but a near-record level of attendance at Friday Night Live! made a powerful impressionThere are times when it feels as though the entirety of British horse racing exists in a state of perma-gloom, bewailing an ageing fanbase, declining attendances and a moribund, factional leadership. It is, so the narrative goes, a sport in slow but irreversible decline, waiting for the inevitable moment in 10 or 20 years’ time when someone finally comes along to turn out the lights.However, every now and again, there are moments such as the Friday Night Live! card at Southwell last week which lift the mood completely, and offer hope that a 250-year-old sport has plenty of running left to give. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Diplomatic failure in the run-up to war in Ukraine | Letters
Readers respond to articles by Shaun Walker and Simon Tisdall as the Ukraine war enters its fifth year Shaun Walker’s outstanding piece of work on the run-up to the Russian invasion in 2022 (A war foretold: how the CIA and MI6 got hold of Putin’s Ukraine plans and why nobody believed them, 21 February) is by no means the only example of defence and intelligence analysts foreseeing catastrophic acts of war. Ironically, one of the classic examples, exhaustively analysed, is the US failure to anticipate the deadly Japanese attack on Hawaii, with all its monstrous consequences, despite a myriad of clear signals.David Kahn, the US historian and author, attributes this fatal myopia to “mirroring”, which made analysts incapable of imagining Japanese tactics. Couple this with Simon Tisdall’s typically forensic article on the diplomatic failure since 2022 (Ukraine is the biggest and most consequential of all the American betrayals, 21 February) to demonstrate how out of touch the Nato top brass and their acolytes were recently in frantically calling for massive rearmament. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Video footage shows former peer being driven away shortly after he was escorted from his London home by officersPeter Mandelson has been arrested by detectives investigating claims he committed misconduct in public office during his friendship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Video footage showed the former British ambassador to the US being driven away in an unmarked police car for questioning shortly after being escorted from his London home by plainclothes officers. Continue reading...

BBC World News
Open 
Trump threatens countries that 'play games' with existing trade deals
The threat comes after the Supreme Court ruled on Friday that Trump had exceeded his authority in enacting a sweeping global programme of tariffs.

BBC World News
Open 
US partially evacuates Beirut embassy amid rising Iran tensions
The State Department has ordered non-essential staff to leave the embassy in Beirut after a security review.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertainty
US president’s international trade war spooks investors, with drops in US share prices after European lossesTrump threatens ‘obnoxious’ tariffs as UK and EU seek clarity on trade dealsStock markets stumbled on Monday as Donald Trump pushed ahead with fresh tariffs on the US’s trading partners despite a supreme court strike-down and growing opposition from domestic voters.Uncertainty over the status of global trade deals spooked investors, triggering a drop in US shares prices including on the Dow Jones industrial average, which tumbled 1.6% by Monday’s closing. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 also fell 1.4% and 1.1%, after losses for European stock markets. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
I tried the new Tomb Raider mobile port, and it's a no-brainer given its low asking price

TechRadar News
Open 
I’ve been watching Seedance 2.0 videos so you don’t have to and they are a nightmare dreamscape

TechRadar News
Open 
Palantir awarded $1 billion DHS contract for AI and data analytics rollout

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Green Mountain Falls Skyspace in Green Mountain Falls, Colorado

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung brings Galaxy Book6 laptops to the US, and they roam pretty close to MacBook Air
Samsung launches Galaxy Book 6, Pro, and Ultra in the US starting at $1,049.99, featuring Intel Core Ultra Series 3 chips and up to RTX 5060 graphics.
The post Samsung brings Galaxy Book6 laptops to the US, and they roam pretty close to MacBook Air appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Where Trump’s affordability ideas stand ahead of his State of the Union
President Donald Trump is likely to tackle the elevated cost of living in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night. Here’s a look at what he has promised on that front — and whether he’s delivering.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Novo Nordisk’s stock slips to 4-year low after its next-gen weight-loss drug lost to Lilly’s in Phase 3 trial
Novo Nordisk shares were under pressure on Monday as the struggling Danish pharmaceutical said a head-to-head study found a drug in development didn’t cut as much weight as an Eli Lilly product.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Dow has its worst day in a month as Trump looks to impose replacement tariffs
President Donald Trump opened up a new round of verbal attacks against the Supreme Court on Monday, just days after the high court struck down his sweeping tariff program — creating an uneasy environment for investors in U.S. assets.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why software stocks lost more than $200 billion in market cap today
For investors to wade back into the software sector, they “want and need to see the stocks stop trading down on new AI headlines,” one analyst says.

Slashdot
Open 
IBM Shares Crater 13% After Anthropic Says Claude Code Can Tackle COBOL Modernization
IBM shares plunged nearly 13% on Monday after Anthropic published a blog post arguing that its Claude Code tool could automate much of the complex analysis work involved in modernizing COBOL, the decades-old programming language that still underpins an estimated 95% of ATM transactions in the United States and runs on the kind of mainframe systems IBM has sold for generations.

Anthropic said the shrinking pool of developers who understand COBOL had long made modernization cost-prohibitive, and that AI could now flip that equation by mapping dependencies and documenting workflows across thousands of lines of legacy code. The sell-off deepened a rough 2026 for IBM, whose shares are now down more than 22% year to date.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
Cybertruck's fatality rate reportedly far surpasses the legendary Ford Pinto
This social media missive reminds us the Ford Pinto was orders of magnitude safer than the now-discounted Cybertruck.

The Pinto was so widely derided that it became a joke in movies and on tv. It was even more derided than the quirky AMC Gremlin or the disaster waiting to happen Chevy Corvair. — Read the rest
The post Cybertruck's fatality rate reportedly far surpasses the legendary Ford Pinto appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Grandpa Pudding Brains remembers the good old days of Aqua Net
Not satisfied to just be bringing back fuel inefficient cars and maybe someday getting rid of seat belts, convicted felon and frontotemporal dementia poster boy Donald Trump gripes that hairspray has been so put on by environmental regulations.

Trump failed to detail any policy, and local officials are in a "details to come" holding pattern, but be assured that the Republican state of Utah will get Federal assistance. — Read the rest
The post Grandpa Pudding Brains remembers the good old days of Aqua Net appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Please do not poop on LA DOT buses
The City of Los Angeles released a video, and then rapidly retracted it, asking riders to report on fellow passengers who defecate on the bus.





CBS asked the city how often people really make this sort of a mess on public transportation, and the videos were then quickly deleted. — Read the rest
The post Please do not poop on LA DOT buses appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Nick Reiner pleads not guilty to killing parents Rob and Michele
Nick Reiner, 32, appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday, after his parents were found dead in their Brentwood home in December.

Russia Today News
Open 
Slovakia halts electricity supplies to Ukraine

Nature
Open 
First-of-a-kind stem-cell therapies set for approval in Japan

UK Government News
Open 
Australia-UK Defence Industry Dialogue: Joint Statement
On 23 February 2026, the UK Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry, Luke Pollard MP hosted the Minister for Defence Industry of Australia, the Hon. Pat Conroy MP, for the Australia–UK Defence Industry Dialogue (AUKDID).

Mail Online
Open 
Senator warns Mexican narco-terrorists are 'hunting down Americans' in war zone Puerto Vallarta as thousands try to escape on flights: Live updates
A new US-military-led task force specializing in collecting intelligence on drug cartels played a role in the Mexican military raid on Sunday that killed the Mexican drug lord known as 'El Mencho.'

Mail Online
Open 
Everton vs Manchester United - Premier League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Benjamin Sesko comes off bench to score
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Everton host Manchester United at the Hill Dickinson Stadium in the Premier League.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US military strike on boat allegedly smuggling drugs kills three men
It is the third such attack in a week, and is part of increased US forces in the CaribbeanThe US military launched a strike on an alleged drug smuggling boat in the Caribbean, which killed three men – its third such attack over the course of a week.“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Caribbean and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” US Southern Command, which oversees operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, said on X. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertainty
US president’s international trade war spooks investors, with drops in US share prices after European lossesTrump threatens ‘obnoxious’ tariffs as UK and EU seek clarity on trade dealsStock markets stumbled on Monday as Donald Trump pushed ahead with fresh tariffs on the US’s trading partners despite a supreme court strike-down and growing opposition from domestic voters.Uncertainty over the status of global trade deals spooked investors, triggering a drop in US shares prices including on the Dow Jones industrial average, which tumbled 1.6% by Monday’s closing. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 fell 1.4% and 1.1%, after losses for European stock markets. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Pacquiao and Mayweather agree professional rematch
Boxing greats Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather agree a professional rematch at Sphere in Las Vegas in September.

Ministry of Defence
Open 
Australia-UK Defence Industry Dialogue: Joint Statement
On 23 February 2026, the UK Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry, Luke Pollard MP hosted the Minister for Defence Industry of Australia, the Hon. Pat Conroy MP, for the Australia–UK Defence Industry Dialogue (AUKDID).

ZDNet News
Open 
Shelly Smart Plug review: A cheap TP-Link alternative that's seriously versatile
The Shelly Gen4 Smart Plug ups the ante in the smart home market, with the best value for the price and support for the major platforms.

ZDNet News
Open 
Samsung Galaxy Book 6 Ultra review: A MacBook Pro alternative that truly lasts all day
Samsung's Galaxy Book6 Ultra pairs strong multi-core performance with nearly a full day's worth of battery life. It's designed well, too.

ZDNet News
Open 
I've tested 50+ laptop accessories - this M.2. PCIe enclosure is the only one I truly need
The HyperDrive Next USB4 M.2 PCIe enclosure lets NVMe SSDs perform at their best, ensuring fast transfer speeds for large files.

ZDNet News
Open 
Should anyone buy Apple's Thunderbolt 5 cables when Satechi's cheaper alternative exists?
The Satechi Thunderbolt 5 Pro cable is a fantastic cable at a palatable price. I put it through a tester to see how it stacks up.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
OpenAI’s KYC Partner Persona Faces Allegations of Sharing User Crypto Data with US Authorities
A major controversy has surfaced at the intersection of artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency privacy. Persona, the firm responsible for conducting identity verification for OpenAI’s premium ChatGPT features, stands accused of forwarding sensitive user information—including linked cryptocurrency wallet addresses—directly to US federal agencies. Security researchers operating... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
BNPL Services Expand Steadily but Pose Moderate Systemic Risks : Research
In February 2026, the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond released a detailed examination of the “buy now, pay later” (BNPL) sector, focusing on its rapid evolution and broader economic effects. Authored by economist Zhu Wang, the research report highlights how these short-term financing options have... Read More

The Hill
Open 
Trump races to rebuild tariff wall after Supreme Court loss
President Trump is rushing to rebuild his tariff wall after the Supreme Court struck down a pillar of his trade agenda by ruling his use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to justify them was unlawful. Ahead of the first State of the Union address of his second term, Trump is racing ahead...

The Hill
Open 
Which guests are attending Trump's State of the Union address?
President Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday is expected to highlight accomplishments made throughout the first year of his second term, with a focus on affordability, election security and immigration enforcement. While this is not Trump’s first speech to Congress following his return to the White House, it falls in the midst of...

The Hill
Open 
Boebert calls on Tony Gonzales to resign over alleged affair
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) on Monday became the first House Republican to call on Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) to resign over allegations he had an affair with one of his congressional staffers. “@RepTonyGonzales, RESIGN!” Boebert wrote on the social media platform X. Gonzales has been under increasing scrutiny since last week, when the San Antonio Express-News reported...

The Hill
Open 
Americans want to hear about economy in Trump State of the Union address: Poll
Nearly half of respondents in a new poll say they are most interested in hearing President Trump talk about the economy in Tuesday night’s State of the Union address.  The Scripps News/Talker Research poll, released Monday, found that 47 percent of respondents are most interested in what Trump has to say on the economy. That...

The Hill
Open 
Ousted senior FBI official running for Congress in Maryland 
Dave Sundberg, who previously helmed the FBI’s Washington Field Office before he was ultimately pushed out after President Trump returned to office, announced on Monday that he’s running to succeed Rep. Steny Hoyer (D) in Maryland’s 5th Congressional District.  “I’m running for Congress because I believe in the rule of law, not the rule of one man,” Sundberg said in a statement announcing...

The Hill
Open 
Witkoff says Iran 'a week away' from nuclear bomb-making material
Special Envoy Steve Witkoff says Iran is a “week away” from developing nuclear bomb-making material through uranium enrichment. Witkoff said Iran's enrichment level has reached “60 percent.” "They’re probably a week away from having industrial-grade bomb-making material,” the special envoy said during a Saturday appearance on Fox News’s “My View with Lara Trump." Typically, uranium...

The Hill
Open 
Mounjaro ingredient cuts alcohol intake: Research
An ingredient in the prescription diabetes drug Mounjaro was found to reduce alcohol intake in rodents, according to a recent study. In the study, published in early January in the medical journal eBioMedicine, researchers in Sweden, South Carolina and Brazil looked at how the ingredient, tirzepatide, affected rodents. The researchers found that alcohol’s “rewarding properties”...

The Hill
Open 
Most say US worse off compared to a year ago: Survey
Ahead of President Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday, a majority of respondents to a new NPR/PBS News/Marist poll said he is changing the country for the worse. The survey, released Monday, found that 55 percent of respondents believe he is moving the country in a negative direction. That is up from 51...

The Register
Open 
Google Antigravity falls to Earth under OpenClaw-fueled compute load
Company tries to curb strain by banning customer accounts for 'malicious' usage Google customers paying $250 per month for AI Ultra subscriptions and less extravagant spenders have been surprised to find their accounts suspended for using the company's Antigravity agent development app and Gemini services with third-party agent tools like OpenClaw and OpenCode.…

The Register
Open 
Pop music fans literally dying to stream hot new albums - in car crashes, that is
What do Taylor Swift and Drake’s release days have to do with road deaths? More than you’d think Who doesn’t like streaming music while driving? Unfortunately, new research suggests that when major albums drop and streaming spikes, traffic fatalities rise too.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Trump’s So-Called ‘Board of Peace’ Wants to Put Gaza on the Blockchain
Gazans have been restricted to 2G networks. Now planners are talking about a stablecoin.

Gizmodo
Open 
Ryan Coogler’s ‘X-Files’ Reboot Has Found Its Star
Danielle Deadwyler will star in the Hulu pilot, which will be written and directed by Coogler and showrun by Jennifer Yale.

Gizmodo
Open 
Woman Loses Her Limbs After Innocent Dog Lick
Manjit Sangha developed an aggressive case of sepsis, one that left her hospitalized for 32 weeks.

The Right Scoop
Open 
UGH BREAKING: New texts reveal GOP congressman pressed female staffer about “favorite sexual positions”
Republican Congressman Tony Gonzales from Texas had an affair with a female staffer in 2024, who immolated herself to death over a year later in September of last year. Now, new texts . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Trump corrects Fake News Media about war with Iran
President Trump just called out the ‘Fake News Media’ about their phony stories that he is considering limited strikes on Iran, but mostly about their phony stories that General Daniel ‘Razin’ Caine . . .

Mail Online
Open 
Two students who blew up sheep with fireworks after beating and kicking it in 'violent assault' are locked up
Leighton Ashby, 22, and 20-year-old Oakley Hollands chased the animal before punching and kicking it for 30 minutes at a field near Ditchling Beacon in the South Downs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Attia resigns from CBS News amid revelations about ties to Epstein
Controversial doctor steps down as contributor after Epstein files reveal communication between the two menControversial longevity expert Dr Peter Attia has resigned from his post as a CBS News contributor after correspondence between Attia and convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein was made public.The Hollywood Reporter first broke the news of Attia’s departure. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Tourette's campaigner 'deeply mortified' after racial slur at BAFTAs
A Tourette's campaigner who yelled out a racial slur at the BAFTAs has spoken out about the incident, saying he is "deeply mortified".

CNET News
Open 
ExpressVPN Unveils Industry's First Hybrid Browser Extension for Flexible Online Privacy
ExpressVPN is also expanding its reach to virtual reality through support for the Meta Quest platform.

CNET News
Open 
Streaming Service Deals for Students: Save on Peacock, HBO Max and Music
See if you qualify for one of these student-focused discounts.

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 24, #1711
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 24, No. 1,711.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 24, #989
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 24 #989.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 24 #723
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 24, No. 723.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 24, #519
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 24, No. 519.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Reportedly Plans to Unveil at Least Five New Products Next Week
In his Power On newsletter today, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said Apple will have a three-day stretch of product announcements from Monday, March 2 through Wednesday, March 4. In total, he expects Apple to introduce "at least five products."



Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos.

A week ago, Apple invited selected journalists and content creators to an "Apple Experience" in New York, London, and Shanghai on Wednesday, March 4 at 9 a.m. Eastern Time. At these in-person gatherings, the expectation is that attendees will receive hands-on time with the new products that Apple announces next week.



Given this launch is described as an "Apple Experience," it appears there will not be a traditional Apple Event live stream. Instead, the new products are expected to be unveiled in a series of press releases on the Apple Newsroom website.



A new lower-cost MacBook will "very likely" be one of the new products introduced next week, according to Gurman. Rumored features include a 12.9-inch display, a version of the iPhone 16 Pro's A18 Pro chip, and a variety of fun color options.



Gurman expects the iPhone 17e to debut by the first week of March. The device is expected to have four key upgrades over the iPhone 16e, including an A19 chip, MagSafe, Apple's C1X modem for faster 5G, and Apple's N1 chip for Wi-Fi 7.



Other potential products coming next week include an iPad Air with the M4 chip, an iPad 12 with the A18 chip, a MacBook Air with the M5 chip, and MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips. Two new Studio Displays are reportedly in the works too, but Gurman said it might be "overkill" for those to arrive next week.



In any case, it sounds like Apple's next products are just days away. This launch comes after Apple released a second-generation AirTag last month.



Tag: Mark GurmanThis article, 'Apple Reportedly Plans to Unveil at Least Five New Products Next Week' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Israel's parliament is debating the reintroduction of the death penalty. Opponents, including the UN, say it targets only Palestinians
Israel's parliament is debating a highly controversial draft death penalty bill. Experts at the UN Human Rights Council say the bill violates the right to life and discriminates against Palestinians.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Political sabotage’: EU leaders accuse Hungary of undermining support for Ukraine
Viktor Orbán’s government blocks fresh economic measures against Russia on eve of war’s fourth anniversaryEuropean leaders have accused Hungary of sabotaging support for Ukraine on the eve of the fourth anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion, after a defiant Budapest blocked fresh economic measures against Moscow.Germany, France and other EU states failed to persuade Viktor Orbán’s government on Monday to approve the latest EU sanctions package and a loan meant to help Kyiv meet its military and financial needs. Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, described Hungary’s actions as “political sabotage”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump Iran airstrikes decision to be guided by Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff’s advice
Exclusive: Trump’s decision will be driven by envoys’ judgment on whether Iran is stalling on a nuclear dealDonald Trump’s decision to order airstrikes against Iran will hinge in part on the judgment of Trump’s special envoys, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, about whether Tehran is stalling over a deal to relinquish its capacity to produce nuclear weapons, according to people familiar with the matter.The president has not made a final determination on any strikes, as the administration prepares for Iran to send its latest proposal this week, ahead of what officials have described as a last-ditch round of negotiations scheduled for Thursday in Geneva. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Lord Mandelson in a cell: Days after Andrew, the ashen-faced architect of New Labour is led away by police too amid allegations of misconduct in public office 
The disgraced former minister was led away by detectives who have spent weeks investigating allegations that he leaked sensitive information to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ryan Coogler’s X-Files reboot lands with Danielle Deadwyler leading
Sinners film-maker’s much-anticipated relaunch of the paranormal hit show finally receives official green lightRyan Coogler’s reboot of The X-Files has received the official green light with Danielle Deadwyler set as the first co-lead.The film-maker behind Black Panther and Sinners has long talked about his love for the hit paranormal drama series and how he wants to make some new episodes that are “really fucking scary”. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Yes, Section 230 Should Apply Equally To Algorithmic Recommendations
If you’ve spent any time in my Section 230 myth-debunking guide, you know that most bad takes on the law come from people who haven’t read it. But lately I keep running into a different kind of bad take—one that often comes from people who have read the law, understand the basics passably well, and […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Judge permanently bars US justice department from releasing report on Trump’s classified documents case – live
First amendment group criticizes Aileen Cannon’s order to permanently block release of Jack Smith report after dismissing case against Trump in 2024Sign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts direct to your inboxMajor institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Reform UK's Zia Yusuf unveils plans to ban all face coverings including the burka in public
Zia Yusuf said on Monday he would 'personally support' a ban on face coverings in public, which would include the burka.

Mail Online
Open 
YouTuber 'stabbed pregnant girlfriend to death while staging fake live stream in bid to cover his tracks', court told
Stephen McCullagh, 36, from Woodland Gardens, Lisburn, has denied Natalie McNally's murder, but the court was told he 'put on an act' to cover his tracks.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment woman steals £200 of shellfish from Michelin star restaurant as 'langoustine lifter' avoids prison
Ekaterina Frolova, 46, was convicted last month for the theft and was fined a total of £350.

Mail Online
Open 
The popular supplements that are aging your brain... and the innocent habit that makes it even worse
Three doctors in the US have warned over the six common supplements that could be aging your brain faster.

Mail Online
Open 
The cartel king is dead, but his dynasty survives: Inside El Mencho's savage billion-dollar empire... and why all eyes are now on his 'narco queen' wife and glamorous criminal daughter
El Mencho's wife and daughter have both served jail sentences for money laundering.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Moss turns heads in a slip dress and Burberry's iconic trench coat as she joins Iris Law and Marisa Abela at the brand's London Fashion Week showcase
The supermodel joined the likes of Marisa Abela and Bridgerton's Simone Ashley on the front row for the showcase of the British brand's 2026 Autumn Winter showcase.

Mail Online
Open 
David Beckham enjoys a wholesome father daughter ski holiday with Harper in Courchevel during half term as he insists 'making memories with my kids has always been important'
Sir David Beckham enjoyed a wholesome father daughter ski holiday with Harper during half term as he shared a series of sweet photos to Instagram on Monday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Sharon Osbourne makes the heartbreaking decision to move part-time to the US and away from the Buckinghamshire home where her husband Ozzy is buried
Sharon Osbourne has had to make the heartbreaking decision to move part-time to the US.

Mail Online
Open 
Rapper Luci4 dead at age 23: Cause of death unknown but grandparents are 'suspicious' of his passing
A trailblazer in the sigilkore microgenre, Luci4 - born James Dear - is behind the songs BodyPartz, idk anymore, and more.

Mail Online
Open 
Sex abuse survivor, 41, who is too terrified to walk to the shops because her ex is still tormenting her from behind bars 'feels trapped in her home'... and can't move because 'she can't get funding to safeguard a new house'
Gemma Willis, 41, was subjected to terrifying and degrading assaults from her partner between 2014 and 2017.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine four years on: As Putin's cruel, wicked bid to conquer the country marches on, those who fled to the safety of Britain await the uncertain day they can return
Four years ago today, on a cold wintery morning, every Ukrainians life changed irreversibly.

Mail Online
Open 
Queen Camilla tells Gisele Pelicot she has been left 'speechless' by the horrors the French rape survivor endured at the hands of her husband
Her Majesty, a long-term campaigner on the issue of violence against women, invited Mme Pelicot for tea at Clarence House to discuss a new memoir she has written about her shocking case.

Mail Online
Open 
Convenient home delivery meal kits cost up to £35 more than buying the ingredients in the shops, consumer experts warn
Recipe subscription companies, such as Gousto, Hello Fresh and Mindful Chef, deliver food boxes directly to the doors of diners, saving them a trip to the supermarket.

Mail Online
Open 
London house which looks like a 'nuclear shelter' goes on the market for £950,000
The narrow patch of land - wedged between existing homes in the sought-after Southfields area - has spent more than a decade hidden behind hoardings.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Judge permanently bars US justice department from releasing report on Trump’s classified documents case – live
First amendment group criticizes Aileen Cannon’s order to permanently block release of Jack Smith report after dismissing case against Trump in 2024Sign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxMajor institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Channel 4’s Dirty Business is a clarion call to nationalise the water industry
As the drama shows, private firms no longer able to pollute the coast of England of Wales just switched to rivers instead There is a moment in Channel 4’s drama Dirty Business when Julie Maughan holds the body of her dead child and lets out an anguished cry. It is as brutal as it is compelling.Her eight-year-old daughter Heather had just died in hospital, two weeks after playing in the sea on the beach at Dawlish Warren in Devon, where she contracted E coli O157, a bug which comes from raw sewage. She became ill with diarrhoea and blood loss. Transferred to Bristol children’s hospital, her parents agreed to switch off her life-support machine after she suffered kidney failure and brain damage. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ukraine negotiator tells BBC how it feels to sit across table from Russia
Sergiy Kyslytsya is among those trying to negotiate an end to the conflict, which is entering its fifth year.

Mail Online
Open 
Lily Collins is set to play Audrey Hepburn in new biopic about her iconic film Breakfast At Tiffany's - but the casting sparks fury from Ariana Grande's fans as they claim the singer was 'born to play her'
The Emily In Paris star is set to play the Hollywood icon in a film about the making of her famous 1961 film Breakfast At Tiffany's.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mexico sends thousands of soldiers to stop violence after death of drug lord
A wave of violence has erupted across Mexico since a powerful drug cartel boss died following his capture by special forces.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The US moved away from its heartland to set a Winter Olympics high in Italy
Other nations are catching up with the US in its traditional strengths such as snowboarding. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing for AmericansIn 2002, on home ice and snow in Utah, the USA obliterated its records for most gold medals (10, beating the previous high of six) and most overall medals (34, more than two times the previous high of 13) by the country in a single Winter Olympics.In 2026, the USA broke that national record for gold medals with 12, and broke the 30-medal mark for the first time outside North America (Norway broke the overall record with 18 golds). Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Mexican drug lord 'El Mencho' was killed 'after visit from romantic partner'
A visit from a "romantic partner" led to the capture and death of one of Mexico's most notorious drug lords, "El Mencho", Mexico's defence minister has said.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Staring down the barrel at higher costs': UK businesses face uncertain future over US tariffs
UK businesses are facing uncertainty and higher costs as Donald Trump's new global tariff hike is set to take effect from Tuesday.

TechRadar News
Open 
'The AI model and prompt are predefined in the code and cannot be changed': Experts say PromptSpy is the first known Android malware to use Gemini to ensure infection

TechRadar News
Open 
Lenovo is the latest victim of the RAM crisis, and states, 'there's no way around' upcoming March price hikes

TechRadar News
Open 
Talk about an unwelcome tax cut - DOGE restructuring saw IRS lose 40% of its IT workforce in 2025

Digital Trends
Open 
I saw Toy Story 5’s first trailer, here’s why the film will reinvigorate Pixar’s iconic franchise
The first trailer for Toy Story 5 has come out, and it looks like Pixar will revitalize its iconic film franchise with the sequel's smart, heartfelt story.
The post I saw Toy Story 5’s first trailer, here’s why the film will reinvigorate Pixar’s iconic franchise appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
PayPal’s stock pops on takeover hopes. Here’s who could swoop in with a purchase.
Analysts think private-equity firms or other strategic buyers might see more value in PayPal than its $40 billion market cap currently reflects.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Domino’s CEO says it’s ‘just not true’ that people are eating less pizza
Domino’s stock was rallying Monday after a sales beat showed that the quick-service pizza category remains healthy, despite the weakness seen by rivals.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Bitcoin ETFs are hemorrhaging billions. Here’s what investors awaiting a crypto turnaround should watch for.
Investors have pulled roughly $4.3 billion out of spot bitcoin ETFs in the past five weeks, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Paramount looks to put itself in the driver’s seat on Warner Bros. deal with increased bid
Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison will have to put all his chips in by a midnight Monday deadline if he wants to pry Warner Bros. Discovery from Netflix’s hands.

BBC UK News
Open 
Lord Mandelson arrest - how did we get here?
It comes after the ex-Labour minister was accused of passing sensitive government information to Jeffrey Epstein.

The Verge
Open 
Anthropic accuses DeepSeek and other Chinese firms of using Claude to train their AI
Anthropic claims DeepSeek and two other Chinese AI companies misused its Claude AI model in an attempt to improve their own products. In an announcement on Monday, Anthropic says the "industrial-scale campaigns" involved the creation of around 24,000 fraudulent accounts and more than 16 million exchanges with Claude, as reported earlier by The Wall Street […]

The Verge
Open 
Billions of dollars later and still nobody knows what an Xbox is
The last few years of Xbox have been expensive. Under Phil Spencer's leadership, Microsoft has spent billions of dollars in an attempt to build an ambitious future for gaming that looks a lot like Netflix. And while its subscription service Game Pass started out as a good deal for gamers (although now not so much), […]

The Verge
Open 
Will Trump’s DOJ actually take on Ticketmaster?
In mid-February, the Department of Justice lost its head antitrust enforcer - just weeks before it was scheduled to argue one of the year's biggest anti-monopoly cases in court. Antitrust Division chief Gail Slater announced her departure suddenly, via a post on her personal X account. But to those who follow the agency closely, it […]

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Queen tells Gisèle Pelicot her new memoir left her 'speechless'
Camilla praised the French rape survivor over tea at her Clarence House residence in London.

Mail Online
Open 
Emma Stone sparks weight loss speculation after stunning in daring gown on BAFTA red carpet
Stone, 37, showed off a noticeably slimmer appearance in the Louis Vuitton dress, sparking online speculation about her weight loss.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Plan B-2
Plan B-2

By Benjamin Picton, senior market strategist at Rabobank

US stocks closed higher on Friday following news that the Supreme Court had ruled 6-3 to uphold a lower court decision that found Trump’s signature tariff policy to be illegal. The court found that Trump acted beyond his authority by imposing tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act with the majority holding that tariffs are a branch of taxation and that the Constitution grants powers over taxation to Congress, not to the President. Critically, the Court found that IEEPA makes no specific mention of delegating tariff powers to the Executive and that there exists no precedent of IEEPA being used to levy tariffs.

Precious metals are higher in early trade, the DXY is down, US equity futures are pointing lower and Brent crude is down by almost 1%. Aussie yields are now bull-flattening after initially moving higher, but Kiwi yields are holding at higher levels following idiosyncratic strong retail sales data. Aussie stocks have opened weaker, but the Hang Seng, TAIEX and KOSPI are catching a bid, highlighting the winners-and-losers effect of shifts in tariff policy that has just delivered a boost to countries who previously had a comparatively bad deal.

Unsurprisingly, the administration reacted with disappointment to the decision but then moved quickly to impose new baselines tariffs of 10% - later increased to the maximum rate of 15% - using powers granted by Section 122 of the Trade Act. As regular readers would know, we have been pointing out for some time that this and other avenues exist – on firmer legal ground – for the administration to continue to pursue its tariff strategy. Other potential avenues include:


Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, which allows the President to impose tariffs of indefinite duration and with no cap if imports threaten national security. This requires a Commerce Department investigation finding that such a threat exists and would typically be applied on a sectoral basis.


Section 201 of the Trade Act, which allows tariffs up to 50% above existing rates for a duration of 4 years if imports cause or threaten serious harm to a domestic industry. This would require an International Trade Commission investigation, public hearings and would also likely be imposed sectorally.


Section 301 of the Trade Act, which authorizes uncapped tariffs in response to unfair foreign trade practices. This requires a US Trade Representative investigation, public hearings and consultation with the affected foreign government.


\u009FSection 338 of the Tariff Act allows tariffs of up to 50% on goods from countries imposing unreasonable restrictions on US commerce. The President can make this determination directly, but it has never been applied and could be subject to legal challenge.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has already indicated that the administration is preparing investigations under Section 232 and Section 301 to expand tariff coverage.

That’s not to say that this isn’t a big spanner in the works. The ruling immediately raises the prospect that US importers may seek refunds on the $160-175bn (estimated) paid in tariffs collected under the illegal IEEPA authority. That’s bad news bears for the US fiscal position, which was already in dire straits, and should only add to the pressure on the US Dollar index where the “sell America” meme has once again been a theme this year. Bessent was adamant over the weekend that the combination of Section 122, 232 and 301 tariffs will result in virtually unchanged tariff revenue in 2026, but presumably the 2025 revenues are now a write off. Equity traders will now be pricing in the positive effects of prospective refunds against negative effects of potentially higher term premia.

There are also broader implications. While the Supreme Court ruled that the President cannot use IEEPA to impose taxes (including tariffs), the ruling does not overturn the long-standing interpretation that IEEPA can be used for more direct intervention to impose direct trade restrictions, including import bans, embargoes, asset freezes, restriction of financial transactions and sanctions on individuals or entire sectors. There is more than one way to skin a cat, and the alternative methods may prove more brutal than the one that has just been struck down.

It should also be remembered that the current account (of which the trade balance is a major component) is the inverse of the capital account. Scott Bessent is on a mission to fix external imbalances vis-à-vis China, so capital controls is another lever that exists in the realm of policy tools to tackle the problem. Needless to say, the implications of employing that particular tool for US yields and the role of the dollar in the absence of a compliant Federal Reserve are potentially unacceptable (at least for now). This remains a low-delta trade for the time being, but perhaps the delta rises as the US gains traction with its stablecoin strategy.

US tariff policy will continue to be a source of uncertainty for markets as traders attempt to price in the implications of what is still a movable feast. There is still some fog of war over what happens once the Section 122 tariffs expire in 150 days’ time (can they be momentarily cancelled and then re-applied?), over the implications for the US fiscal position (will the $160bn be refunded? Fully? Partially? When?), over the differing relative impact on trade partners (the first will be last and the last will be first), over whether previous sectoral exemptions will still apply, and over whether bilateral trade deals negotiated to alleviate IEEPA tariffs are still a thing (the US says yes, a cancelled Modi visit says maybe not).

All of this is likely to add cost for businesses who need to understand the new rules, litigate to recover illegal import duties and potentially recalibrate their supply chains (again). Central bank DSGE models will reduce this into an assumption of lower business investment and therefore lower productivity growth, but the experience so far (in the US, at least) has been just the opposite.

US Q4 GDP figures released on Friday were a big miss, printing at 1.4% annualized vs a consensus estimate of double that rate and a much hotter Q3 result of 4.4% annualized. Most of the miss came from a contraction in government spending, which was impacted by government shutdowns and is likely to rebound in Q1 of 2026, while the contribution of fixed investment to growth tripled from Q3. December PCE inflation rose by 0.4% on both the core and headline readings, taking the year-on-year core figure up two-tenths to 3% even as the market remains priced for at least two more Fed cuts this year.

Of course, looming over everything else in markets this week is the extensive US military buildup around the Middle East. The USS Gerald R Ford has now arrived in the region, meaning that there are now two carrier strike groups within striking distance of Iran. A near continuous logistics airbridge has been operating for days and the US has reportedly forward deployed a large share of its AWACS theatre command aircraft and available airpower. Several analysts are noting that this is the most extensive military buildup since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which would be an awfully expensive negotiating tactic if Trump doesn’t intend to use it.

With tomorrow marking the 4th anniversary of the start of the war in Ukraine, it’s worth recalling how many analysts were saying in late 2021 that the Russian buildup on the Ukrainian border was “probably nothing”. The efficient market hypothesis took a big bath back then as it failed to factor in realpolitik. Surely by now we must realize that if plan A fails, there is always plan B-2.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 13:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Supreme Court To Hear Lawsuits Over Americans' Seized Assets In Cuba
Supreme Court To Hear Lawsuits Over Americans' Seized Assets In Cuba

Authored by Matthew Vadum via The Epoch Times,

The U.S. Supreme Court is poised to hear two cases on Feb. 23 about U.S. business assets that Cuba’s communist government seized decades ago.



Both cases focus on the 1996 Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act that was created to pressure Cuba by penalizing foreign companies “trafficking” in property that the Cuban regime seized from U.S. interests.

Also known as the Helms-Burton Act, the law allows U.S. citizens and companies to sue any person who traffics in or uses confiscated property. Trafficking in the statute includes using or profiting from the confiscated property.

The law defines “person” to include “any agency or instrumentality of a foreign state,” and contemplates civil judgments being obtained against “an agency or instrumentality of the Cuban Government.”

Cuba’s late dictator Fidel Castro overthrew the then-government in 1959 and turned Cuba into a one-party state in which socialist policies were implemented, including the nationalization of the assets of foreign businesses operating in Cuba at the time.

In Exxon Mobil v. Corporacion Cimex, Exxon Mobil seeks compensation from three Cuban government-owned companies for energy assets seized in 1960 after the communists took power. The company was previously known an Standard Oil Co.

Until recently, parties like Exxon were unable to pursue claims against Cuban government-owned enterprises under the Helms-Burton Act because President Bill Clinton suspended Title III—the part of the law allowing compensation lawsuits to be filed.

In his first term, President Donald Trump revoked the suspension on May 2, 2019, and Exxon Mobil filed its lawsuit the same day.

The legal issue in the case is whether the Helms-Burton Act “abrogates foreign sovereign immunity” in cases against Cuban entities, the company said in its petition.

Foreign sovereign immunity is a legal doctrine that prevents governments from being sued unless they agree to be sued. Abrogation is the act of formally annulling a law or legal provision.

In 2024, a divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that a separate federal statute poses an additional hurdle for lawsuits against Cuban entities. That court held that Title III claims may only proceed against Cuban entities if the lawsuit falls under an exception in the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which generally forbids lawsuits against foreign governments but allows suits involving commercial activities or property seized in violation of international law.

The appeals court ruled that when the district court considered the case, it failed to properly analyze whether the commercial activities exception applied, and sent the case back to that court for further consideration.

Exxon Mobil argues the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act shouldn’t be interpreted to deprive the company of the judicial remedies promised by Helms-Burton.

Exxon is seeking compensation upwards of $1 billion for assets seized by the Cuban government in 1960. At the time of the confiscation of the assets, then belonging to subsidiaries owned by Standard Oil, they were worth $70 million. 

However, Exxon wants $1 billion in the current claim because interest has accrued and there is potential of enhanced damages. 

Cuban government-owned company Corporacion Cimex argued in a brief that if Exxon’s legal argument prevails, it could open U.S. courts to a flood of lawsuits against foreign entities like itself, despite the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act protections.

The other case, Havana Docks Corp. v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, involves U.S.-based company Havana Docks Corp., which, in its petition, described the case as “the most important case involving U.S. foreign policy toward Cuba to reach this Court in the past sixty years.”

Havana Docks Corp. built the port of Havana’s docks at its own expense in exchange for a concession to run those docks for 99 years. The Cuban government unilaterally ended the concession without compensation in 1960, which had 44 years left to run, along with the company’s property interest in the docks, according to the petition.

In October 2024, a divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit overturned a more than $100 million judgment against various cruise lines for trafficking in confiscated property by using expropriated docks in Cuba.

The appeals court held that the cruise lines could not be held liable for using the port facilities because Havana Docks’s property interest “expired in 2004,” according to the provisions of the 99-year concession the company was originally granted.

The appeals court “effectively nullified” the right to sue under Title III, the company said in the petition.

The petition said the cruise lines used the confiscated docks even after the U.S. Department of Justice’s Foreign Claims Settlement Commission certified Havana Docks’s claim against Cuba for taking its property interest in the docks.

The cruise lines disembarked almost one million tourists on the docks from 2015 to 2019, paying Cuba at least $130 million and earning more than $1 billion from their Cuban cruises, the petition said.

The cruise lines argue that Havana Docks Corp. has no legal claim against them because even though that company once had permission to use the docks, it never actually owned the docks, which always remained the property of the Cuban government.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule on the two cases by the end of June.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 14:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
IBM Plunges After Anthropic's Latest Update Takes On Cobol
IBM Plunges After Anthropic's Latest Update Takes On Cobol

After disrupting countless Software/SaaS/finance/real estate/broker sectors, Anthropic's Claude is now going after targeted companies. 

A little before 2pm ET, Bloomberg sent out a headline that Anthropic's Claude has found yet another skillset:

*ANTHROPIC SAYS CLAUDE CODE CAN AUTOMATE COBOL MODERNIZATION
A herd of panicked IBM longs flooded to the Claude blog to read more on what is happening. Here's what it found (excerpted): 


COBOL is everywhere. It handles an estimated 95% of ATM transactions in the US. Hundreds of billions of lines of COBOL run in production every day, powering critical systems in finance, airlines, and government.

Despite that, the number of people who understand it shrinks every year.

The developers who built these systems retired years ago, and the institutional knowledge they carried left with them. Production code has been modified repeatedly over decades, but the documentation hasn't kept up. Meanwhile, we aren't exactly minting replacements—COBOL is taught at only a handful of universities, and finding engineers who can read it gets harder every quarter.

Given these roadblocks, how can organizations modernize their systems without losing the reliability, availability, and data they’ve accumulated over decades? And without breaking anything?

* * * 

How AI changes COBOL modernization

AI excels at streamlining the tasks that once made COBOL modernization cost-prohibitive. With it, your team can focus on strategy, risk assessment, and business logic while AI automates the code analysis and implementation.

* * * 

Start your COBOL modernization

The approach outlined above works for COBOL systems of any size. Tools like Claude Code can automate much of the exploration and analysis work described, giving your team the comprehensive understanding they need to plan and execute migrations confidently.

Start with a single component or workflow that has clear boundaries and moderate complexity. Use AI to analyze and document it thoroughly, plan the modernization with your engineers, implement incrementally with testing at each step, and validate carefully.  This will build organizational confidence and surface adjustments needed for your systems.


In kneejerk reaction, IBM stock, already down sharply on the day, and tumbling 20% from its all time highs just earlier this month, plunged $15 to the lowest level since Liberation Day, briefly dipping below $230...



... as the market realized that it is the latest target of the Claude disruption train. You see, Common Business-Oriented Language (COBOL)  is a high-level, English-like compiled programming language developed specifically for business data processing, via IBM. As such, anything that disrupts this lucrative ecosystem created by IBM (code COBOL, then sell consultancy contracts to adjust the code which virtually nobody knows how to use), would immediately smash IBM stock... and that's precisely what happened. 

Which begs the question: after various Claude updates caused hundreds of billions in market cap damage in the past 3 weeks, is the company's strategy to keep rolling incremental disruption updates becoming Antrhopic's self-funding strategy. After all, if Dario Amodei had bought puts on IBM, and the dozens of companies that have plunge dmore than double digits in recent weeks, he would have made billions, certainly enough to fund his company for months if not years. 

And if not Anthropic, when will OpenAI - which needs capital much more badly than its enterprise-focused peer - do the same? 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 14:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AOC's Ignorance Is No Laughing Matter
AOC's Ignorance Is No Laughing Matter

Authored by Stephen Soukup via American Greatness,

Over the past week or so, many on the political Right have understandably enjoyed a laugh or two at the expense of Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D, N.Y.). AOC went to the Munich Security Conference to provide “balance” to the Trump administration’s presence and to burnish her own credentials on the global stage. Instead, she mostly just made a fool of herself. Not only did she stutter, stammer, and offer a Kamala Harris-esque non-answer when asked about American interests in and obligations to Taiwan, but she also demonstrated a comically poor grasp of geography and a righteously ignorant understanding of history. In an effort to rebut and embarrass U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, AOC embarrassed only herself, showing that historical facts mean far less to her than identity-inspired fiction.



But while it’s inarguably fun to chuckle at and mock the ignorance of the smug congresswoman and presumed presidential aspirant, it is also important to acknowledge that her historical and political illiteracy extends beyond the superficial and touches on matters of real and critical importance. Notably, this purported champion of the working class does not know the history of working-class politics, does not understand the reasons for the collapse of the working-class-centered ideology, and, as a result, has never contemplated the dangers inherent in attempting to resuscitate that failed doctrine.

Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez has long emphasized her biography and working-class roots to enhance her political status—and justifiably so. Her childhood may not have been quite the struggle she pretends it was, but she nevertheless endured economic hardships—especially after her father’s death—and was unable to find employment commensurate with her education. She was, famously, a bartender and a cocktail waitress before her election to Congress and, as a result, has long fashioned herself a champion of the working class and its purported priorities.

Indeed, on her trip to Munich, AOC emphasized her affinity with the working class and admonished democratic nations to erect a bulwark against totalitarianism by focusing on workers, workers’ rights, and worker-centered politics. “It is of utmost urgent priority that we get our economic houses in order and deliver material gains for the working class,” the congresswoman said, “or else we will fall to a more isolated world governed by authoritarians that also do not deliver to working people.” She railed against large corporations and especially billionaires, insisting that they had to be stopped from “throwing their weight around” in domestic and international politics. In short, the good congresswoman used her trip to Munich to urge the workers of the world to unite, because, as she sees it, they have nothing to lose but their chains.

There’s only one little problem with AOC’s exhortation: it’s ridiculous. Indeed, it’s been tried . . . and tried . . . and tried. It doesn’t work. And when I say that, I don’t mean that socialism doesn’t work or that communism has been tried countless times before and failed every time. That much is obvious by now. Rather, what I mean is that the workers of the world don’t care about the rest of the workers of the world. They don’t like the idea of being divided into classes, and they don’t have any particular affection for their fellow laborers. They don’t dislike other workers necessarily, but they don’t see themselves as a monolithic federation sharing the same interests, needs, or political predilections. Truth be told—and this is the key to understanding the silliness of the whole “global proletariat” nonsense—even the Marxists long ago gave up on uniting the workers of the world. In fact, in the United States, the most prominent Marxist theorists actually gave up on workers altogether as allies in the fight against capitalism.

One of the most pervasive bits of common knowledge about World War I is the idea that the ruling classes of Europe did not expect it to last very long or to be particularly destructive. Kaiser Wilhelm infamously predicted that Germany’s troops would be home “before the leaves fall.” What is less well known is that this “short-war illusion” was shared and embraced even more unequivocally by the era’s Marxist agitators. They believed, as Engels in particular predicted, in the inevitability of a “new man,” who would evolve from the working classes and would never harm his fellow new men. Just two years before Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated, the Manifesto of the Second International Socialist Congress in Basel in 1912 declared that war between working men was a virtual impossibility:

It would be insanity for the governments not to realize that the very idea of the monstrosity of a world war would inevitably call forth the indignation and the revolt of the working class. The proletarians consider it a crime to fire at each other for the profits of the capitalists, the ambitions of dynasties, or the greater glory of secret diplomatic treaties.

Of course, things didn’t exactly go as planned—either for the ruling classes or the Marxists. World War I did many things to Europe, most of them awful and ugly and demoralizing. It did many of the same things to Marxism. Although the war did incite revolution in Russia, that was far less than the Marxists had hoped for. Russia’s revolution was led by the educated classes and animated by peasants. Proletarian “workers” were largely non-existent. In the industrialized parts of Europe, workers flat out rejected appeals to class unity, choosing instead to fight for God and country. German workers saw themselves not as workers but as Germans. French workers saw themselves not as workers but as Frenchmen. And so it went.

In the aftermath of the war, Marxists were forced to confront two massive and related problems: the workers’ refusal to unite and the rise of profound and entrenched nihilism. In order to save their ideology, these Marxists had to revise it and explain its failures. As any schoolboy knows, they did so by concluding that the workers of the world did not understand their own interests or even their own natures. Workers were dissociated from their interests by the institutions of society, especially the institutions of cultural transmission: the Church, the schools, the media, art, entertainment, and so on. Therefore, to enable workers to see their real interests, those institutions had to be taken over, destroyed, and rebuilt along ideological lines. And thus began the Gramsci, Lukács, and Frankfurt School-led “long march through the institutions,” which largely killed economic Marxist theory, creating what we know today as “cultural Marxism.”

In 1964, Herbert Marcuse—a latecomer to the Frankfurt School who became America’s most prominent Marxist theorist—essentially gave up on the workers as the stimulators of revolution. As I have noted before in these pages, “Marcuse conceded that the capitalist system was simply too good at providing goods and services that made the masses comfortable and happy. It therefore deprived them of ever knowing or caring about their true oppressed consciousness. Workers had become one-dimensional consumers, distracted from their fate by their egos and the creature comforts of capitalism.” In turn, Marcuse laid the foundations for “identity politics,” which would, he believed, enable the rise of a new revolutionary class, motivated by new perceptions of oppression.

Long story short (if that’s possible any longer), over the course of the last century, Marxists gave up on workers and even on economics, deciding instead to focus on culture and identity-based grievances.

Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez doesn’t appear to know any of this, of course, which means that she also doesn’t know that appeals to working-class unity have tended to end in tragedy, followed by massive, civilization-destroying revisionism. Most notably, because she doesn’t know that revisionism was necessary in Marxism, she also doesn’t know that the other stream of post-World-War-I Marxist revisionism ran through Rome and Berlin and resulted in authoritarianism on a scale previously unimagined.

AOC’s ignorance isn’t just about cowboys, in other words. It’s also about the greatest and most profound tragedies in world history. Her ignorance is dangerous.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 14:45

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My rookie era: I wasn’t immediately good at oil painting, but it taught me to find pleasure in struggle
One week I spent three miserable hours trying to paint a satin ribbon, and went home in a filthy moodRead more summer essentialsAs a five-year-old, I loved fairies, Spice Girls and Vincent van Gogh. It wasn’t the famous ear incident or the existential despair that I found fascinating, but a picture book. For the Love of Vincent, by Brenda V Northeast, told the story of Van Gogh’s life but with one minor change: Vincent was a teddy bear, not a depressed Dutchman. It was this book that lead me to the real Van Gogh and to his art, which was vibrant and alive and made complete sense to a small child who mainly painted with her fingers. I loved Vincent, man and bear; I even went as Vincent Van Bear to Book Week and confused the hell out of everyone.I was a happy painter for years, until I reached high school and I started getting marked for it. When art went from something I simply did to something I could be judged for, that made it terrifying. And as I learned more about artists like Vincent (man, not bear), I began to suspect that an artist’s life was for other people, who seemed to experience life a lot more vibrantly than I did, good and bad. Taking solace in the fact that I would never have been exceptional made it easier to just stop. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Parents of children with Send give changes in England a mixed response
Amid relief that significant disruption for families will be avoided, there are fears some children will not benefitParents of children with special needs say they are relieved that the government’s long-awaited overhaul will avoid significant disruption for their families – but told the Guardian they fear getting help will remain a struggle.Becky, whose son Kyllian has a number of disabilities including cerebral palsy and is registered blind, said she was “cautiously optimistic” about the changes in England announced by Bridget Phillipson, and immediate relief that her son wouldn’t have to move from his special school. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jeremy Hunt urges medics to do more to improve detection of rare childbirth condition
Exclusive: Former health secretary throws weight behind campaign to boost diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrumJeremy Hunt has urged leading doctors to do more to help maternity specialists detect a rare complication of childbirth that can lead to a women bleeding to death within minutes.The former health secretary has thrown his weight behind a new campaign, aimed at improving the NHS’s identification of placenta accreta spectrum. The Action for Accreta campaign was set up by Amisha Adhia and her husband, Nik, after five hospitals failed to spot that she had PAS. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
What are GFCI outlets? Plus 5 household items you should never plug into one
These decades-old safety devices can be inconvenient if you misuse them, but they can also save your life.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to improve your Sonos soundbar's audio performance - 3 easy and free ways
If you're disappointed with your soundbar's audio output, these simple and free tweaks helped mine significantly.

ZDNet News
Open 
Your best Google weather app alternatives (and what I recommend instead)
Missing Google's weather app? I found three reliable weather apps for Android, but there's an even better option.

ZDNet News
Open 
Spotify vs. YouTube Music: I paid for both services, and this one was more worth it
Spotify and YouTube Music offer competing streaming experiences, so here's what you should know before subscribing to either one.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to turn off HDMI-CEC on your TV - and why it makes such a big difference
TVs often analyze what you watch to curate suggestions and serve you ads, even through HDMI-connected devices, but I've found ways to take back control.

ZDNet News
Open 
Samsung Unpacked 2026: 5 surprise products we could see besides the S26 Ultra
Unpacked 2026 this week could feature a few curveballs, like a new type of foldable, smart glasses, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
I tested the first car charger with Apple and Google Find My tracking - here's the verdict
The Scosche FoundIT 12V charger has dual USB ports and a built-in finder for Apple Find My and Google Find Hub.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
If Consumers Hold Stablecoins, They Should Get Yield. Banks Can Compete on a Level Playing Field
The biggest hurdle to the CLARITY Act‘s approval in the Senate appears to be the issue of stablecoin holders generating yield. The bugaboo here is legacy banks, which tend to hold deposits and pay little to no yield to their customers. As these same banks... Read More

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#10921 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Leeds (CityFibre) (Close)
window closed

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 09:00

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 15:00

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 19:52

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 19:52

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11022 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Maintenance - Leicester Area (Close)
window closed. issue appears resolved

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 08:00

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 14:00

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 19:53

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 19:53

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

The Hill
Open 
CDC No. 2 steps down amid HHS shake-up
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced Monday that Principal Deputy Director Ralph Abraham, the former Louisiana surgeon general, has resigned from his position after less than three months because of "unforeseen family obligations." His departure comes amid a shake-up at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), with former interim Director...

The Hill
Open 
Federal court rejects GOP bid to block new House map in Utah
A federal court on Monday rejected the latest Republican-led bid to block a new congressional map in Utah that could give Democrats a seat in the red state. A three-judge panel denied a motion for a preliminary injunction that would have blocked the new lines from going into effect before this fall’s midterms.  “Because we...

The Hill
Open 
Education Department to move more programs to other federal agencies amid Trump, McMahon efforts to close it
The Education Department announced Monday plans to move two more programs to other federal agencies amid President Trump's effort to “break up the federal education bureaucracy.”  The department reached interagency agreements with the departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and State, adding to previous deals reached last year.   The latest announcement says HHS will take some control of family engagement...

The Hill
Open 
Moore vows to continue redistricting push as Senate declines to move forward 
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) is vowing to forge ahead with his redistricting push in the Old Line State even as the state Senate has shown no signs of moving forward with a new Democratic gerrymander.  “Democracy means we debate. Democracy means we test ideas. Democracy means compromise. And then democracy means that we vote — that is the basis of democracy,” Moore told...

The Register
Open 
Workaholic open source developers need to take breaks
A week off for vacation? The nerve of some people Opinion  If you want to see the definition of "workaholic," you can't do better than to look at your typical senior open source developer or maintainer. I should know, I'm a workaholic too. I know my kind.…

The Register
Open 
Infosec community panics as Anthropic rolls out Claude code security checker
Not the first of its kind ai-pocalypse  Anthropic sent the infosec community into a tizzy on Friday when it rolled out Claude Code Security, a new feature that scans codebases for vulnerabilities and suggests patches to fix the issues.…

The Register
Open 
Nvidia superchip infusion finally coming to Windows PCs, report says
Nv-based integrated graphics for Wintel box also in the works Your next laptop may have Nvidia inside – not in the form of a GPU, but as a system on a chip, complete with CPU. Team Green could be chipping away at Intel's marketshare and giving people Arm-based systems that compete with Apple's MacBook line.…

Gizmodo
Open 
AI Added ‘Basically Zero’ to US Economic Growth Last Year, Goldman Sachs Says
Imported chips and hardware mean the AI investments are translating into US GDP growth.

Gizmodo
Open 
Meta Exec Learns the Hard Way That AI Can Just Delete Your Stuff
One small trick to get you to inbox zero.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Goodbye, All of Evangelion’ Actually Means ‘Hello, to More Evangelion’
The legendary mecha series will carve itself another ending once more, with a new animated series helmed by 'Nier' writer Yoko Taro.

Gizmodo
Open 
Flat Molecules Aren’t Actually Flat. Blame Quantum Physics
In chemistry, molecules with a "flat" geometry are often stable enough to support a wide range of reactions. But in the quantum world, that's not technically true.

CNET News
Open 
Is Amazon's Spring Sale Happening This Year? Here's How We're Getting Ready
There's no official word on a sale yet, but another one this spring is likely to happen soon.

CNET News
Open 
If You Can't Hear the TV Properly, You Need One of These Soundbars
These are the best soundbars to upgrade your TV audio for better intelligibility.

CNET News
Open 
NotebookLM Review: Practical and Powerful, This Tool Feels Like Magic
NotebookLM can transform information in surprising ways, and that's why we love it.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Italian cricket in crisis amid sexual assault allegation
Italian cricket is in crisis days after the country's World Cup debut as it deals with an allegation of sexual assault by a senior figure within the national governing body.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US military strike on boat allegedly smuggling drugs kills three men
It is the third such attack in a week, and is part of increased US forces in the CaribbeanThe US military launched a strike on an alleged drug smuggling boat in the Caribbean which killed three men, in its third such attack over the course of a week.“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Caribbean and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” US Southern Command, which oversees operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, said on Twitter/X. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I want to come back, to win gold’: banned Ukrainian determined to race for glory in helmet of memory
On the eve of the fourth anniversary since Russia invaded Ukraine, Vladyslav Heraskevych has no regrets about sacrificing his Winter Olympic dreams in Milano CortinaIt is the image that will forever define the 2026 Winter Olympics: a Ukrainian skeleton racer, stoic and unbowed, holding a helmet bearing the faces of 24 athletes killed by Russia. Behind him, the icy track serves as a reminder of the dreams he sacrificed for a greater purpose.It was an extraordinary act of bravery and defiance, which carried the tremors of Tommie Smith and John Carlos’s civil rights protest in 1968. But in his first in-depth interview since being disqualified from the Milano Cortina Games, Vladyslav Heraskevych makes one thing clear: he has unfinished business with the Olympics. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can Bridget Phillipson convince jaded families to have faith in Send changes?
Education secretary and her team have won over some critics but obstacles remain in their attempt to overhaul system In her first week as a cabinet minister Bridget Phillipson held a meeting for new Labour MPs with one subject – special educational needs. Almost 100 MPs came to that first meeting.There were new MPs for whom the issue was personal to their own families – Jen Craft, Daniel Francis, Steve Race, as well as the then business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds. Dozens more knew the system was at breaking point because of their previous work in the charity sector, for unions and in the disability sector. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Rape suspect freed from jail in error now abroad
The man was awaiting trial when he was released from HMP Wormwood Scrubs and has now left the UK.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lord Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
The Metropolitan Police says a 72-year-old man has been taken to a London police station for interview following the arrest in Camden.

Mail Online
Open 
Peter Mandelson is arrested by police amid probe into alleged misconduct in public office
The Metropolitan Police confirmed a 72-year-old man was arrested on Monday afternoon following searches at two properties in London and Wiltshire.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ tracked through romantic partner
Killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader sparks wave of violence across western MexicoAnalysis: Mexico faces uphill battle to appease kingpin TrumpWho was El Mencho?Mexican authorities tracked down and killed “El Mencho”, one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, by following a romantic partner to his safe house near a picturesque mountain town, the country’s defence secretary has revealed.In a press conference, officials provided the first details about the operation that led to the death of the leader of Mexico’s most powerful organised crime group, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than 600 people have died trying to cross Mediterranean in 2026, UN says
Deadliest start to a year in more than a decade, according to the International Organization for Migration A least 606 people trying to reach Europe in search of refugee have been reported dead or missing in the Mediterranean since the beginning of 2026, marking the “deadliest start to a year” in more than a decade, the UN’s migration agency said on Monday.The figure includes at least 30 people who are feared dead or missing after their boat capsized in severe weather off the coast of Greece on Saturday. Authorities rescued 20 people, including four minors, and recovered the bodies of three men and one woman, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni suspended by Uefa after Vinícius Júnior incident
Benfica appeal against ban for Real Madrid second legBrazilian alleged he was racially abusedGianluca Prestianni will not be available for Benfica’s Champions League playoff at Real Madrid on Wednesday night after Uefa suspended him following allegations that he racially abused Vinícius Júnior during the first leg. The one‑game ban is a provisional mea­sure as an investigation continues.Benfica have said they will appeal and regret being “deprived” of the winger, but the club admitted they did not expect to be able to prevent the 20-year-old Argentinian from missing the second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can Bridget Phillipson convince jaded families to have faith in Send reforms?
Education secretary and her team have won over some critics but obstacles remain in their attempt to overhaul system In her first week as a cabinet minister Bridget Phillipson held a meeting for new Labour MPs with one subject – special educational needs. Almost 100 MPs came to that first meeting.There were new MPs for whom the issue was personal to their own families – Jen Craft, Daniel Francis, Steve Race, as well as the then business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds. Dozens more knew the system was at breaking point because of their previous work in the charity sector, for unions and in the disability sector. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US strikes suspected drug boat in Caribbean, killing 3
The Trump administration argues that the boat strikes are important to curb the flow of illicit narcotics. Critics say the strikes violate international law.

BBC UK News
Open 
Inside the children's home where late night footsteps meant fear and abuse
Two women who were sexually abused at Skircoat Lodge in Halifax in the 1990s tell their stories.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I want to come back, to win gold’: banned Ukrainian determined to race for glory in helmet of memory
On the eve of the fourth anniversary since Russia invaded Ukraine, Vladyslav Heraskevych has no regrets about sacrificing his Winter Olympic dreams in Milano CortinaIt is the image that will forever define the 2026 Winter Olympics: a Ukrainian skeleton racer, stoic and unbowed, holding a helmet bearing the faces of 24 athletes killed by Russia. Behind him, the icy track serves as a reminder of the dreams he sacrificed for a greater purpose.It was an extraordinary act of bravery and defiance, which carried the tremors of Tommie Smith and John Carlos’s civil rights protest in 1968. But in his first in-depth interview since being disqualified from the Milano Cortina Games Vladyslav Heraskevych makes one thing clear. He has unfinished business with the Olympics. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Video footage shows former peer being driven away shortly after being escorted from his London home by officersUK politics live – latest updatesPeter Mandelson has been arrested by detectives investigating claims he committed misconduct in public office during his friendship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Video footage showed the former British ambassador to the US being driven away in an unmarked police car for questioning shortly after being escorted from his London home by plainclothes officers. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Draper makes winning return to tour after injury
British number one Jack Draper marks his post-injury return to action on the ATP Tour with a straight-set win over Frenchman Quentin Halys at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Mail Online
Open 
Danniella Westbrook unveils her new face after undergoing 'miracle' reconstruction surgery on her nose, lips and neck in Dubai
The former EastEnders star, 52, cut a casual figure as she left a hair salon in London and showed off her freshly blow-dryed blonde locks.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ tracked through romantic partner
Killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader sparks wave of violence across western Mexico• Who was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?Mexican authorities tracked down and killed “El Mencho”, one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, by following a romantic partner to his safe house near a picturesque mountain town, the country’s defence secretary has revealed.In a press conference, officials provided the first details about the operation that led to the death of the leader of Mexico’s most powerful organised crime group, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Communication is key to the chances of Send reforms succeeding
Bridget Phillipson and her team are making sure MPs and the public grasp the need to overhaul the special educational needs system In her first week as a cabinet minister Bridget Phillipson held a meeting for new Labour MPs with one subject – special educational needs. Almost 100 MPs came to that first meeting.There were new MPs for whom the issue was personal to their own families – Jen Craft, Daniel Francis, Steve Race, as well as the then business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds. Dozens more knew the system was at breaking point because of their previous work in the charity sector, for unions and in the disability sector. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Keir Starmer opens investigation into Josh Simons over targeting of reporters
PM asks ethics adviser to examine conduct of Cabinet Office minister amid Labour Together scandal falloutKeir Starmer has opened a formal investigation into a Cabinet Office minister involved in falsely accusing journalists of having links to pro-Russian propaganda.The prime minister’s decision follows revelations in the Guardian that Josh Simons, who was running the thinktank Labour Together at the time, was also involved in telling British intelligence officials that another journalist was “living with” the daughter of a former adviser to Jeremy Corbyn. Officials were told by Simons’ team that the former adviser was “suspected of links to Russian intelligence”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Video footage shows former peer being driven away shortly after being escorted from his London home by officersUK politics live – latest updatesPeter Mandelson has been arrested by detectives investigating claims he committed misconduct in public office during his friendship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Video footage showed the former British ambassador to the US being driven away from his home in an unmarked police car for questioning shortly after being escorted from his home by plainclothes officers. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Uncanny Valley: AI Researchers’ Resignations, Bots Hiring Humans, Evie Magazine’s Party
This episode of Uncanny Valley covers the people resigning from AI companies and the humans getting hired by AI agents. Plus, we attend a soiree thrown by a conservative women's magazine.

Sky News Home
Open 
Children's home manager abused vulnerable boys and girls in 18 year 'regime of fear'
A children's home manager sexually abused girls and boys in his care during an 18-year "regime of fear", a court has found.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Barcelona sign 16-year-old Norwich prospect Tavares
Spanish giants Barcelona have signed 16-year-old Norwich City academy prospect Ajay Tavares, who has played for England age-group teams.

Mail Online
Open 
Danniella Westbrook unveils her new face after undergoing 'miracle' reconstruction surgery on her nose, lips and neck in Dubai
The former EastEnders star, 52, cut a casual figure as she left a hair salon in London and showed off her freshly blow-fryed blonde locks.

TechRadar News
Open 
Panasonic’s 2026 TV line-up is here, and I saw it in action — but it was one of its demos of future tech that impressed me most

TechRadar News
Open 
There's a sneaky way to watch Love Island All Stars final for free

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Sembawang Hot Springs in Singapore, Singapore

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung leak drops info on a whole bunch of feature upgrades on Galaxy Buds 4
Galaxy Buds 4 Pro may gain head gestures, camera remote functionality, and a physical find-my-phone shortcut, though both models reportedly miss out on case speakers.
The post Samsung leak drops info on a whole bunch of feature upgrades on Galaxy Buds 4 appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Spotify’s next big update could make its recommendations make more sense
This upcoming tool could enable text-based feedback, shifting personalization from passive data tracking to active guidance, while limits on notes and characters keep influence in check.
The post Spotify’s next big update could make its recommendations make more sense appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Honor is bringing its first humanoid robot to MWC, and it could help you shop
Honor is jumping on the humanoid robot bandwagon and will showcase its offering at MWC alongside the Robot Phone and the Magic V6.
The post Honor is bringing its first humanoid robot to MWC, and it could help you shop appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Congress must enact Trump’s tariffs now to steer the U.S. from a massive revenue cliff
Tariffs need to become law or the federal budget will take a hit. Lawmakers have less than 150 days to decide.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The moving company held my boyfriend’s stuff hostage until he paid them an extra $300. Is this standard practice?
“The original cost was $350, so it was practically double the amount.”

Slashdot
Open 
'How Many AIs Does It Take To Read a PDF?'
Despite AI's progress in building complex software, the ubiquitous PDF remains something of a grand challenge -- a format Adobe developed in the early 1990s to preserve the precise visual appearance of documents. PDFs consist of character codes, coordinates, and rendering instructions rather than logically ordered text, and even state-of-the-art models asked to extract information from them will summarize instead, confuse footnotes with body text, or outright hallucinate contents, The Verge writes.

Companies like Reducto are now tackling the problem by segmenting pages into components -- headers, tables, charts -- before routing each to specialized parsing models, an approach borrowed from computer vision techniques used in self-driving vehicles. Researchers at Hugging Face recently found roughly 1.3 billion PDFs sitting in Common Crawl alone, and the Allen Institute for AI has noted that PDFs could provide trillions of novel, high-quality training tokens from government reports, textbooks, and academic papers -- the kind of data AI developers are increasingly desperate for.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Linus Torvalds: Someone 'More Competent Who Isn't Afraid of Numbers Past the Teens' Will Take Over Linux One Day
Linus Torvalds has pondered his professional mortality in a self-deprecating post to mark the release of the first release candidate for version 7.0 of the Linux kernel. From a report: "You all know the drill by now: two weeks have passed, and the kernel merge window is closed," he wrote in the post announcing Linux 7.0 rc1. "We have a new major number purely because I'm easily confused and not good with big numbers." Torvalds pointed out that the numbers he applies to new kernel releases are essentially meaningless.

"We haven't done releases based on features (or on "stable vs unstable") for a long, long time now. So that new major number does *not* mean that we have some big new exciting feature, or that we're somehow leaving old interfaces behind. It's the usual "solid progress" marker, nothing more.â

He then reiterated his plan to end each series of kernels to end at x.19, before the next release becomes y.0 -- a process that takes about 3.5 years -- and then pondered what happens when the next version of Linux reaches a number he finds uncomfortable. "I don't have a solid plan for when the major number itself gets big," he admitted, "by that time, I expect that we'll have somebody more competent in charge who isn't afraid of numbers past the teens. So I'm not going to worry about it."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
ICE agents keep shooting themselves
Trump's rootin' tootin' secret police keep "accidentally shooting themselves," reports Newsweek, with three blasting themselves in the leg within two days during "training exercises." A fourth shot himself with a taser, inside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office.

No one was killed in the incidents, and all injured personnel were treated and released, according to internal incident reports obtained by the watchdog American Oversight through a Freedom of Information Act request and shared with Newsweek.

— Read the rest
The post ICE agents keep shooting themselves appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Epstein associate Lord Mandelson arrested in U.K.
Last week, the former prince Andrew was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office after the Epstein Files implied that he had shared privileged information with billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein. Earlier today, Lord Mandelson was taken into custody under the same suspicion. — Read the rest
The post Epstein associate Lord Mandelson arrested in U.K. appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
1990s game got a rave review thanks to LSD in office coffee pot
In the 1990s, American video game players had it made for supplemental reading. Electronic Gaming Monthly, GamePro, and Nintendo's flagship Nintendo Power were the premier choices, but there were plenty of smaller monthlies too.
One of them, Game Fan, was eager to premiere Atari's new 64-bit console, the Jaguar, and its pack-in game, Cybermorph. — Read the rest
The post 1990s game got a rave review thanks to LSD in office coffee pot appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Verge
Open 
Does Big Tech actually care about fighting AI slop?
As 2025 drew to a close, Instagram head Adam Mosseri ended the year by doom-posting about AI. "Authenticity is becoming infinitely reproducible," Mosseri lamented. "Everything that made creators matter - the ability to be real, to connect, to have a voice that couldn't be faked - is now accessible to anyone with the right tools." […]

Mail Online
Open 
Explore the Nancy Guthrie case: All the hidden clues and explosive twists in Daily Mail's Deep Dive
She's the mother of one of the most familiar faces on American morning television. What has happened to her is every family's worst nightmare.

Mail Online
Open 
Repeat drink drivers could soon have to blow into 'alcolocks' before every journey as investigation reveals the number of persistent offenders
An investigation into repeat drink-driving offenders comes as the Government consults on the introduction of in-car breathalysers as part of its Road Safety Strategy.

Mail Online
Open 
Dangerous hit-and-run driver who hit speeds of more than 100mph just moments before he killed 'beautiful and kind' mother-of-two is jailed for 10 years
Ryan Scott, 28, had been travelling at 112mph just five seconds before he collided with Claire Laybourne, 39, who was returning with her mother from a Christmas trip to the theatre.

Mail Online
Open 
Police launch hate crime probe after bacon is left outside mosque in first week of Ramadan
The meat was placed on a glass door at the mosque in Cheltenham Road, Bristol, during prayer on Friday. Avon and Somerset Police say the incident is being treated as a hate crime.

Mail Online
Open 
Fresh CCTV shows fugitive drill rapper who went on the run ahead of deportation flight - as police manhunt enters 9th day
Daniel Boakye, 21, was set to be removed from Britain to Ghana later this year after he was jailed in July 2023 for a series of knifepoint robberies.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Follow updates from Monday’s 8pm (GMT) kick-offTen talking points from the weekend | Email DanielI’m minded of Martin Buchan’s legendary response – later pilfered by Gordon Strachan – to a reporter he didn’t know putting a hand on his chest to stop him going to get a drink.“A quick word, Martin?And because he’d been so rude I added ‘fuck off’.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is matter for MPs, says No 10
Anthony Albanese says Australia would not object to his removal from royal succession lineA parliamentary inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links to Jeffrey Epstein is a matter for MPs, Downing Street has said, as ministers faced a new push to uncover details about the former prince’s role as a trade envoy.It comes as the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, wrote to Keir Starmer to say his country would have no objection to Mountbatten-Windsor being removed from the royal line of succession. Continue reading...

Nature
Open 
Music is not a universal language — but it can bring us together when words fail

Nature
Open 
How big is the ‘motherhood penalty’? In Denmark, it adds up to $120,000

Nature
Open 
This AI can improve your peer review — and make it more polite

Nature
Open 
Historically Black US universities chase top research ranking

Nature
Open 
Whistle while you whinny: researchers identify two sounds straight from the horse’s mouth

Nature
Open 
First-of-a-kind stem cell therapies set for approval in Japan

Nature
Open 
Iron Age mass grave reveals unprecedented violence against women and children

Nature
Open 
AI tools can design genomes. Will they upend how life evolves?

Nature
Open 
Why every scientist needs a librarian

Nature
Open 
From Victorian voyages to vanishing maps: Books in brief

Nature
Open 
Markovnikov hydroamination of terminal alkenes via phosphine redox catalysis

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ukraine negotiator tells BBC how it feels to sit across table from Russia
Serhii Kyslytsia is among those trying to negotiate an end to the conflict, which is entering its fifth year.

ZDNet News
Open 
Forget Roomba: This futuristic robot vacuum changed how I clean my floors - seriously
The Mova Mobius 60 has proven to be a worthwhile alternative to some of the most popular robots on the market.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Delta Flight Suffers Engine Failure on Departure from Savannah
A Delta Air Lines service from Savannah to Atlanta experienced a significant engine malfunction shortly after takeoff on the evening of 22 February 2026.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Cork Airport Gets Major Expansion from Aer Lingus
Cork Airport is set for one of its most significant network expansions in recent years as Aer Lingus and Aer Lingus Regional, operated exclusively by Emerald Airlines, unveil a strengthened summer 2026 schedule.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Storm Hernando: Airports In New York Disrupted by Severe Blizzard
The aviation network in New York has been thrown into disarray as powerful winter Storm Hernando sweeps across the Northeast, forcing the cancellation of thousands of flights and bringing operations at the region’s busiest airports to a near halt.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Passenger Suffers Burns Onboard Alaska Airlines Flight in Wichita
A Horizon Air Embraer ERJ175 operating for Alaska Airlines was forced to return to Wichita on 22 February 2026 after a passenger’s power bank went into thermal runaway shortly after takeoff.

Russia Today News
Open 
Internet (un)chained: Why cyber-censorship is here to stay

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
I almost lost my leg after Olympics crash, says US skier Lindsey Vonn
Lindsey Vonn says she nearly lost her leg from the injuries she sustained in a heavy crash at the Winter Olympics - and thanks the doctor who saved her from an amputation.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Three key changes being made to special educational needs
The government has set out broad changes it will make to the SEND system in England in the coming years.

The Hill
Open 
Congress shouldn't be playing political football with aviation safety and security
Congress is considering legislation to ensure that air traffic controllers, TSA officers, and CBP agents are paid during government shutdowns, in order to prevent the chaos and economic harm caused by the previous shutdown.

The Hill
Open 
US endorses AI declaration without binding rules
The U.S. signed onto a non-binding declaration Saturday with dozens of other countries following India’s AI Impact Summit, committing to a “shared global vision” on the technology. It was one of 89 countries and organizations to sign the document, which laid out seven key pillars for AI development, including democratizing AI resources, using AI to...

The Hill
Open 
Johnson: Gonzales must address affair allegations in ‘appropriate way'
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Monday said Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) must address the allegations that he had an affair with one of his congressional staffers, who died last year after setting herself on fire, but added that it is “too early to prejudge" the situation. “I endorsed Tony before all these allegations came out,”...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Democrats hear from ICE whistleblower
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) are expected to hear from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) whistleblower at a public forum on Monday. The Democrats say the former ICE employee will for the first time publicly "discuss new immigration enforcement training methods and policies, including authorizing warrantless entry to the homes...

The Hill
Open 
Clueless Bernie Sanders stumped at Stanford Union, pushes data center pause 
Sanders said that “we” should have a degree of control over what the tech CEOs are building. And that sounds nice, but let’s be clear on  something — who is “we”? 

The Hill
Open 
Epstein files investigated as possible motive of armed man fatally shot at Mar-a-Lago
Investigators are looking into the views regarding Jeffrey Epstein of the man fatally shot by law enforcement on President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property early Sunday morning, a source briefed on the investigation confirmed to NewsNation, The Hill’s sister network. While not a definitive motive, investigators are examining writings by Martin in which he referenced the Epstein...

The Hill
Open 
CDC No. 2 steps down amid HHS shake-up
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced Monday that Principal Deputy Director Ralph Abraham, the former Louisiana surgeon general, has resigned from his position after less than three months due to "unforeseen family obligations." His departure comes amid a shakeup at the HHS, with interim director Jim O'Neill being moved from the position...

The Hill
Open 
US military blows up drug boat in Caribbean, raising death toll to 150 ‘narco-terrorists’ killed 
The U.S. military blew up another alleged drug-smuggling boat in the Caribbean on Monday, killing three “narco-terrorists” in the operation, it said.  The vessel was operated by a designated terrorist organization, was transiting along a “known narco-trafficking” routes and was engaged in “narco-trafficking operations,” the U.S. Southern Command (Southcom) said on social platform X. It...

The Hill
Open 
Trump tariffs struck down by Supreme Court — agenda in jeopardy? 
For much of his second term, the court has handed the president major wins on immigration, executive power and agency authority. But this time, the justices drew a line.   

Gizmodo
Open 
How the Altered Ending of ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Hints at Changes for Season 2
The finale of HBO's 'Game of Thrones' spin-off made a small but significant change to George R.R. Martin's 'Tales of Dunk and Egg' novella.

Gizmodo
Open 
Colorado Legislators Want Device-Level Age Restrictions for Minors. Here’s What That Means
Lawmakers are following in California's foot steps. Could this spark a nationwide trend?

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Federal judge ALLOWS state-judge imposed Utah congressional districts that help Democrats
The Republican-led legislature in Utah has been given another loss after a federal judge allowed state judge-imposed congressional districts after that judge struck down districts approved by the legislature. The state judge . . .

CNET News
Open 
Apple Could Launch at Least 5 New Products, Including iPhone 17E, Next Week
A Bloomberg report suggests a potential one-two-three punch of product launches over consecutive days from Apple, including three new MacBooks and an iPad with an M4 chip.

CNET News
Open 
What to Expect From Apple's March Event: New iPhones, iPads and MacBooks Expected Next Week
Apple's March 4 event might be presented in an entirely new format. Here are the new products we expect to see during the lead-up to the big day.

CNET News
Open 
Nvidia Set to Launch Laptop Chip in the First Half of This Year
The Wall Street Journal reports the graphics and AI chip giant will soon take on Intel, AMD, Qualcomm and Apple for consumer laptop chip supremacy.

CNET News
Open 
Is Amazon's Spring Sale Happening This Year? Here's How We're Getting Ready
There's no official word on a sale yet but it's likely that another Spring Sale will happen soon

Mac Rumours
Open 
Take Up to 30% Off Apple's iPhone 17 Cases on Amazon
Amazon this week has big discounts across Apple's Clear, Silicone, and TechWoven Cases for the iPhone 17 and iPhone Air lineup. Items on sale include Clear, Silicone, and TechWoven Cases for the iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, and iPhone Air. We're also tracking a few discounts on other accessories like the FineWoven Wallet with MagSafe and Beats cases.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



Apple's official cases are reaching up to 30 percent off in this sale, with many priced at $39.99, down from their original $49.00 price tags. In terms of the Beats deals, you'll find steep markdowns on the Beats Woven Charging Cables during this event, as well as Beats Cases for the iPhone 17 lineup as low as $9.99.



UP TO 30% OFFiPhone 17 Cases at Amazon

iPhone Air

Clear Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

iPhone 17

Clear Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

Silicone Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

iPhone 17 Pro

Clear Case - $33.99, down from $49.00

Silicone Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

TechWoven Case - $49.99, down from $59.00

iPhone 17 Pro Max

Clear Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

Silicone Case - $39.99, down from $49.00

TechWoven Case - $49.99, down from $59.00

More Sales

FineWoven Wallet - $47.99, down from $59.00

Beats USB-C to USB-C Woven Cable - $9.04, down from $18.99

Beats iPhone 17 Case - $9.99, down from $45.00

Beats iPhone 17 Pro Case - $14.99, down from $45.00

Beats iPhone 17 Pro Max Case - $34.80, down from $45.00



If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Take Up to 30% Off Apple's iPhone 17 Cases on Amazon' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 26.4 Beta Adds End-to-End Encryption for iPhone-to-Android RCS Texts
With the second iOS 26.4 beta, Apple and Google have started testing end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS messages exchanged between iPhone and Android users.





Apple started testing E2EE for RCS in the first beta, but the feature was limited to iPhone-to-iPhone communications with iMessage turned off. In this beta, ‌iPhone‌ users can send encrypted messages to Android users.



‌iPhone‌ users will need to install the second beta of iOS 26.4 to exchange encrypted messages with Android users, while Google users need to have the latest version of Google Messages.



According to Apple's developer release notes for beta 2, while E2EE is being tested for ‌RCS‌, it isn't going to ship in iOS 26.4 and will instead come at a later date.

In this beta, RCS end-to-end encryption will become available for testing between Apple and Android devices. This feature is not shipping in this release and will be available to customers in future iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and watchOS 26 releases. End-to-end encryption is in beta and is not available for all devices or carriers. Conversations labeled as encrypted are encrypted end-to-end, so messages can't be read while they're sent between devices.

Apple worked with the GSM Association to implement end-to-end encryption. iMessage, which is used for texts between iPhones, has long supported end-to-end encryption. Android's ‌RCS‌ implementation already has E2EE for Android-to-Android texts, but there is no full encryption for iPhone-to-Android and Android-to-iPhone conversations at the current time.



E2EE is not available for all devices or all carriers during the beta testing period.Related Roundups: iOS 26, iPadOS 26Tags: Android, RCSRelated Forum: iOS 26This article, 'iOS 26.4 Beta Adds End-to-End Encryption for iPhone-to-Android RCS Texts' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Follow updates from Monday’s 8pm (GMT) kick-offTen talking points from the weekend | Email DanielI guess Carrick also likes Sesko off the bench, with good reason – two injury-time belters in the last two games have been helpful, but he was also good at Arsenal. Having ti handle that genre of physical specimen after an hour spent chasing about can’t be an especially pleasant activity.Get on with it. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Tourette's campaigner John Davidson says he is 'deeply mortified' after yelling the N-word at black Sinners actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo - who condemns BAFTA for failing to speak to them afterwards
John Davidson, whose life story inspired the film I Swear, was heard shouting the expletive while the actors presented the first prize of the night at London's Royal Festive Hall on Sunday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than 600 migrants die trying to cross Mediterranean so far in 2026, UN says
Deadliest start to a year in more than a decade, according to the International Organization for Migration A least 606 people trying to reach Europe in search of refugee have been reported dead or missing in the Mediterranean since the beginning of 2026, marking the “deadliest start to a year” in more than a decade, the UN’s migration agency said on Monday.The figure includes at least 30 people who are feared dead or missing after their boat capsized in severe weather off the coast of Greece on Saturday. Authorities rescued 20 people, including four minors, and recovered the bodies of three men and one woman, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jeremy Hunt urges medics to do more to improve detection of rare childbirth condition
Exclusive: Former health secretary throws weight behind campaign to boost diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrumJeremy Hunt has urged leading doctors to do more to help maternity specialists detect a rare complication of childbirth that can lead to a women bleeding to death within minutes.The former health secretary has thrown his weight behind a new campaign, aimed at improving the NHS’s identification of placenta accreta spectrum. The campaign was set up by Amisha Adhia and her husband, Nik, after five hospitals failed to spot that she had PAS. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ tracked through romantic partner
Killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes sparked wave of violence across western Mexico• Who was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?Mexican authorities tracked down and killed “El Mencho”, one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, by following a romantic partner to his safe house near a picturesque mountain town, the country’s defence secretary has revealed.In a press conference, officials provided the first details about the operation that led to the death of the leader of Mexico’s most powerful organised crime group, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Follow updates from Monday’s 8pm (GMT) kick-offTen talking points from the weekend | Email DanielI wonder if United’s lack of a left-winger encouraged Moyes to go for Jimmy Garner at right-back. Without an opponent holding width, he’s freer to invert into midfield; if I was Carrick, though I’m not mad about Matheus Cunha through the middle. I’d think about sticking Amad or Mbeumo on the left, to attack Garner on the outside.I guess Carrick also likes Sesko off the bench, with good reason – two injury-time belters in the last two games have been helpful, but he was also good at Arsenal. Having ti handle that genre of physical specimen after an hour spent chasing about can’t be an especially pleasant activity. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lindsey Vonn says she almost had leg amputated after crash at Winter Olympics
41-year-old developed compartment syndromeSkier credits Team USA surgeon with saving legLindsey Vonn says she came close to having her leg amputated in the aftermath of her crash during the Olympic downhill earlier this month.The 41-year-old sustained a complex tibia fracture to her left leg in the crash and underwent multiple surgeries in Italy before being flown back to the US for further treatment last week. But in an Instagram post on Monday, the American said the crash also led to compartment syndrome in her leg. The condition occurs after traumatic injuries such as falls from heights and car crashes. According to the Cleveland Clinic, “compartment syndrome happens when there’s too much pressure around your muscles. The pressure restricts the flow of blood, fresh oxygen and nutrients to your muscles and nerves. Compartment syndrome is extremely painful.” The lack of blood flow can lead to permanent damage to patients. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US evacuates staff from Lebanon embassy amid tensions with Iran
US state department official says it’s ‘prudent’ to reduce their footprint to essential personnelWashington has evacuated dozens of non-essential personnel from its embassy in Lebanon as US ships and warplanes have been positioned in the region for a potential strike against Iran in the coming days.The diplomatic drawdown followed reports that dozens of US personnel had been evacuated through Lebanon’s Beirut-Rafic Hariri international airport to protect them from a possible Iranian counterattack if tensions between the US and Iran escalate into war. Roughly 30-50 US embassy personnel have left the country, estimates suggest. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Two arrested after death of 'British Lip King'
Two people have been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter following the death of Jordan James Parke.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Nottingham killer watched shooting videos online, inquiry hears
Valdo Calocane's phone was analysed after the Nottingham attacks in June 2023.

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners stars Delroy Lindo and Michael B. Jordan lead outrage after N-word is shouted at them during shocking BAFTAs moment
Delroy Lindo has spoken out following a deeply uncomfortable moment at the 2026 BAFTA Awards, saying he wishes 'someone from BAFTA spoke to us afterwards.'

Techdirt
Open 
Daily Deal: The 2026 Ultimate Project Managers Training Bundle
The 2026 Ultimate Project Managers Training Bundle will help you learn how to efficiently manage small- and large-scale complex projects. With 9 courses focused on Asana, Jira, Agile, Microsoft Project, and more, you’ll be introduced to various ways to organize and manage teams, and to various tools that will aid productivity while keeping projects and […]

Techdirt
Open 
Ring’s Super Bowl Ad Generates So Much Backlash It Has Ended Its Partnership With Flock Safety
Eight million ways to die. According to AdWeek, the price for a 30-second commercial during Super Bowl LX has soared to $8 million, after NBC opened in the summer by offering spots for $7 million. As AdWeek notes, “due to demand, the company has already reached its cap for the number of spots that were available for advertisers […]

Russia Today News
Open 
Hungary vetoes €90 billion loan for Ukraine

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico: Violence flares over killing of 'El Mencho'
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced the capture and killing of 'El Mencho.' At least 25 security forces were killed in the operation. DW has the latest.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-Mail on Sunday editor denies misleading inquiry over private investigator
Peter Wright confronted in high court over evidence on newspaper’s relationship with convicted investigatorThe former editor of the Mail on Sunday has denied claims he misled the Leveson inquiry into press standards over the newspaper’s involvement with corrupt private investigators.Appearing at the high court, Peter Wright, who edited the Sunday newspaper from 1998 to 2012, said some of the allegations aimed at the title – which include landline tapping and bugging – were “just incredible”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Over 600 migrants die trying to cross Mediterranean so far in 2026, UN says
Deadliest start to a year in more than a decade, according to the International Organization for Migration A least 606 people trying to reach Europe in search of refugee have been reported dead or missing in the Mediterranean since the beginning of 2026, marking the “deadliest start to a year” in more than a decade, the UN’s migration agency said on Monday.The figure includes at least 30 people who are feared dead or missing after their boat capsized in severe weather off the coast of Greece on Saturday. Authorities rescued 20 people, including four minors, and recovered the bodies of three men and one woman, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Death to the dictator’: Iranian students hold protests for third day
Demonstrations spread to Tehran’s Al Zahra University one month after security crackdown left thousands deadStudents at universities in Iran have held a third consecutive day of protest just over a month after the violent suppression by security services of mass street demonstrations left thousands dead.The protests came amid tensions between Iran and the US. Washington has built up military forces and pressure in the Middle East as it negotiates with Tehran – with the next round in Geneva on Thursday. Donald Trump has warned “really bad things will happen” if there is no deal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Follow updates from Monday’s 8pm (GMT) kick-offTen talking points from the weekend | Email DanielHuman existence demands an endless search for narrative – consider religion, psychotherapy and the arts – so of course football, its most uniting obsession, does likewise. Consequently, every game Michael Carrick’s Manchester United face is an episode in his quest to earn the permanent manager’s job, the most daunting and meaningful obstacle always the next one.First, he was asked to beat good teams considered far superior to his own, and he did; then, he was asked to beat ones he was expected to, at home, and did that too; now, he’s being asked to beat difficult ones away, something United failed to do at West Ham. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham killer was not sectioned because of his race, inquiry told
Valdo Calocane released in 2020 after mental health staff considered research on over-representation of young black men in detentionMental health professionals decided not to detain the Nottingham triple killer Valdo Calocane despite a violent incident in 2020, after they considered research that addressed the over-representation of young black men in custody, a public inquiry has been told.Calocane, who has paranoid schizophrenia, fatally stabbed 19-year-old students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, and 65-year-old Ian Coates, and severely injured three others on 13 June 2023. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Motorcyclist fled scene 'for own safety' after hitting boy, court told
Arlo Buckley was hit by an off-road bike as he attempted to cross the street in Flintshire.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Parents of children with Send give changes in England a mixed response
Amid relief that changes will avoid significant disruption for families, there are fears some children will not benefitParents of children with special needs say they are relieved that the government’s long-awaited overhaul will avoid significant disruption for their families – but told the Guardian they fear getting help will remain a struggle.Becky, whose son Kyllian has a number of disabilities including cerebral palsy and is registered blind, said she was “cautiously optimistic” about the changes in England announced by Bridget Phillipson, and immediate relief that her son wouldn’t have to move from his special school. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
The 2026 Mazda CX-5, driven: It got bigger; plus, radical tech upgrade

Ars Technica
Open 
New Microsoft gaming chief has "no tolerance for bad AI"

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Barcelona sign Norwich prospect Tavares
Spanish giants Barcelona have signed 16-year-old Norwich City academy prospect Ajay Tavares, who has played for England age-group teams.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
At least 25 National Guard troops killed in violence after death of Mexican drug lord
Violence has erupted across Mexico since a powerful drug cartel boss died after being captured by special forces.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-head of top private school accused of dishonestly using funds for cricket tickets and luxury accommodation must wait nearly two years for their trial
Julian Johnson-Munday, 63, appeared before Norwich Crown Court today after denying fraud by false representation at Westminster Magistrates Court last month and electing for a trial by jury.

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners stars Delroy Lindo and Michael B. Jordan lead outrage after N-word is shouted at them during shocking BAFTAs moment
Hannah Beachler says John Davidson also said the racist term to her at
Sunday's ceremony in London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni suspended by Uefa after Vinícius Júnior incident
Benfica appeal against ban for Real Madrid second legBrazilian alleged he was racially abusedGianluca Prestianni will not be available for Benfica’s Champions League playoff against Real Madrid on Wednesday night after Uefa suspended him following allegations that he racially abused Vinícius Júnior during the first leg. The one-game ban is a provisional measure as an investigation continues.Benfica have said they will appeal and regret being “deprived” of the winger, but the club admitted they did not expect to be able to prevent the 20-year-old Argentinian from missing the second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the fourth anniversary of Putin’s war: Ukraine is exhausted, but not broken | Editorial
Despite relentless attrition at appalling human cost, the Kremlin has not achieved its goals. Maximum economic pressure can undermine its war aimsFour years after Vladimir Putin launched the biggest conflict on European soil since the second world war, the human cost of his revanchist ambition mounts ever higher. Across a 750-mile frontline in the east of Ukraine, Russian forces make minimal progress despite relentless attrition, advancing more slowly than troops during the battle of the Somme. In 2025, the estimated number of Russian casualties in “the meat grinder” was 415,000.For Ukraine, the suffering will scar generations to come. Battlefield casualties are estimated to be about 600,000. Since the invasion, as many as 6 million people have been displaced inside the country and 4 million, mainly women and children, have left. Civilian deaths soared last year as Russia stepped up its bombing campaign of cities and infrastructure in an effort to break Ukrainians’ will.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on Send reforms: ministers need to show how inclusion will work | Editorial
Building up support and expertise in mainstream schools will take time and ministerial focusWith its education white paper, the key section of which concerns support for children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send), the government is returning to a more holistic view of schools. High standards and inclusion should be “two sides of the same coin”, the document states. The narrowing of the Department for Education’s focus under Michael Gove is being reversed – even if the New Labour name for the Department for Children, Schools and Families is not coming back.Ambitious targets on attendance and a halving of the attainment gap between richer and poorer pupils are meant to boost wellbeing as well as standards. But the overall package’s success or failure will depend on whether Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, can win support for her Send reforms and implement them so that children do not lose out. Stricter criteria for the education, health and care plans (EHCPs) that oblige councils to provide individual support are dreaded by some parents and charities. The processes surrounding the new individual support plans, which will address less complex needs in future, must be robust and open to challenge. Schools must be resourced to play the bigger role that ministers envision for them – not handed extra responsibilities with no means of carrying them out.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour’s Send revolution is a high-stakes experiment. It also threatens precious parental rights | John Harris
Bridget Phillipson’s 10-year plan is generous in places, but it has its problems. Not least that it could be trashed by a Reform governmentWhether the change is down to the shifting of the Overton window or the demise of basic decency, one awful feature of the current national conversation is becoming clearer by the day: the demonisation of disabled and vulnerable children and young people – and their parents – by voices that seemingly know no shame at all.The crude version of the “overdiagnosis” theory – essentially, the idea that such conditions as autism and ADHD are exaggerated and confected – is everywhere. Seemingly by law, every two-bit newspaper columnist must now write an annual piece about how the cutting edge of human psychology and child development is really just a byword for needless expense and sharp-elbowed families milking the state. A Facebook page used to find people to speak to the media recently appealed for a “mum who’s concerned her child’s school budget is being spent on pupils with special educational needs”. Aren’t there, the ad wondered, “more important things you feel the school should be spending money on? For example … computers, sports equipment etc?” The fee offered to anyone willing to stoop that low was £150. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Violence in Mexico after military kills notorious drug cartel boss – a visual guide
Streets empty as residents shield from chaos of retaliatory attacks after death of ‘El Mencho’ in federal raidMexico is on alert after cartel gunmen went on a violent rampage of revenge in response to federal forces killing their leader, a notorious mob boss known as “El Mencho”.Authorities had attempted to capture Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes in the western state of Jalisco on Sunday but the raid led to a firefight that fatally wounded the infamous leader and killed six of his accomplices, according to officials. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertainty
US president’s international trade war spooks investors, with drops in US share prices after European lossesTrump threatens ‘obnoxious’ tariffs as UK and EU seek clarity on trade dealsStock markets stumbled on Monday as Donald Trump pushed ahead with fresh tariffs on the US’s trading partners despite a supreme court strike-down and growing opposition from domestic voters.Uncertainty over the status of global trade deals spooked investors, trigging a drop in US shares prices including on the Dow Jones industrial average, which tumbled 1.4% in morning trading. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 also fell 0.9% and 1.1%, after losses for European stock markets. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Major Japanese semiconductor supplier hit by ransomware attack

TechRadar News
Open 
If you’re looking for a portable power station to handle storm outages and camping trips, I recommend the Bluetti AC200L — it’s better than half price at under $750

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra’s cool privacy display is coming to more phones
A new leak suggests Chinese smartphone makers are testing a "spy screen" similar to Samsung's Privacy Display, signaling wider adoption of advanced hardware-based privacy protection.
The post Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra’s cool privacy display is coming to more phones appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Trump threatens ‘obnoxious’ use of tariffs as markets buckle in wake of Supreme Court decision
President Donald Trump is expanding his tariff toolkit in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling against his signature economic policy.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The government is trying to rein in Medicare Advantage costs. Will it work?
Keeping healthcare costs under control is crucial for retirees.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Strategy shows no fear — it keeps adding to a losing bitcoin position as prices drop
The company sold more common shares to buy $40 million worth of bitcoin, even as its total holdings are more than $8 billion in the red.

Slashdot
Open 
Anthropic Accuses Chinese Companies of Siphoning Data From Claude
U.S. artificial-intelligence startup Anthropic said three Chinese AI companies set up more than 24,000 fraudulent accounts with its Claude AI model to help their own systems catch up. From a report: The three companies -- DeepSeek, Moonshot AI and MiniMax -- prompted Claude more than 16 million times, siphoning information from Anthropic's system to train and improve their own products, Anthropic said in a blog post Monday.

Earlier this month, an Anthropic rival, OpenAI, sent a memo to House lawmakers accusing DeepSeek of using the same tactic, called distillation, to mimic OpenAI's products. Anthropic said distillation had legitimate uses -- companies use it to build smaller versions of their own products, for example -- but it could also be used to build competitive products "in a fraction of the time, and at a fraction of the cost." The scale of the different companies' distillation activity varied. DeepSeek engaged in 150,000 interactions with Claude, whereas Moonshot and MiniMax had more than 3.4 million and 13 million, respectively, Anthropic said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
Fossilized puke from before the dinosaurs contains 41 tiny bones
Forty-one tiny bones from three different species, jumbled together in a single clump and preserved in stone for 290 million years. That's the contents of the world's oldest known terrestrial regurgitalite — science-talk for fossilized puke — unearthed at the Bromacker fossil site in Thuringia, Germany. — Read the rest
The post Fossilized puke from before the dinosaurs contains 41 tiny bones appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Woman abandons fake service dog at airline gate, gets arrested, dog gets better family
A woman was arrested after abandoning her dog at a ticket counter at Reid Airport in Las Vegas. The woman had attempted to bring her dog on the plane as a service dog, but had no documentation. In surveillance footage on 8newsnow, the dog can be seen wandering around the ticket area, dragging its leash, before the woman ties it to a baggage sizer and walks away. — Read the rest
The post Woman abandons fake service dog at airline gate, gets arrested, dog gets better family appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
DOGE accessed millions of Americans' data with no stated reason
DOGE staffers showed up to federal agencies carrying what a whistleblower described as "backpacks full of laptops," each pre-loaded with access to databases holding the Social Security numbers, tax returns, biometric data, and background checks of millions of Americans.
Rep. Lori Trahan (D-Massachusetts) wants to make sure it can't happen again. — Read the rest
The post DOGE accessed millions of Americans' data with no stated reason appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Hot Streak: The mascot racing game that turns betting into bedlam
We played a family game recently that I suspect will become a house staple. Hot Streak (CMYK Games, $45, 2-9+, Ages 6+) is a fast, chaotic betting and racing game that leans hard into slapstick silliness. The theme is a race of the world's worst sports mascots. — Read the rest
The post Hot Streak: The mascot racing game that turns betting into bedlam appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
A 21-year-old Trump fan shot dead at Mar-a-Lago and unsearched Epstein storage units
A 21-year-old Trump supporter was shot dead by Secret Service agents at Mar-a-Lago after showing up with a shotgun and a gas canister around 1:30 a.m. Sunday. Austin Tucker Martin of Moore County, North Carolina, raised his weapon when ordered to put it down. — Read the rest
The post A 21-year-old Trump fan shot dead at Mar-a-Lago and unsearched Epstein storage units appeared first on Boing Boing.

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners actor Delroy Lindo condemns BAFTA for failing to speak to them after Tourette's sufferer shouted the N-word at him and Michael B. Jordan - as black co-star leaps to his defence
John Davidson, whose life story inspired the film I Swear, was heard shouting the expletive while the black actors presented the first prize of the night at London's Royal Festive Hall.

The Verge
Open 
Apple’s newest AirTags are already on sale if you’re looking to upgrade
Less than a month after making their debut, Apple’s second-gen AirTags are already receiving their first discount. Right now, Costco members can buy five location trackers for $99.99 ($29 off) either online or in-store, bringing the price of each tracker down to about $20 a pop. If you don’t already belong to Costco, you can […]

Sky News Home
Open 
Rob Reiner's son pleads not guilty to murder of his parents
Rob Reiner's son Nick has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder in the fatal stabbing of the actor-director and his wife Michele Singer Reiner.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ tracked through romantic partner
Killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes sparked wave of violence across western Mexico• Who was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?Mexican authorities tracked down and killed “El Mencho”, one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, by following a romantic partner to his safe house near a picturesque mountain town, the head of the country’s defence secretary has revealed.In a press conference on Monday, authorities provided the first details about the operation that led to the death of the leader of Mexico’s most powerful organised crime group, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Kenneth Williams and racist attitudes | Brief letters
Calling out racism | Cognitive shuffling | Free art | Party of rejects | Arresting event | Andrew and the mediaWhile appreciating Kenneth Williams’ humour, I felt uneasy that your article (‘He loved showing his bum. Loved it’: the subversive genius of Kenneth Williams, 20 February) didn’t simply state he had racist attitudes. Referring to a dislike of Sid James and people of colour seems to water down unacceptable views.Catherine UtleyLondon• When I can’t sleep because my brain is too busy, I have my own method of “cognitive shufflng” (I tried the latest sleep trick – and my husband and I were up all night, 18 February). I choose a subject and try to think of an example for each letter of the alphabet. I’ve tried flowers, animals, birds and the periodic table. It sometimes works.Melanie WhiteReading, Berkshire Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lord of the Flies, diverse casting and themes of racial identity | Letters
Readers respond to criticism levelled at Jack Thorne’s adaptation of William Golding’s bookDarren Chetty suggests that diverse casting in Jack Thorne’s adaptation of Lord of the Flies has failed to respect the themes of racial identity present in William Golding’s original narrative (The BBC’s Lord of the Flies shows why diverse casting doesn’t always work, 19 February). He appears to take this position in order to highlight the lack of direct racism faced by non-white characters in the new TV series. I feel that this is to take a narrow view of how racism operates.Racism isn’t just playground name-calling. More often than not, it covets the power and agency of black people, seeking either to own or destroy it. Although treated with subtlety, race plays a key role in shaping the identities of the characters Ralph and Jack. One character’s sense of righteousness can be traced to his black, ailing mother, while the other is portrayed as a victim of absentee parents. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chickens coming home to roost in eastern Europe | Letters
In ignoring the peace movement, the west facilitated the rise of ‘gangster capitalism’ in Russia, writes Richard Taylor. Plus a letter from Rev Canon John Longuet-HigginsOf all the disappointments, betrayals and incompetence of Keir Starmer’s government, none is greater than the naive sycophancy shown to Donald Trump over Ukraine and much else.So, Simon Tisdall is absolutely correct: it is high time for European nations, especially the UK, to “tell Trump to get lost” and to take far more positive action to support the Ukrainians in their resistance to Russian aggression (Ukraine is the biggest and most consequential of all the American betrayals, 21 February). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palantir deals are a threat to our data rights as UK citizens | Letters
This US tech giant should not have been given NHS or Ministry of Defence contracts, writes Stephen Saunders. Plus a letter from Jan SavageFor 100 years, the UK government has led us through existential threats, including two world wars. But instead of resisting the latest threat to democratic accountability, it has welcomed it with open arms: Palantir Technologies (NHS deal with AI firm Palantir called into question after officials’ concerns revealed, 12 February).This polarising US surveillance giant provides data-fusion and AI platforms used by by the US for immigration enforcement and by Israel in the Gaza conflict. Its software amplifies state power through militarised analytics and opaque algorithms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Political sabotage’: EU leaders accuse Hungary of undermining support for Ukraine
Viktor Orbán’s government blocks fresh economic measures against Russia on eve of war’s fourth anniversaryEurope live – latest updatesEuropean leaders have accused Hungary of sabotaging support for Ukraine on the eve of the fourth anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion, after a defiant Budapest blocked fresh economic measures against Moscow.Germany, France and other EU states failed to persuade Viktor Orbán’s government on Monday to approve the latest EU sanctions package and a loan meant to help Kyiv meet its military and financial needs. Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, described Hungary’s actions as “political sabotage”. Continue reading...

Computer Weekly
Open 
Innovate UK cyber startup programme gets £10m funding booster
Graduates of DSIT and Innovate UK's CyberASAP scheme to commercialise cutting-edge cyber research projects have raised nearly £50m in the past decade.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Disgraced UK Ambassador Peter Mandelson Arrested Weeks After Resigning Over Epstein
Disgraced UK Ambassador Peter Mandelson Arrested Weeks After Resigning Over Epstein

Former UK cabinet minister and Ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, has been arrested just weeks after resigning over revelations that he gave Jeffrey Epstein advance notice of a €500bn bailout to save the Euro. 



Mandelson was arrested at an address in Camden on Monday and taken to a London police station for an interview in connection with 'misconduct in public office.'


BREAKING: Peter Mandelson has been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office, the Metropolitan Police has saidhttps://t.co/CAU6JMk4vg
📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602, Freeview 233 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/Hgl7kPXEpa
— Sky News (@SkyNews) February 23, 2026
The arrest follows search warrants at two addresses in Wiltshire and Camden, and comes four days after Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, was arrested early Thursday morning on suspicion of misconduct in public office, amid allegations he shared confidential government trade documents with Epstein as well.

As we noted earlier this month;

Documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice as part of the so-called Epstein files appear to show that Mandelson, then business secretary in the Labour government of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, forwarded confidential policy discussions and draft plans to the disgraced financier while the government was grappling with the collapse of global credit markets.

As the Guardian notes, emails forwarded to Epstein from the very top of the UK government include:

A confidential UK government document outlining £20bn in asset sales.
Mandelson claiming he was “trying hard” to change government policy on bankers’ bonuses.
An imminent bailout package for the euro the day before it was announced in 2010.
A suggestion that the JPMorgan boss “mildly threaten” the chancellor.
Epstein asked Mandelson to confirm a €500bn bailout – which the then business secretary said would be announced that evening. The following day, Mandelson also appeared to give Epstein an early tipoff about Gordon Brown’s resignation.
The revelations have prompted Prime Minister Keir Starmer to order an investigation by the cabinet secretary and to demand that Mandelson resign from the House of Lords. Brown has separately asked the cabinet secretary, Chris Wormald, to investigate the alleged disclosures.

Opposition parties have escalated the matter further. The Scottish National Party and Reform UK have reported Mandelson to police, alleging misconduct in a public office. Emily Thornberry, Labour’s chair of the foreign affairs select committee, said the allegations should be examined as a potential criminal matter.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed it had received several reports relating to alleged misconduct and was assessing whether they meet the threshold for a criminal investigation.

“The reports will all be reviewed to determine if they meet the criminal threshold for investigation,” said Commander Ella Marriott. “As with any matter, if new and relevant information is brought to our attention we will assess it, and investigate as appropriate.”

Sensitive Information Shared

According to the disclosures, emails forwarded to Epstein from senior levels of the British government included a confidential document outlining £20 billion in potential asset sales, discussions about changing policy on bankers’ bonuses, details of an imminent eurozone bailout package ahead of its public announcement in 2010, and references to pressuring the chancellor through senior banking executives.

In one email sent on June 13, 2009, Nick Butler, then a special adviser to Brown, circulated a memo detailing policy measures under consideration and suggesting that the government had £20 billion in saleable assets. Mandelson forwarded the message to Epstein, writing, “Interesting note that’s gone to the PM.”

Epstein replied asking, “what salable (sic) assets?” A response from a redacted email address stated: “Land, property I guess.” Four months later, the government announced plans to sell surplus real estate in a bid to raise £16 billion.

Butler said he was considering reporting the matter to police. “We worked on the basis of trust, which allowed us to float ideas,” he told the Times. “I am disgusted by the breach of trust, presumably intended to give Epstein the chance to make money.”

Another email from May 9, 2010 shows Epstein asking Mandelson to confirm a €500 billion eurozone bailout, which Mandelson indicated would be announced that evening. The following day, Mandelson appeared to give Epstein advance notice of Brown’s impending resignation.


"he was a great FX trader" https://t.co/1U0adiK71z
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) February 2, 2026
In separate correspondence days later, Epstein asked whether JPMorgan chief Jamie Dimon should contact the chancellor, Alistair Darling. Mandelson replied that Dimon should “mildly threaten” him.

BBC economics editor Faisal Islam said he understood from discussions with Darling that such calls from senior bankers, including Dimon, did subsequently take place.

Financial Ties Under Question

The disclosures have also revived questions about Mandelson’s financial relationship with Epstein. Documents released earlier this week suggest that Epstein paid a total of $75,000 into bank accounts of which Mandelson, then a Labour MP, was believed to be a beneficiary. It is also alleged that Epstein sent £10,000 in September 2009 to Mandelson’s partner—now his husband—Reinaldo Avila da Silva, to help fund an osteopathy course and other expenses.

A former adviser described Mandelson’s conduct to the Guardian as “treacherous,” adding: “You can imagine the sense of betrayal that those of us who worked every hour of the day during that crisis are feeling.”

Brown said he had previously asked the cabinet secretary to investigate potential leaks in September but was told there was insufficient evidence at the time. “This is shocking new information that has come to light,” Brown said Monday, calling for “a wider and more intensive enquiry” into the disclosure of government papers during the crisis.

Political Fallout

Starmer, who has no direct authority to strip Mandelson of his peerage, is facing renewed scrutiny over his decision to appoint Mandelson as U.S. ambassador and his proximity to senior Labour figures, including chief of staff Morgan McSweeney and Health Secretary Wes Streeting. Mandelson resigned his Labour Party membership on Sunday.

Downing Street has written to the House of Lords authorities urging urgent reform of disciplinary procedures to allow for the removal of peers in cases of serious misconduct. A Lords source said there is currently little guidance on how such reforms would be implemented, despite their inclusion in Labour’s manifesto.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones told Parliament that “no government minister of any political party should have, nor ever should behave in this way,” and suggested Mandelson may have misrepresented his interests before taking up his ambassadorial role. “When someone lies in their declaration of interests, there must be a consequence,” Jones said.

There is no modern precedent for removing an individual from the House of Lords, a step that would require primary legislation. The last such action occurred during the First World War, when a group of peers aligned with Britain’s enemies were stripped of their titles.

No timetable has been set for the Cabinet Office review, and Downing Street has not confirmed whether its findings will be made public. The inquiry may involve examining archived government documents and interviewing Mandelson and other senior officials who served in Downing Street during the period in question.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 12:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
EU Leaders Furious At Hungary's Double Veto Defeat Of Anti-Russia Measures
EU Leaders Furious At Hungary's Double Veto Defeat Of Anti-Russia Measures

Hungary strikes again... As the European Union confirms no agreement Monday on a proposed 20th package of sanctions against Russia, EU leaders are furious at Budapest.

The majority of EU states were hoping to unveil their next round of punitive sanctions in time for the four year anniversary of the grinding war, on Tuesday. But instead Hungary came in with a resounding veto, and not just one - but two.
via Atlatszo

"This is a setback and message we did not want to send today, but the work continues," EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said in response to the failed passage.

The sanctions weren't the only major anti-Moscow move vetoed by Hungary. It in fact exercised a double-veto, further infuriating Brussels leadership:


A €90 billion emergency loan for Kyiv and a new package of sanctions against Moscow are being held up by Budapest over an energy dispute involving the transit of Russian oil through the Soviet-era Druzbha pipeline.

"We should not tie together things that are not connected to each other at all," High Representative Kaja Kallas said on Monday morning before heading to a meeting of foreign affairs ministers that was intended to approve the sanctions.

"But let us listen to them explaining the reasons why they are blocking, and then see whether there are possibilities to overcome."


Others also vented their anger and frustration, with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul expressing to reporters, "I am astounded about the Hungarian position."

The top German diplomat added: "I don’t think it’s right if Hungary uses its own fight for freedom to betray European sovereignty."

And Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys asserted he was "really upset and frustrated" with Hungary, alleging that Budapest's motives "are not based in European needs, they are not based in European security interests."

Poland weighed in too, with its Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski saying, "I would have expected a much greater feeling of solidarity from Hungary for Ukraine." He further described of the Orban government, "The ruling party managed to create a climate of hostility towards the victim of aggression. And then it is now trying to exploit that in the general election. It's quite shocking."


🤝 The Brusselians & Kyiv are interfering in Hungary’s election because they want our patriotic government out so they can impose their plans.
❌ They cannot cut us off from Russian energy, force Ukraine’s EU accession, make us send money, or drag us into war.
🇭🇺 Hands off!… pic.twitter.com/c2a1sNbEXw
— Orbán Viktor (@PM_ViktorOrban) February 23, 2026
Sikorski additionally claimed Hungary has forgotten what it's like to resist a Russian military invasion, in apparent reference to the Soviet invasion of Budapest in 1956.

But Hungary remains unflinching in the face of this pressure and avalanche of criticisms. "No one has the right to put our energy security at risk," said Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 12:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Judge Says Jack Smith's Final 'Mar-a-Lago Docs' Report On Trump Can Never Be Released
Judge Says Jack Smith's Final 'Mar-a-Lago Docs' Report On Trump Can Never Be Released

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

A federal judge on Feb. 23 said that the final report on President Donald Trump compiled by a former special counsel shall not be released.

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who is based in Florida (and was appointed by President Trump), said in a 15-page decision that she was granting requests from Trump and his co-defendants to keep part two of the report from former special counsel Jack Smith shielded from the public.



Cannon said that Smith wrongly forged ahead with investigating Trump and others for allegedly violating federal law by gathering and retaining sensitive documents even after she ruled his appointment was unconstitutional and threw out the case.

“Rather than seek a stay of the Order, or clarification, Special Counsel Smith and his team chose to circumvent it, for months, by taking the discovery generated in this case and compiling it in a final report for transmission to then-Attorney General Garland, to Congress, and then beyond,” Cannon said.

“The Court need not countenance this brazen stratagem or effectively perpetuate the Special Counsel’s breach of this Court’s own order.”

She added later:

“While it is true that former special counsels have released final reports at the conclusion of their work, it appears they have done so either after electing not to bring charges at all or after adjudications of guilt by plea or trial. The Court strains to find a situation in which a former special counsel has released a report after initiating criminal charges that did not result in a finding of guilt.”

The Department of Justice (DOJ) had appealed Cannon’s ruling, but dropped the appeal after Trump won a second term in office.

The department also released part of Smith’s report just before Trump began his second term.

The other part, which has not been made public, was not to be released, according to a January 2025 order from Cannon.

Cannon announced in December 2025 that her injunction was set to expire in February this year.

Trump and co-defendants said in filings on Jan. 20 that Cannon should permanently block the release of the other part of Smith’s report. Lawyers for Trump said Smith was illegally appointed, and all acts he undertook were thus void, so the release “would constitute an irreversible violation of this Court’s constitutional rulings in the underlying criminal action and of bedrock principles of the separation of powers.”

DOJ officials backed that position.


“Put simply, Smith’s tenure was marked by illegality and impropriety, and under no circumstance should his work product be given the full weight and authority of this Department,” they said in a brief, adding later that making the second part of the report public would “lead to the public dissemination of sensitive grand jury materials, attorney-client privileged information, and other information derived from protected discovery materials, raising significant statutory, due process, and privacy concerns for President Trump and his former co-defendants.”


The DOJ and Trump did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Cannon’s ruling. Smith’s law firm did not return an inquiry by publication time.

Two outside groups, American Oversight and Knight First Amendment Institute, recently requested to intervene in the case because they wanted the second part of Smith’s report disclosed.

Cannon declined to allow the requested intervention.

In an appeal, the groups said that because the government had aligned with the defendants in the case, unless they were allowed to intervene, the hidden portion of Smith’s report would be buried or destroyed.

“There is no good reason for withholding this report from the public,” Scott Wilkens, senior counsel at the Knight First Amendment Institute, said in a Feb. 9 statement. “The public has a right to the report under the First Amendment and common law, and the Freedom of Information Act requires its release as well.”

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 12:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Go F**k Yourself": Immigrant-Owned Maryland Crab Shack Goes Viral After Slamming HuffPo Over Anti-USA Olympic Story
"Go F**k Yourself": Immigrant-Owned Maryland Crab Shack Goes Viral After Slamming HuffPo Over Anti-USA Olympic Story

It was a historic moment for Team USA Hockey as Jack Hughes scored the game-winning goal in a dramatic overtime finish, defeating Canada for the gold medal in Milan. The last time USA won Olympic gold in hockey was during the "Miracle on Ice" at the 1980 Winter Olympics. Now, the celebration heads to Washington, with President Trump inviting Hughes and his teammates to the White House.

The thrilling 2-1 victory ended Team USA's nearly five-decade Olympic gold drought and marked one of the biggest moments in the US hockey program.



"I'll tell you what. I just told my people two minutes ago, I didn't know they'd be calling. I said we're giving the State of the Union speech on Tuesday night," President Trump told the players. "I can send a military plane or something, but if you would like to, it's the coolest night. It's the biggest speech …"

One player told Trump, "Sir, we're in."


🚨 EPIC! Kash Patel put PRESIDENT TRUMP on the phone in Team USA’s locker room so that 47 could PERSONALLY congratulate them
“Congratulations! That was an UNBELIEVABLE game! We love you guys!”
“You’re going to be proud of that game for FIFTY YEARS!”
“I can send a MILITARY… pic.twitter.com/GGCUOadySq
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) February 23, 2026
The New Jersey Devils star became the face of Team USA Hockey and ignited a sense of pride in being American, while the left-leaning outlet HuffPost wrote, "If waving the American flag or chanting 'USA!' turns you off right now, you're not alone."

Responding to the HuffPost post on X, a Maryland restaurant named Jimmy's Famous Seafood went absolutely viral for calling out the publication, replying, "Go f**k yourself."


Go fuck yourself
— Jimmy’s Famous Seafood (@JimmysSeafood) February 22, 2026
Jimmy's Famous Seafood's response on X went viral, with more than 9 million views. The restaurant, which also sells crab cakes online, saw such an explosion in website traffic that its backend crashed.



"Overwhelmed by the support! We are doing our best to get the website back up to full strength, and will work tirelessly to answer each tweet!" Jimmy's Famous Seafood wrote on X.


Overwhelmed by the support! We are doing our best to get the website back up to full strength, and will work tirelessly to answer each tweet! 🇺🇸 🦀 pic.twitter.com/2swd3QuQQ3
— Jimmy’s Famous Seafood (@JimmysSeafood) February 23, 2026
We love to see it: an immigrant-owned business standing up to out-of-touch, unhinged left-wing reporters at a media outlet that is shockingly still around.

But HuffPost's anti-American article shouldn't come as a surprise because its readership target is deranged Democrats who increasingly hate America more and more. That data was visible in a recent 2025 Gallup poll...



Will Trump have Jimmy's Famous Seafood's crab cakes in the White House for Team USA Hockey?


While the fake news represents the worst, Main Street truly represents the BEST of America. Thank you to the great patriots of @JimmysSeafood! https://t.co/RaDXMrjCL1
— Kelly Loeffler (@SBA_Kelly) February 23, 2026

The Trump administration certainly has eyes on the Maryland crab shack. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 13:05

ZDNet News
Open 
Oura Ring 3 vs. Oura Ring 4: I've tested both and this is the model you should buy
The Oura Ring 4 is one of the best wearables I've tested, but it's not for everyone. Here's how to decide between the latest model and the old.

ZDNet News
Open 
This hub-free smart plug is the best option for most homes (and it's only $20)
The Shelly Gen4 Smart Plug ups the ante in the smart home market, with the best value for the price and support for the major platforms.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bitcoin Whales Intensify Exchange Deposits During Extended Market Downturn : Analysis
On-chain data reveals that large Bitcoin holders are increasingly moving funds to centralized exchanges amid the cryptocurrency’s prolonged bearish conditions in early 2026. Analytics platform CryptoQuant highlighted this trend in a February 20 report, noting a sharp concentration of selling activity from major investors as... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Fintech focused Banking as a Service Is Reshaping Bank Stability and Consumer Expectations : Analysis
Cornell Law School Professor Dan Awrey has just released a timely new working paper that delves into one of the most pressing challenges facing modern finance: the disruptive power of technology on traditional banking. Titled Banking, Technology, and Instability, the paper examines how rapid technological... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Securities and Exchange Commission Schedules Roundtable to Discuss “Retailization” of Private Securities
The Securities and Exchange Commission has scheduled a Private Markets Roundtable to discuss the retailization of private markets. Currently, non-accredited investors may participate in the private securities markets largely via Reg A and Reg CF. While there are certain situations in which a non-accredited individual... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
US Audit Flags FAA Oversight Gaps in United Maintenance
A federal watchdog audit has identified significant gaps in the Federal Aviation Administration’s oversight of United Airlines maintenance operations, citing staffing shortages, high employee turnover and the improper use of virtual inspections in place of required on-site reviews.

Mail Online
Open 
Almost every flight delayed or canceled at NYC and Boston airports as blizzard brings 20 inches of snow to Empire State
Almost every flight out of New York City and Boston has been cancelled Monday morning due to the severe weather, with multiple states issuing states of emergency over the devastating storm.

Sky News Home
Open 
Queen meets Gisele Pelicot and praises rape survivor's 'extraordinary dignity'
The Queen has met French rape survivor, Gisele Pelicot, and told her she was left "speechless" by the account of her ordeal in her new memoir.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New datacentres risk doubling Great Britain’s electricity use, regulator says
Ofgem says about 140 proposed projects, driven by AI use, could require more power than current peak demandThe amount of power being sought by new datacentre projects in Great Britain would exceed the national current peak electricity consumption, according to an industry watchdog.Ofgem said about 140 proposed datacentre schemes, driven by use of artificial intelligence, could require 50 gigawatts of electricity – 5GW more than the country’s current peak demand. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Netflix boss dismisses Trump's demand for Susan Rice to be fired
Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos brushed aside a demand by President Trump that the company fire former Democratic diplomat Susan Rice from its board. Sarandos was discussing Netflix's tentative deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery's sprawling movie and television studio, a potential $70 billion acquisition that has raised antitrust concerns. “He likes to do a lot...

The Hill
Open 
FDA proposes new treatment approval pathway for ultrarare diseases
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a new proposal Monday for flexible drug approval pathway treatments addressing ultrarare diseases. The FDA unveiled draft guidance on a proposed regulatory pathway for individualized therapies, treatments for rare conditions that affect a very small population, with the proposal specifically focusing on genome editing and RNA-based therapies. The...

The Hill
Open 
Here's how we're stopping DIY use-of-force investigations in Ohio
Ohio has taken the lead in investigating its own agents' use of deadly force by using an independent, competent, complete, and transparent process, which has helped to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the public.

The Hill
Open 
Kash Patel's Olympic outing sparks scrutiny
12:30 Report is The Hill's midday newsletter. Subscribe here. 🚨Plus: Americans in Mexico urged to shelter in place {beacon} It’s Monday. I have never been more ready for a winter to end. The groundhog sure wasn’t joking around this year.   In today's issue: Patel’s Olympic locker room visit sparks controversy DHS reinstates TSA PreCheck...

The Hill
Open 
Senate Democrats unveil Trump tariffs refund legislation
Senate Democrats introduced legislation Monday requiring the Trump administration to refund up to $175 billion collected through tariffs that the Supreme Court ruled were invalid. The bill would require the commissioner of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to pay refunds of all “unlawfully collected duties” in the wake of the court’s decision last week that...

The Hill
Open 
It’s beginning to feel a little like Sarajevo in June 1914
If the U.S. does strike Iran, does that suggest a 21st-century Sarajevo and a prelude to a wider war?

The Hill
Open 
Former UK ambassador arrested amid scrutiny over Epstein ties
Former U.K. Ambassador to the U.S. Peter Mandelson was arrested Monday as he faces scrutiny over files linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, multiple outlets have reported. London’s Metropolitan Police said in a statement obtained by both the BBC and the Financial Times that they had “arrested a 72-year-old man on suspicion of misconduct...

The Register
Open 
Indie web browser Ladybird flutters toward Rust with a little help from AI
Project ditches Swift and translates C++ with LLM assistance The independent Ladybird web browser project is changing course on its choice of programming languages, with LLM-based coding assistants helping to evaluate the shift.…

The Register
Open 
Microsoft execs worry AI will eat entry level coding jobs
Russinovich and Hanselman say firms must train juniors to fix agent mistakes – not replace them with prompts Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich and VP of Developer Community Scott Hanselman have written a paper arguing that senior software engineers must mentor junior developers to prevent AI coding agents from hollowing out the profession's future skills base.…

Gizmodo
Open 
This Is What a Brain Destroyed by Measles Looks Like
A new case report illustrates the deadly impact of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, a rare complication of measles infection.

Gizmodo
Open 
AI Added ‘Basically Zero’ to US Economic Growth Last Year, Goldman Sachs Says
Imported chips and hardware mean the AI investemtns are translating into US GDP growth.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Frankenstein’ and ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Will Be Freed From Streaming Shackles by the Criterion Collection
The popular Netflix films are getting special feature-filled physical releases.

The Right Scoop
Open 
DUDE VIDEO – Gavin Newsom just told Black Americans that he’s just like them, he can’t read either…
It came out late last night that Gavin Newsom told Black Americans that he’s no better than them, that he’s just like them. Then he proceeds to tell them how he got . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Rubio orders non-emergency personnel to evacuate Lebanon
Secretary of State Marco Rubio just ordered non-emergency personnel in Lebanon to evacuate over the situation in Beirut. They’ve given Lebanon a “Level 4: Do Not Travel” Here’s what they write: Lebanon: . . .

CNET News
Open 
Apple Could Launch at Least Five New Products, Including iPhone 17E, Next Week
A Bloomberg report suggests a potential one-two-three punch of product launches over consecutive days from Apple, including three new MacBooks and an iPad with an M4 chip.

CNET News
Open 
8 Pantry Items That Home Cooks Are Sleeping on, According to Chefs
Stock your pantry like a pro with these eight undercelebrated ingredients.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Releases Second watchOS 26.4, tvOS 26.4 and visionOS 26.4 Betas
Apple today provided developers with the second betas of upcoming watchOS 26.4, tvOS 26.4, and visionOS 26.4 betas for testing purposes. The software comes a week after Apple released the first betas.





The software updates are available through the Settings app on each device, and because these are developer betas, a free developer account is required.



watchOS 26.4 adds a new Average Bedtime metric to the sleep features that sync to the health app, so you can better keep an eye on how bedtime impacts overall sleep quality.



tvOS 26.4 eliminates the iTunes Movies and iTunes TV Shows apps on the Apple TV. These apps haven't worked for some time and have directed users to the ‌Apple TV‌ app for purchases, but Apple is finally phasing them out entirely. Apple also added a Continuous Audio Connection option for HDMI output.



visionOS 26.4 includes support for foveated streaming for apps and games. Foveated streaming allows video to be streamed to the precise area where a user is looking, and peripheral areas are compressed. It allows for higher visual quality and lower latency.This article, 'Apple Releases Second watchOS 26.4, tvOS 26.4 and visionOS 26.4 Betas' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Seeds Second Betas of iOS 26.4 and iPadOS 26.4 to Developers
Apple today seeded the second betas of upcoming iOS 26.4 and iPadOS 26.4 updates to developers for testing purposes, with the software coming a week after Apple seeded the first betas.





Registered developers can download the betas from the Settings app on the iPhone or iPad by going to the General section and selecting Software Update.



iOS 26.4 and iPadOS 26.4 add multiple new features to the ‌iPhone‌ and the ‌iPad‌, but the first beta contained no sign of new Siri capabilities.



A Playlist Playground feature in Apple Music lets you generate songs for any idea, mood, emotion, or activity using a text-based prompt. There's also a Concerts Near You feature for finding local shows, and a redesigned look for albums and playlists with full-page artwork.



Apple Podcasts is getting native video podcasting capabilities that will make it easier to create, distribute, and monetize video podcast content through the Podcasts app. Video episodes will integrate with existing Apple podcasts features, like personalized recommendations and editorial suggestions.



Apple is testing end-to-end encryption for RCS, which will eventually bring full encryption to text conversations between Android and ‌iPhone‌ users. Right now, Apple is testing ‌RCS‌ with iPhone-to-iPhone conversations.



The first beta didn't include new emoji, but we saw signs of them in the code so we might get them in the second beta. The new update is also expected to new emoji characters will include trombone, treasure chest, orca, landslide, and Bigfoot.



Stolen Device Protection is enabled by default, there's a new ambient music widget, new average bedtime metrics in the sleep app, and plenty more. All of the features in iOS 26.4 can be found in our iOS 26.4 beta features guide.This article, 'Apple Seeds Second Betas of iOS 26.4 and iPadOS 26.4 to Developers' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Second macOS Tahoe 26.4 Beta Now Available for Developers
Apple today provided the second beta of an upcoming macOS Tahoe 26.4 update to developers for testing purposes, with the update coming a week after Apple seeded the first beta.





Developers can download the ‌macOS Tahoe‌ 26.4 update by opening up the System Settings app, selecting the General category, and then choosing Software Update. Beta Updates will need to be enabled, and a free developer account is required.



‌macOS Tahoe‌ 26.4 adds a new Charge Limit feature so Mac users can select a maximum charge level that ranges from 80 to 100 percent. Apple also brought back the Compact tab layout in Safari for those who missed the option in earlier versions of ‌macOS Tahoe‌.



Apple silicon Macs who are running apps that still rely on Rosetta will see warnings about the upcoming end of support for Rosetta. After ‌macOS Tahoe‌ 27, Apple will phase out Rosetta support, and all apps will need to be updated before that time.



‌macOS Tahoe‌ 26.4 will be released to the public in the spring after several weeks of beta testing.Related Roundup: macOS TahoeRelated Forum: macOS TahoeThis article, 'Second macOS Tahoe 26.4 Beta Now Available for Developers' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Anti-government student protests spread to more Iranian universities
A fresh wave of anti-government protests at several Iranian universities that began on Saturday has spread to more campuses.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump invites US Olympic hockey heroes to State of the Union in locker-room call
Trump invites Olympic champions to State of the UnionFBI director Kash Patel joins locker-room revelry in MilanUSA women turn down invite over previous commitmentsDonald Trump made a congratulatory phone call to the United States men’s hockey team after their dramatic win over Canada in the Olympic gold medal game on Sunday afternoon, praising what he called an “unbelievable” performance and inviting the players to Washington DC this week.The US president addressed the team by speakerphone shortly after their 2-1 overtime victory, telling them they had delivered a moment the country would remember for decades. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Tyson and Paris Fury can't stop beaming in new pics from At Home With The Furys ahead of their elaborate vow renewal in Netflix's season two
The fly-on-the-wall TV documentary about the very famous family premiered on Netflix back in August 2023.

Mail Online
Open 
Emma Stone sparks weight loss speculation after stunning in daring gown on BAFTA red carpet
Stone, 37, showed off a noticeably slimmer appearance in the Louis Vuitton dress, sparking online speculation about her weight loss.

Mail Online
Open 
Bus driver who crashed coach with 29 children on board after entering roundabout at 50mph is banned from driving
Brett Jarvis, of Honey Hill in Lamburn, was 'screaming' when he crashed the school bus, which was travelling at an 'inappropriate' speed.

Mail Online
Open 
Holly Ramsay looks sensational in a sexy backless gown as she shares pictures from Cruz Beckham's luxury 21st birthday bash
Holly Ramsay dressed to impress in a sexy black backless gown as she celebrated family friend Cruz Beckham's luxury 21st birthday bash. 

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-head of top independent school accused of dishonestly using funds for cricket tickets and luxury accommodation must wait nearly two years for trial.
Julian Johnson-Munday, 63, who was suspended from his job three years ago, has been told his case cannot be heard by a jury until February 2028.

Sky News Home
Open 
Shake-up of support for children with special needs and disabilities unveiled
The government has unveiled sweeping plans to reform support for children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) in England's schools.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England in sight of semi-finals but face another trial by spin against Pakistan
Harry Brook’s side have been unconvincing against the turning ball and will face a team that has an attack packed with spinning optionsAfter four wins in five games, and now just one away from sealing a place in the semi‑finals, it is hard to describe England’s progress through the World Cup as ugly. But it hasn’t been straightforward. Like an inverted swan, everyone can see them struggling – yet somehow their progress has been, up to this point, serene.There are no bonus points available for artistic merit and to win tournaments it is necessary only to be, at each stage, slightly better than your opponents. Australia’s T20 champions of 2021, for example, were a side few considered the best in that competition – and were notably annihilated by England in the group stages – until Aaron Finch raised the trophy in Dubai. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Farage kicks things off before 30 minutes of hate – and has the final word | John Crace
Reform’s ‘shadow home secretary’, Zia Yusuf, launches tirade of misery that sounded more hardline and deranged as it wentIt was only last week that Nigel Farage declared he was no longer a one-man band with the announcement of a handful of key appointments. Though that does not mean his “Mini-Mes” can yet be trusted to be allowed out on their own. Baby steps and all that.Nige would rather die than let someone else hog all the limelight. It’s not that his team would screw up. That would be just fine. The worry is always that they might do too well. Might reckon they could live without him. Farage needs to watch them all like a hawk. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EU leaders accuse Hungary of sabotaging support for Ukraine
Viktor Orbán’s government blocks fresh economic measures against Russia on eve of war’s fourth anniversaryEurope live – latest updatesEuropean leaders have accused Hungary of sabotaging support for Ukraine on the eve of the fourth anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion, after a defiant Budapest blocked fresh economic measures against Moscow.Germany, France and other EU states failed to persuade Viktor Orbán’s government on Monday to approve the latest EU sanctions package and a loan meant to help Kyiv meet its military and financial needs. Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, described Hungary’s actions as “political sabotage”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertainty
US president’s international trade war spooks investors, with drops in US share prices after European lossesStock markets stumbled on Monday as Donald Trump pushed ahead with fresh tariffs on the US’s trading partners despite a supreme court strike-down and growing opposition from domestic voters.Uncertainty over the status of global trade deals spooked investors, trigging a drop in US shares prices including on the Dow Jones industrial average, which tumbled 1.4% in morning trading. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 also fell 0.9% and 1.1%, after losses for European stock markets. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
The Media Still Can’t Figure Out That Trump Says Things That Aren’t True
Debates on how the media should be covering what Donald Trump says have been going on for over a decade now. A few months ago, we wrote about the regularity with which the mainstream media “sanewashes” his more ridiculous statements, taking the incoherent ramblings of a madman and pretending to translate them into actual policy […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch: Peter Mandelson led away by police from Camden home
The Metropolitan Police said a 72-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Judge permanently bars US justice department from releasing report on Trump’s classified documents case – live
First amendment group criticizes Aileen Cannon’s order to permanently block release of Jack Smith report after dismissing case against Trump in 2024Major institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Five reasons for England's Six Nations slide
England's downturn in form has been steep and sudden. Why has their Six Nations campaign turned from Grand Slam dreams to a salvage job?

Russia Today News
Open 
Ukraine hates us – Hungary (VIDEOS)

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico: Violence flares over killing of 'El Mencho'
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced the capture and killing of 'El Mancho.' At least 25 security forces were killed in the operation. DW has the latest.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
UK police arrest ex-ambassador Mandelson in Epstein probe
London police arrested former UK ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson over his ties to late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Mail Online
Open 
Former children's home manager, 93, and his female deputy convicted of abusing vulnerable boys and girls while running centre 'like a prison'
Malcolm Phillips used his power and 'unfettered access' to children who had been sent to Skircoat Lodge Care Home in Halifax, West Yorks, to abuse them on a 'daily' basis.

Mail Online
Open 
Two students who blew up sheep with fireworks after beating and kicking it in 'violent assault' are locked up
Leighton Ashby, 22, and Oakley Hollands, 20, chased a sheep before punching and kicking it for 30 minutes at a field near Ditchling Beacon in the South Downs, East Sussex

Mail Online
Open 
Gaunt Nick Reiner seen in custody for first time as he pleads not guilty to murders of Hollywood director dad Rob and mom Michele: Heard saying a single word in hoarse whisper
Nick Reiner was in court today. The 32-year-old looked gaunt as he sat hunched over in court on Monday in Los Angeles, California, wearing brown prison garb.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nick Reiner pleads not guilty in the killing of parents Rob and Michele
Nick Reiner, 32, appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday, after his parents were found dead in their Brentwood home in December.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New British datacentres risk exceeding national peak electricity use, regulator says
Ofgem says about 140 proposed projects, driven by AI use, could require 50 gigawatts of electricityThe amount of power being sought by new datacentre projects in Great Britain would exceed the national current peak electricity consumption, according to an industry watchdog.Ofgem said about 140 proposed datacentre schemes, driven by use of artificial intelligence, could require 50 gigawatts of electricity – 5GW more than the country’s current peak demand. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour’s Send revolution is a bold, high-stakes experiment – but is it Reform-proof? | John Harris
Bridget Phillipson’s 10-year plan is generous in places, but her party might not be in power long enough to see it throughWhether the change is down to the shifting of the Overton window or the demise of basic decency, one awful feature of the current national conversation is becoming clearer by the day: the demonisation of disabled and vulnerable children and young people – and their parents – by voices that seemingly know no shame at all.The crude version of the “overdiagnosis” theory – essentially, the idea that such conditions as autism and ADHD are exaggerated and confected – is everywhere. Seemingly by law, every two-bit newspaper columnist must now write an annual piece about how the cutting edge of human psychology and child development is really just a byword for needless expense and sharp-elbowed families milking the state. A Facebook page used to find people to speak to the media recently appealed for a “mum who’s concerned her child’s school budget is being spent on pupils with special educational needs”. Aren’t there, the ad wondered, “more important things you feel the school should be spending money on? For example … computers, sports equipment etc?” The fee offered to anyone willing to stoop that low was £150. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Horror on a shocking scale’: resurgent US movement calls for end to family ICE detention
Solidarity campaign mobilizes as thousands of children like Liam Ramos taken amid Trump’s immigration crackdownOn 28 January, hundreds of protesters gathered near the Dilley immigration processing center in south Texas, where hundreds of children are being held. Days earlier, immigration lawyer Eric Lee filmed a video of detainees screaming and chanting “libertad”, or “freedom”.Soon after, solidarity events arose in the state. “Community members saw the children and families crying out [and] having their own protests from within and said to everybody: we need to show up there too,” said the Rev Erin Walter, executive director of the Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertainty
US president’s international trade war spooks investors, with drops in US share prices following UK and European lossesStock markets stumbled on Monday as Donald Trump pushed ahead with fresh tariffs on the US’s trading partners despite a supreme court strike-down and growing opposition from domestic voters.Uncertainty over the status of global trade deals spooked investors, trigging a drop in US shares prices including on the Dow Jones industrial average, which tumbled 1.4% in morning trading. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 also fell 0.9% and 1.1%, following losses for UK and European stock markets. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Special educational needs system to be overhauled in England
Only children with the most complex needs will be eligible for education, health and care plans from 2035.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nick Reiner pleads not guilty in the killing of parents Rob and Michele
Nick Reiner, 32, appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday, a month after his parents were found dead in their Brentwood home.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wegovy and Ozempic owner dealt blow as next-gen weight-loss drug is labelled ‘obsolete’
Novo Nordisk’s shares fall sharply after testing of CagriSema falls short of investors’ expectationsBusiness live – latest updatesThe owner of Wegovy and Ozempic has suffered a significant setback, as its highly anticipated new weight-loss treatment was labelled “obsolete” after disappointing clinical trials.Novo Nordisk’s shares fell sharply on Monday after the results from testing the Danish company’s CagriSema drug fell short of investors’ expectations. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-DJ jailed in London for selling fake parts to airlines
Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala set up AOG Technics, which sold more than 60,000 components in a £40m global fraudA one-time techno DJ who orchestrated a £40m global fraud selling fake aircraft parts from his garage outside London has been jailed.Engine parts from AOG Technics found their way into planes used by American Airlines, Ethiopian Airlines, Delta and Ryanair before the scam was discovered, leading to regulators issuing safety alerts and planes being grounded. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘This girl was braver than I was’: Julia Kochetova’s astonishing photographs of war in Ukraine
From children’s funerals to underground shelters to the frontline, Kochetova has captured the conflict with power and humanity for the Guardian. ‘I have the same scars as the people I photograph,’ she says ahead of a major showJulia Kochetova is unlike most of the people who cover Russia’s invasion of Ukraine for the Guardian. The photographer lives in Kyiv; she is Ukrainian. It is her country that is being invaded, her friends who are being killed.The war that began in 2014 and brutally escalated on 24 February in 2022 has infused every part of her existence. It is fundamental to her life choices, her relationships, her friendships, her career (when she was younger she had planned to go to art school in Germany, but photojournalism beckoned). She is at home on the frontline, and could give you battlefield first aid if you needed it. She is also a vegetarian who makes an exception for meat-based borsch; reads poetry when we’re on the road together; and can wash and brush out her waist-length hair in unusual locations and at surprising speed. Her driving style lies somewhere on the spectrum between chaotic and shrewd, and she can recommend you a good place for a manicure in Kyiv. She is 32 years old. She has organised more funerals than anyone should have to do in a lifetime. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump threatens ‘more powerful and obnoxious’ tariffs, amid confusion in UK and EU; Wall Street drops – business live
Markets slide after EU halts ratification of US trade deal, as businesses prepare for new 15% global tariff to start tomorrowStock markets stumble as global trade faces more Trump tariff uncertaintyTrump threatens ‘obnoxious’ tariffs as UK and EU seek clarity on trade dealsThe London stock market has dipped slightly in early trading.The FTSE 100 index is down 19 points, or 0.18%, at 10,668 points. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Hetmyer hammers 85 as West Indies thrash Zimbabwe
Shimron Hetmyer stars as West Indies maintain their perfect record at the 2026 T20 World Cup with a 107-run win over Zimbabwe to start their Super 8 stage.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Company director jailed over £7m airline parts fraud
The judge said the actions were a "more or less complete undermining" of rules designed to ensure passenger flights are safe.

Russia Today News
Open 
Epstein-linked former UK envoy arrested

Russia Today News
Open 
Secret Epstein storage units still not searched – Telegraph

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Burned and destroyed': Locals and tourists describe Mexico unrest
Violence has erupted across several states in Mexico after cartel leader El Mencho was killed on Sunday.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
London’s Metropolitan Police arrest former ambassador Peter Mandelson in probe related to ties to Jeffrey Epstein
London police arrested former UK ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson over his ties to late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

F1 Technical
Open 
F1MATHS: How much milage did the five engine manufacturer cover during pre-season testing?
Six days of pre‑season running in Bahrain offered the first meaningful glimpse into the reliability and preparation levels of Formula 1’s five engine manufacturers. F1Technical's senior writer Balazs Szabo delivers his latest analysis.

TechRadar News
Open 
Beat the freeze with the coziest home essentials — from snuggly heated throws to mood-boosting lamps

TechRadar News
Open 
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms season 2: what we know so far about the new Game of Thrones show's return

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Everton vs Man United: Live Streams, TV Guide, Preview

TechRadar News
Open 
Top Las Vegas hotel is the latest ShinyHunters ransomware victim - hackers demand $1.5 million to not leak data

TechRadar News
Open 
The 2026 BAFTAs threw a huge curveball with Robert Aramayo’s best actor win — here’s when you’ll be able to stream his victorious performance on Netflix

TechRadar News
Open 
'Meredith is still in Seattle': Patrick Dempsey confirms new Prime Video show Memory of a Killer will 'not' have a Grey's Anatomy crossover

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Hamburger SV Fan Burial Ground in Hamburg, Germany

Digital Trends
Open 
MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking
MOFT’s new MagSafe wallet combines a slim card holder, a fold-out stand, and Apple Find My tracking, while keeping the iPhone accessory lightweight and easy to carry.
The post MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking appeared first on Digital Trends.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why Nvidia’s earnings report isn’t the market force it once was
Investors have moved on to other AI plays, an analyst says. That presents an opportunity to get Nvidia’s stock at a discount.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Big Tech’s ‘Lag 7’ is putting the S&P 500 — and your index fund — at risk
A breakdown of the “Magnificent Seven” and AI hyperscalers raises concern for the stock market and the economy

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This satellite stock could double as analysts say it’s ‘built for the space megatrend’
York Space Systems shares have slid since the company debuted in January, but some analysts think the company has technological and financial advantages over rivals.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Novo Nordisk’s stock slips to four-year low after its next-gen weight-loss drug lost to Lilly’s in Phase 3 trial
Novo Nordisk shares were under pressure on Monday as the struggling Danish pharmaceutical said a head-to-head study found a drug in development didn’t cut as much weight as an Eli Lilly product.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Dow heads for worst day in a month as Trump looks to impose replacement tariffs
President Donald Trump opened up a new round of verbal attacks against the Supreme Court on Monday, just days after the high court struck down his sweeping tariff program. The situation was creating an uneasy environment for investors in U.S. assets.

Slashdot
Open 
PayPal Attracts Takeover Interest After Stock Slump
An anonymous reader shares a report: PayPal, the digital payments pioneer, is attracting takeover interest from potential buyers after a stock slide wiped out almost half of its value, according to people familiar with the matter.

The San Jose, California-based company has fielded meetings with banks amid unsolicited interest from suitors, the people said. At least one large rival is looking at the whole company, while some other suitors are only interested in certain PayPal assets, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private.

Buyer interest in PayPal is still at a preliminary stage and may not lead to a transaction, the people cautioned. Founded in the late 1990s, PayPal was an early mover in the world of digital payments. But the company now finds itself in a rut with its customers increasingly turning to alternative ways to pay for things. PayPal's shares have fallen around 46% in New York trading over the last 12 months, giving the company a market value of about $38.4 billion.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Say Goodbye to the Undersea Cable That Made the Global Internet Possible
The first fiber-optic cable ever laid across an ocean -- TAT-8, a nearly 6,000-kilometer line between the United States, United Kingdom, and France that carried its first traffic on December 14, 1988 -- is now being pulled off the Atlantic seabed after more than two decades of sitting dormant, bound for recycling in South Africa.

Subsea Environmental Services, one of only three companies in the world whose entire business is cable recovery and recycling, began the operation last year using its new diesel-electric vessel, the MV Maasvliet, and had already brought 1,012 kilometers of the cable to the Portuguese port of Leixoes by August.

TAT-8, short for Trans-Atlantic Telephone 8, was built by AT&T, British Telecom, and France Telecom, and hit full capacity within just 18 months of going live. A fault too expensive to repair took it out of service in 2002. The recovered cable is being shipped to Mertech Marine in South Africa, where it will be broken down into steel, copper, and two types of polyethylene -- all commercially valuable, especially the high-quality copper at a time when the International Energy Agency projects global shortages within a decade.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Boing Boing
Open 
ICE agents keep shooting themselves
Trump's rootin' tootin' secret police keep "accidentally shooting themselves," reports Newsweek, with three blasting themselves in the lef within two days during "training exercises." A fourth shot himself with a taser, inside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office.

No one was killed in the incidents, and all injured personnel were treated and released, according to internal incident reports obtained by the watchdog American Oversight through a Freedom of Information Act request and shared with Newsweek.

— Read the rest
The post ICE agents keep shooting themselves appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
This ghost galaxy is 99% dark matter with only four star clusters
CDG-2 (short for Candidate Dark Galaxy-2) has so few stars that it's basically invisible. The only reason anyone noticed it at all is that four globular clusters were hanging out together about 300 million light-years from Earth, deep inside the Perseus cluster, with no obvious host galaxy in sight. — Read the rest
The post This ghost galaxy is 99% dark matter with only four star clusters appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘An apotheosis’: Osasuna rejoice at ending 15-year wait to topple Real Madrid | Sid Lowe
After relegation fears, historic late victory has goalkeeper jumping in the stands and El Sadar dreaming of EuropeThere’s only one thing better than celebrating a brilliant 90th-minute winner that at last delivers victory over the team you most want to beat, 15 long years later. Celebrating it twice. So this Saturday, that was exactly what Sergio Herrera did. At the north end of El Sadar, where for one night only they thought VAR might be a good thing, Raúl García applied the brakes, sent Raúl Asencio sliding by out of shot and curled a gorgeous finish beyond Thibaut Courtois to defeat Real Madrid 2-1; at the south end, Osasuna’s keeper turned, jumped over the hoardings where the ticker tape, armbands and beach balls lay spent, and leapt into the arms of the fans going wild behind his goal, an extra notch somehow found on that volume dial, pandemonium taking Pamplona.Which was when someone noticed that the assistant had his flag up, the referee, Alejandro Quintero, had his whistle in his mouth, and García had his hands over his face. Herrera climbed down, lamenting his lack of patience, but he didn’t have to wait long until everything turned out nice again and he got to have another go. Sixty-four seconds passed before Quintero took his finger out his ear, drew a screen and pointed at the centre circle. The offside overruled, the goal given, victory over Madrid close, Herrera set off once more. He sprinted along the line and back again screaming all the way, let loose for good this time. “Bloody hell,” he said after, the offside had been a blow – “una leche”, in his words – but this was marvellous. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘This girl was braver than I was’: Julia Kochetova’s astonishing photographs of war in Ukraine
From children’s funerals to underground shelters to the frontline, Kochetova has captured the war in Ukraine with power and humanity for the Guardian. ‘I have the same scars as the people I photograph,’ she says ahead of a major showJulia Kochetova is unlike most of the people who cover Russia’s invasion of Ukraine for the Guardian. The photographer lives in Kyiv; she is Ukrainian. It is her country that is being invaded, her friends who are being killed.The war that began in 2014 and brutally escalated on 24 February in 2022 has infused every part of her existence. It is fundamental to her life choices, her relationships, her friendships, her career (when she was younger she had planned to go to art school in Germany, but photojournalism beckoned). She is at home on the frontline, and could give you battlefield first aid if you needed it. She is also a vegetarian who makes an exception for meat-based borsch; reads poetry when we’re on the road together; and can wash and brush out her waist-length hair in unusual locations and at surprising speed. Her driving style lies somewhere on the spectrum between chaotic and shrewd, and she can recommend you a good place for a manicure in Kyiv. She is 32 years old. She has organised more funerals than anyone should have to do in a lifetime. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reform UK’s ICE-style deportation plan condemned as ‘sadistic’
Zia Yusuf sets out proposals and calls migration an ‘invasion’, as rights groups decry ‘grotesque’ measuresUK politics live – latest updatesReform UK’s plan to create an ICE-style deportation agency has been condemned as “sadistic”, after the party’s home affairs spokesperson vowed to face down “progressive outrage”.Zia Yusuf, introduced as “the shadow home secretary” at a press conference in Dover, said mass deportations carried out by a planned UK Deportation Command would not trigger the same kind of violent showdowns seen in the US because “policing is done by consent” in the UK. He also described the number of migrants arriving in the country as an “invasion”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Video footage shows former peer being driven away shortly after being escorted from his London home by officersUK politics live – latest updatesPeter Mandelson has been arrested by detectives investigating claims he committed misconduct in public office during his friendship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Video footage showed him being driven away from his home in an unmarked car shortly after being escorted from his home by officers. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
The creators of Dark Sky have a new weather app that shares multiple predictions
After selling their popular weather app to Apple in March 2020, where some of its core features were incorporated into Apple Weather, the creators of Dark Sky have left Apple to create yet another alternative. Their new app, called Acme Weather, embraces the fact that forecasts will never be entirely accurate by providing both a […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Governments urged to step up enforcement of big tech amid rush to ban social media for under-16s
The Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights says that European governments should consider better enforcement against big tech companies before banning children from social media

Computer Weekly
Open 
Gap between upskilling intent and execution in business, says Pluralsight
Tech leaders understand the importance of providing their employees with training, but there are too many challenges in the way of doing so

UK Government News
Open 
Birmingham City Council - Reprofiling of Exceptional Financial Support
Letter to Birmingham City Council to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request to revise the previously agreed profile of in-principle capitalisation support in prior years (2020-21 to 2025-26).

UK Government News
Open 
Warrington Borough Council: Exceptional Financial Support request 2026-27
Letter to Warrington Borough Council to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request for Exceptional Financial Support for 2025-26 and 2026-27.

UK Government News
Open 
Woking Borough Council: Exceptional Financial Support request 2026-27
Letter to Woking Borough Council to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request for Exceptional Financial Support for 2026-27.

UK Government News
Open 
Thurrock Council: Exceptional Financial Support request 2026-27
Letter to Thurrock Council to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request for Exceptional Financial Support for 2024-25, 2025-26 and 2026-27.

UK Government News
Open 
Slough Borough Council: Exceptional Financial Support request 2026-27
Letter to Slough Borough Council to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request for Exceptional Financial Support for 2026-27.

UK Government News
Open 
London Borough of Croydon: Exceptional Financial Support request 2026-27
Letter to the London Borough of Croydon to communicate the government’s response to the council’s request for Exceptional Financial Support for 2025-26 and 2026-27.

Ian Visits
Open 
Dartford Junction reopens following £10m reliability upgrade
A £10 million upgrade of a major rail junction near Dartford in south east London has been completed, allowing trains to run again following a 9-day closure.Read more ›

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score

California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) needs to work on his pandering skills - after telling a crowd of black people that he's just like them because he can't read and got a low SAT score. 



"I’m not trying to impress you, I’m just trying to impress upon you, ‘I’m like you. I’m not better than you.’ I’m a 960 SAT guy," Newsom told Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickins during a Sunday night event promoting his new book. 

"And I’m not trying to offend anyone," the potential 2028 Democratic contender continued. "I’m not trying to act all there if you got 940 … You’ve never seen me read a speech because I cannot read a speech."

Of note, the average SAT score for blacks is a 907 out of a possible 1600, according to 2024 College Board data, while white SAT takers received an average of 1083. 

Watch:


Gov. Newsom to a black crowd in GA: "I am like you. I'm a 960 SAT guy. I can't read." pic.twitter.com/4Gk0WKbIYz
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.

But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship.

“I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter. “The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.”

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.


Gavin "I Grew Up Poor" Newsom was in the SF Chronicle 1991 "Children of the Rich" pic.twitter.com/zhFE8vsN3Y
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026
But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship. “I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter.

“The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.” The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”


Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read.
I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t.
I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow. https://t.co/EsfKeZjWmi
— Congressman Randy Fine (@RepFine) February 23, 2026
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”


His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read.
This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.
Do you wanna know the craziest part of this footage that… https://t.co/llo1k7F7wB
— Nicki Minaj (@NICKIMINAJ) February 23, 2026
Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.” “Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.


Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028 https://t.co/ijXw9HjOLL pic.twitter.com/vTKDSDcMUp
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) February 23, 2026
The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”

Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.”

“Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.

Newsom hit back, pulling the dyslexia card like a little hctib.


You didn’t give a shit about the President of the United States of America posting an ape video of President Obama or calling African nations shitholes — but you’re going to call me racist for talking about my lifelong struggle with dyslexia?
Spare me your fake fucking outrage,… https://t.co/ABNZJQJLcj
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) February 23, 2026



But wait:


Sooooo pic.twitter.com/ZV3gS7VNvy
— AmericanMemes 47 (@americanme67626) February 23, 2026

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 10:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Greenland Prime Minister Rejects Hospital Ship Offered By Trump
Greenland Prime Minister Rejects Hospital Ship Offered By Trump

Authored by Jacki Thrapp via The Epoch Times,

Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said he does not support President Donald Trump’s decision to send a hospital ship to Greenland.


“It’s going to be a no thank you from here,” according to a translation of Nielsen’s Facebook post on Feb. 22.

“President Trump’s idea to send an American hospital ship here to Greenland is noted. But we have a public health system where treatment is free for citizens. It’s a deliberate choice. And a basic part of our society. It’s not like that in the United States, where it costs money to go to the doctor.”


Nielsen said Greenland is “always open to dialogue and collaboration” but requested Trump “talk to us now instead of just coming up with more or less random outbursts on social media.”



It’s not clear which ship was sent.

The rejection came one day after Trump said on Truth Social that a hospital ship was on its way to the country.


“We are going to send a great hospital boat to Greenland to take care of the many people who are sick, and not being taken care of there,” Trump shared in a Truth Social post on Feb. 21.


Trump said he worked with Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, who serves as special envoy to Greenland, on making the trip a reality.


“It’s on the way!!!” Trump added.


Trump did not say when the ship would arrive or what health issues crews on board are going to help treat.

The announcement was made hours after Denmark’s military said its arctic command forces evacuated a crew member of a U.S. submarine for urgent medical treatment.


“The crew member needed urgent medical treatment and has been transferred to the Greenlandic health authorities and the hospital in Nuuk,” the Danish Joint Arctic Command shared on its Facebook page Feb. 21.


Trump did not say if the crew member’s medical issue inspired him to act and deploy the ship to Greenland, which is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark that Trump has long suggested should be under control of the United States for strategic and national and global security reasons.

The Epoch Times contacted the White House and Landry for additional information but did not hear back by time of publication.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 11:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Putin Vows To Bolster Russia's Nuclear Triad As "Absolute Priority"
Putin Vows To Bolster Russia's Nuclear Triad As "Absolute Priority"

In a Monday televised speech on the occasion of Russia's "Defender of the Fatherland Day," President Vladimir Putin declared that the development of the nuclear triad "remains an absolute priority" for Russia, coming soon on the heels of the collapse of the New START nuclear treaty with the United States.

The nuclear triad serves as the ultimate guarantee of Russia's security and allows the effective maintenance of strategic deterrence and the balance of power in the world, explained Putin, calling it "our absolute priority". Countries like Russia, which are seen by the US either as rivals or even 'rogue' - are busy taking note of Iran now being threatened with regime change given it does not possess a nuclear deterrent. 
1971 nuclear test off French Polynesia. 

Putin further emphasized in the context of strategic deterrence that Russia will enhance the potential of its armed forces and improve their combat readiness and mobility - as well as maintaining the ability to operate under the most complex conditions.

He further pledged to accelerate the pace of research and development of advanced weapons and equipment for the military to ensure that they are in reliable hands, according to state media translation.


"The development of the nuclear triad, which guarantees Russia’s security and enables us to effectively ensure strategic deterrence and balance of power in the world remains." —Putin


As for the US-Russia New START Nuclear Treaty, it officially expired without renewal on February 4. Since then Moscow has declared it will in good faith stick to the nuclear limits outlined in the now-expired arms control treaty, provided Washington does the same.

And yet there's been relative quiet from the White House on the issue. For now it doesn't seem the US has made such a reciprocal pledge, leaving the world in uncertain and uncharted territory.

Russia has also made clear that it has no intention of being "the first to take steps towards escalation" and expanding its warheads.

In early February, Secretary of State Marco Rubio gave insight into why the White House has let New START expire, echoing a complaint that goes all the way back to the first Trump administration.


🚨🇷🇺 Nuclear triad remains an absolute priority: Putin
Vladimir Putin’s Defender of the Fatherland Day address dropped the roadmap for Russia’s military future:
◾️Combat experience is being baked into modernization.
◾️Industrial base is running hot.
◾️Strategic forces stay on… pic.twitter.com/Kt4OlmHOwM
— Sputnik India (@Sputnik_India) February 23, 2026
"Obviously, the president's been clear in the past that in order to have true arms control in the 21st century, it's impossible to do something that doesn't include China because of their vast and rapidly growing stockpile," Rubio said.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 11:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
PayPal Shares Jump On Report Of Takeover Interest
PayPal Shares Jump On Report Of Takeover Interest

PayPal shares were briefly halted due to volatility and are now up 9% after a Bloomberg report said the digital payments firm is attracting takeover interest from potential buyers, as the stock slid to a decade low. The report, based on unnamed sources, has not been confirmed by PayPal.



Interest in a PayPal takeover is in the early stages, according to people familiar with the matter. They say the company has met with banks amid unsolicited interest from suitors.

The sources described one of the suitors as a "large rival" looking to purchase the entire digital payments firm, while others are only interested in certain PayPal assets.

Before the news hit, PayPal shares in New York were at 2017 lows (with a market capitalization of around $37 billion) and down more than 85% from the 2021 high of $291.48. Year to date, shares are down 30%.



Wall Street analysts are largely neutral on the stock, with 12 "Buys," 31 "Holds," and six "Sells." The average 12-month price target is $50.08. 



PayPal was one of the pioneers of digital payments, but has been losing market share as consumers shift to alternatives like Apple Pay and Google Pay.

Bloomberg notes a leadership shakeup of the firm is underway, with board chair Enrique Lores set to become president and CEO on March 1, following the ouster of Alex Chriss earlier this month. The latest earnings have disappointed, with quarter four profit and revenue missing estimates and signs of a continued slowdown in payment volume.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 11:49

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Zohran Mamdani's Budgetary Buffoonery
Zohran Mamdani's Budgetary Buffoonery

Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance

When Zohran Mamdani ran for mayor, he sold New Yorkers a vision of relief. Free childcare. Free buses. A rent freeze. A city that would finally tilt toward the struggling rather than the secure. What he did not campaign on was a nearly 10% property tax hike affecting more than three million residences and over 100,000 commercial properties. Yet, days after his election, here we are.

The proposal, floated as leverage in a standoff with Kathy Hochul, is being marketed as a reluctant last resort. But for a mayor elected on affordability, threatening one of the broadest tax increases available to City Hall is not just ironic—it’s revealing. When the numbers got tight and Albany didn’t comply, Mamdani’s idiotic grand promises collided with fiscal gravity. And instead of rethinking the scale of the agenda, the answer was to reach for the biggest local tax lever available.



Truly a courageous and brilliant new strategy from the left: raising taxes. How novel.

This is not some clever new framework. Property taxes are the most predictable, blunt instrument in municipal finance. They are also uniquely capable of rippling through the housing market in exactly the way Mamdani claims to oppose. Owners of small apartment buildings do not absorb cost increases out of civic virtue. Co-op boards don’t shrug off higher levies as symbolic gestures. Costs get passed along where they can be. Where they can’t, maintenance gets deferred. Either way, renters feel it.

It is a strange approach for a mayor who built his brand on a rent freeze. Even in regulated markets, rising operating costs create pressure. Insurance goes up. Taxes go up. Financing tightens. The idea that rents will somehow remain untouched while property taxes jump by nearly double digits requires a level of magical thinking that would make even this idiot’s campaign rally blush.

And the politics are riskier than they appear. Many of the people who voted for Mamdani also own property—brownstones in Brooklyn, co-ops in Queens, small multifamily homes in the Bronx. They may support progressive goals in theory. They are probably, however, less enthusiastic about writing materially larger checks to City Hall in practice. The coalition that cheers bold rhetoric can fracture quickly when the bill arrives.

🔥 50% OFF FOR LIFE: Using this coupon entitles you to 50% off an annual subscription to Fringe Finance for life: Get 50% off forever

Meanwhile, the wealthiest residents—the ones progressives often argue should shoulder more of the burden—are the most mobile. Florida and Texas have spent years positioning themselves as lower-tax alternatives. Some migration has already occurred. More importantly, the perception has taken hold that New York’s reflex, when faced with a budget gap, is to tax what it can reach.

That perception matters. Capital is cautious. Businesses consider long-term operating costs. High earners with flexibility do the math. A city that signals fiscal instability or punitive tax swings makes those calculations easier. Wealth doesn’t leave overnight in caravans, but it leaves incrementally. A family here. A fund there. A company’s next expansion somewhere else.

None of this solves the structural problem Mamdani says he is fighting. A nearly 10 percent property tax hike does not reform the inequities in the property tax system. It does not fundamentally restructure spending. It does not magically close a multibillion-dollar gap without consequences. It simply shifts pressure onto homeowners, landlords, and—inevitably—renters.

It’s true that New York City has survived worse than one mayor’s budget gambit. It survived the fiscal crisis of the 1970s. It survived waves of out-migration before. It will survive this. The question is not whether the city endures, but what it looks like after years of governing by threat and tax hike. If the answer to every shortfall is to squeeze the remaining tax base harder, how many people with the means to leave will decide they’ve had enough?

And if that exodus accelerates, who exactly will be left to fund the next round of bullshit socialist promises?

Now read:

“Uniquely Destructive”: Matt Taibbi Talks Epstein Files
Sh*t Is Getting Ugly In This One Sector I'd Avoid
When Both Sides Go Quiet
Bitcoin Mining and the Electricity Grid: A Quiet Savior
Down 60%, One Stock I Still Love
Countdown to Detonation: America’s Leverage Problem


QTR’s Disclaimer: Please read my full legal disclaimer on my About page here. This post represents my opinions only. In addition, please understand I am an idiot and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning. Contributor posts and aggregated posts have been hand selected by me, have not been fact checked and are the opinions of their authors. They are either submitted to QTR by their author, reprinted under a Creative Commons license with my best effort to uphold what the license asks, or with the permission of the author.

This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any stocks or securities, just my opinions. I often lose money on positions I trade/invest in. I may add any name mentioned in this article and sell any name mentioned in this piece at any time, without further warning. None of this is a solicitation to buy or sell securities. I may or may not own names I write about and are watching. Sometimes I’m bullish without owning things, sometimes I’m bearish and do own things. Just assume my positions could be exactly the opposite of what you think they are just in case. If I’m long I could quickly be short and vice versa. I won’t update my positions. All positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice and at any point I can be long, short or neutral on any position. You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. If you see numbers and calculations of any sort, assume they are wrong and double check them. I failed Algebra in 8th grade and topped off my high school math accolades by getting a D- in remedial Calculus my senior year, before becoming an English major in college so I could bullshit my way through things easier. I am an investor in Mark’s fund.

The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates. I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but can’t guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because I’m impatient and lazy, so if you see a typo, check back in a half hour. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it twice because it’s that important.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 12:00

Mail Online
Open 
The key sleeping mistake raising your risk of deadly heart disease and stroke... and exactly how to fix it
New research reveals that a crucial part of a proper sleep environment could be quietly affecting your heart in ways you might not expect.

Mail Online
Open 
Mystery as UFO vault with 3.8 million files is wiped clean hours after Trump demands alien docs released
One of the biggest libraries for declassified government files was mysteriously wiped clean just hours after President Trump promised to release all data related to alien life.

Mail Online
Open 
Black star of Tourette's movie I Swear joins outcry over BAFTAs N-word after Jamie Foxx hit out
Scottish actor Thierry Mabonga, who was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said actors should have been warned about Davidson's condition.

Mail Online
Open 
How the specific height and shape of your PILLOW could be destroying your eyesight and slowly crippling you
They might seem an unlikely source of health problems, but research published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology last month suggests pillows could lead to sight loss.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump breaks silence on 21-year-old intruder shot dead at Mar-a-Lago
Donald Trump said he's not sure how long he will be alive considering the amount of times people have tried to kill him. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Duterte at ‘very heart’ of murderous drug crackdowns in Philippines, ICC told
Ex-president, accused of crimes against humanity, selected targets and promised immunity for death squad members, prosecutor saysRodrigo Duterte, the former president of the Philippines, was “at the very heart” of brutal anti-drugs campaigns that led to the killing of thousands of people, prosecutors at the international criminal court (ICC) have argued, as they called for charges against him to proceed to trial.Duterte, 80, who was arrested in Manila last year and flown to The Hague, is facing three counts of crimes against humanity over campaigns against drug users and dealers during his presidency, and his earlier tenure as mayor of the city of Davao. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
I replaced my Sony headphones with this $70 pair - and they're even better designed
The CMF Headphone Pro are my new pick for the best headphones under $70. Here's why.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bitcoin Secure from Quantum Risk, at Least for Now
Eventually, Quantum computing is expected to change everything; older security protocols will fall to the wayside unless updated as the race continues between cyber attacks and the defenses that counter them. A recent X post citing Elon Musk’s statement indicates that Bitcoin, the world’s most... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
TSA PreCheck Reopens, Global Entry Remains Closed Due to Government Shutdown
TSA PreCheck has unexpectedly resumed operations in a sudden reversal of a DHS shutdown, though Global Entry remains suspended. This comes after a funding lapse leaves many officers working without pay.

Chatham House
Open 
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
20 February 2026

Chatham House analysts give their initial reactions to the Supreme Court’s tariffs ruling, its likely impact on President Donald Trump’s economic agenda, and his angry response to the ruling.















The US Supreme Court has ruled against President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs in a long-awaited ruling that will be seen as a blow for the president’s economic agenda.By 6-3 the court found that President Trump exceeded his authority by using a law reserved for national emergencies.Trump called the ruling ‘deeply disappointing’ and said he will impose global tariffs of 15%. Here is early analysis from Chatham House experts, who are are monitoring developments.Bruce Stokes, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The head-spinning changes in US tariff policy in the last few days — first the Supreme Court decision invalidating the Trump administration’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), then President Donald Trump’s imposition of a 10% across the board tariff under Section 122 of U.S. trade law, followed just a day later with the president upping that duty to 15% – have left the American and foreign business communities, US consumers, and foreign governments with more questions than answers.Any sighs of relief in the wake of the Court’s decision should be tempered by a new reality.The effective global U.S. tariff rate was 13.7% before the Court decision, according to the Yale Budget Lab. With Trump’s new Section 122 action duties will now be 8%. But in January 2025, before the Trump administration came to power, the effective U.S. tariff rate was roughly 3%. More than a doubling of American protectionism is better than a quadrupling, but it is still higher than at any time in more than 60 years.It is highly likely some affected party will challenge the use of Section 122, which has never been invoked by any president in its half century on the books.






It is a fallacy to assume that Trump will play by the rules






The law stipulates this power is to be used for a balance of payments problem. But the Department of Justice lawyers claimed in the IEEPA case that: ‘Nor does [122] have any obvious application here, where the concerns the President identified in declaring an emergency arise from trade deficits, which are conceptually distinct from balance-of-payments deficits.’ This awkward statement may come back to haunt the Trump Administration.For those outside the United States, a major question is how the many trade and investment deals Washington has imposed on countries around the world will be affected by the scrambling of U.S. tariff policy.The Financial Times was quick to opine that: ‘Analysts say the risk of retaliation is likely to deter countries from seeking to backtrack on already agreed deals.’But the Japan Times saw it differently: ‘Trump’s treasured negotiating edge dulled by tariff defeat…With a stroke of a pen, the U.S. Supreme Court wreaked havoc on President Donald Trump’s favorite method of wielding leverage over other countries.’At the very least, the uncertainty created by the Court’s decision may lead to more foot dragging by other nations as Washington attempts to finalize the details of its framework trade and investment deals with the EU, Japan, India and others. If they do, who knows what America’s hair-triggered President may do.It is a fallacy to assume that Trump will play by the rules. The 122 tariffs expire in 150 days. To be extended, Congress must vote to do so. Congress has shown no appetite for tariffs, especially with Congressional mid-term elections in November.






The bottom line is that US protectionism will continue, and it may be even more chaotic, unpredictable and disruptive






The Administration claims they can use other trade powers — Section 301 that deals with ‘unfair’ trade practices and Section 232 that allows duties for ‘national security’ purposes — to replace the 122 tariffs.But the scope of these sections is not as broad as an across the board 15% tariff. Once this becomes apparent to the president, his past behavior suggests he may simply extend the 122 tariffs or use his 301 and 232 authority in unprecedented and arguably illegal ways, challenging importers to ‘sue me’. As the IEPA suit showed, this could take months.Finally, it is not clear that the invocation of Section 122 and its 15% tariffs will help the president politically. Just before the Court ruled, the Washington Post and ABC News conducted a public opinion survey showing that 64% of Americans disapproved of how Trump was handling tariffs on imported goods.And in the wake of the Court decision a snap YouGov poll found that 60% of Americans strongly approve of striking down the IEEPA tariffs.So the bottom line is that US protectionism will continue, and it may be even more chaotic, unpredictable and disruptive.Bruce Stokes is a US-based non-resident fellow at the German Marshall Fund. Read his full biography here.Heather Hurlburt, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:At first glance, this is a more comprehensive repudiation of the Trump administration’s tariff policies than many (including me) expected.The language of the majority opinion appears to include an attempt to close off some of the other unilateral options that President Trump had said he had at his disposal.






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision. It may reflect both the breadth of corporate support for the lawsuit and concern with Trump’s recent rounds of tariff threats, including against Europe over Greenland.The SCOTUS ruling covers President Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ baseline 10% tariff that he announced on 2 April 2025, higher tariffs on many countries, and fentanyl and other “national security” tariffs.However it does NOT cover steel/aluminum and many other product-specific tariffs issued as a result of a “232” or “301” investigation. (‘232’ and ‘301’ refer to specific sections of decades-old trade laws passed by Congress, which authorize the executive branch to impose tariffs in specific circumstances, after an investigation. 232 tariffs may include national security as a justification.)President Trump still has lots of ways to impose tariffs. He’s not going to back down.I’m very struck by this phrase from Justice Kavanaugh’s dissent: ‘So the Court’s decision is not likely to greatly restrict presidential tariff authority going forward.’The court also did not mandate refunds of the tariffs collected to date, either to consumers or to manufacturers reliant on tariffed imports.Does that suggest that Chief Justice Roberts identified an approach to the law that feels like a momentous defense of the Constitution but has relatively little practical effect?Or will this ruling presage a vibe shift that gets the administration to change course?Senator Bernie Moreno, the senior Republican senator from Ohio, has called on Congress to use reconciliation to enact the president’s tariffs.This would presumably be challenging given that Republicans in both houses have joined Democrats in opposing President Trump’s tariffs.Heather Hurlburt served as Chief of Staff to US Trade Representative Katherine Tai from 2022 to 2024. Read her full Chatham House biography here.Ambassador Julián Ventura, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The 20 February US Supreme Court 6-3 decision on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) is a significant fork in the tariff-driven trade policy road taken exactly 13 months ago by President Donald Trump when he announced his America First Trade Policy.It does not, however, mark an end to his expansive use of Executive authority to shape his engagement with global trading partners.In his combative reaction to the ruling, the president previewed alternative legal authorities that his administration will use as a basis for continued tariff action, including a new 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows for temporary import surcharges or import quotas to address balance-of-payments issues.






Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game






With details on scope, applicability and implementation of additional actions still unclear, US trade partners around the world will scramble in the coming days to determine the potential impact on their respective deals or framework agreements reached with Washington. Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game.The ruling comes on the heels of the release of the US Census Bureau’s 2025 international trade data confirming Mexico and Canada’s place as the first and second US trading partners, export markets and sources of imports, and as the three countries undertake the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA)’s first joint review.In North America, with intraregional annual trade at almost 2 trillion dollars and millions of jobs and investment decisions linked to the continuity of the agreement, a great deal is at stake.In its initial reaction to the ruling, the government of Canada stated that it reinforces its view that the IEEPA tariffs ‘are unjustified’. Mexico´s Secretary of the Economy said he would be reaching out to his US counterparts and await more details on the announced 10% global tariff. Both countries were subject to IEEPA tariffs (35% on Canada and 25% on Mexico) on non-USMCA compliant exports, in addition to various Section 232 sectorial tariffs which continue to apply.It’s important to keep in mind that roughly 85% of massive Canadian and Mexican USMCA-compliant exports – totalling approximately 780 billion dollars – maintains tariff-free access to the US market.Beyond specific negotiating strategies with Washington, Ottawa and Mexico City will continue to focus on reducing uncertainty and preserving their current relative competitive advantages in a rapidly changing tariff environment.Ambassador Julián Ventura is a career diplomat, currently on leave from the Mexican Foreign Service, with over 33 years in public service. Read his full Chatham House biography here.Professor Roland Paris, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs may have removed one instrument from his tariff toolkit, but it has done nothing to make US trade policy more predictable. If anything, it may herald even greater volatility.Trump retains several alternative instruments now that tariffs imposed under the IEEPA have been ruled unlawful. Each entails procedural hurdles, evidentiary thresholds, time limits and litigation risks. Yet, as Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed in his dissenting opinion, “the Court’s decision might not prevent Presidents from imposing most, if not all, of these same sorts of tariffs under other statutory authorities.”That Trump, visibly angered by the ruling, quoted Kavanaugh’s statement not just once but twice suggests that he is not reconsidering his long-held belief in the benefits of tariffs. He has already pledged to introduce a new global tariff of 15 per cent, while signalling that further measures may follow.For US trade partners – including several that negotiated agreements intended to reduce IEEPA tariffs on their exports – the outlook is unclear. The uncertain status of those arrangements, together with the prospect of new tariffs, now adds an additional layer of unpredictability to an already unstable picture.






The US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner






Canada, for its part, gains little from the removal of the IEEPA tariffs, since goods compliant with the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement were already exempt. Meanwhile, the tariffs inflicting real pain on key Canadian sectors – including autos, steel, aluminium and lumber – remain in place because they rest on different statutory authorities. And any new US global tariffs may prove more damaging than the IEEPA measures if they eliminate existing exemptions.The logic of Canadian prime minister Mark Carney’s speech at Davos, in other words, remains unchanged: the US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner, leaving its jilted allies with little choice but to diversify their trade partnerships and invest in their own resilience.Canada-based Roland Paris is director of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa, and former foreign policy adviser to the prime minister of Canada. Read his full Chatham House biography here.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Local Government Finance Act 1988 (Prescription of Non-Domestic Rating Multipliers) (England) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Utilities Act 2000 (Amendment of Section 105) Order 2026
Article 2 inserts new paragraphs into section 105 (3) of the Utilities Act 2000 (c. 27) (“the Act”).

The Hill
Open 
Greenland PM says thanks but no thanks to Trump hospital ship offer
Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen is turning down an offer from President Trump, who has openly sought to acquire the island from Denmark, to send a Navy hospital ship to his country. “It’s going to be a no thank you from here,” Nielsen wrote on Facebook. “President Trump’s idea to send an American hospital ship...

The Hill
Open 
Anthropic CEO to meet Hegseth amid dispute over military use of Claude
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei is meeting with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday at the Pentagon as the company continues discussions with the department around the terms of use of its AI model Claude, a Pentagon official confirmed to The Hill on Monday. The AI firm has increasingly found itself at odds with the Pentagon in recent...

The Hill
Open 
Appeals court sides with Louisiana on Ten Commandments in schools
The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on Friday in favor of a Louisiana law that says the Ten Commandments must be displayed in every public school classroom.   The appeals court said a preliminary lower court injunction against the law, which was challenged on free speech grounds, was premature since the displays never went up in classrooms.  The...

The Hill
Open 
After Trump, the US needs a Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Without a complete record of the Trump years, history will be written by those empowered by Trump.

The Hill
Open 
Abbott urges Texans to 'stay alert' amid chaos between US, Mexican drug cartels
Gov. Greg Abbott urged Texans to stay alert for federal travel warnings from the U.S. Department of State amid the ongoing chaos in Mexico following Sunday’s killing of infamous drug lord Nemesio ‘El Mencho’ Oseguera Cervantes, of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

The Hill
Open 
Netflix boss dismisses Trump's demand for Susan Rice to be fired
Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos brushed aside a demand by President Trump that the company fire former Democratic diplomat Susan Rice from its board. Sarandos was discussing Netflix's tentative deal to buy Warner Brothers Discovery's sprawling movie and television studio, a potential $70 billion acquisition that has raised antitrust concerns. “He likes to do a lot...

The Hill
Open 
Blood test could predict when Alzheimer's symptoms will begin
A new study conducted by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis researchers found that a single blood test could predict when someone is likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease. The study, published last week in Nature Medicine, determined that a test to find the level of p-tau217 protein in an individual’s plasma can be...

The Hill
Open 
American Olympians are supposed to speak their minds
Eileen Gu and Alysa Liu are two young women at the top of their respective sports, both children of Chinese immigrants, who have been used as pawns in the US-China rivalry, with Gu facing criticism for taking money from the Chinese government to compete for China and Liu being praised for representing the U.S.

The Hill
Open 
FDA proposes new treatment approval pathway for ultra-rare diseases
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Monday announced a new proposal for flexible drug approval pathway treatments addressing ultra-rare diseases. The FDA unveiled draft guidance on a proposed regulatory pathway for individualized therapies, treatments for rare conditions that affect a very small population, with the proposal specifically focusing on genome editing and RNA-based therapies....

The Hill
Open 
Supreme Court to hear oil companies' effort to toss local climate suit
The Supreme Court will consider a bid from oil companies to toss out a locality’s suit blaming them for climate change. The justices decided to take up a request from ExxonMobil and Suncor to toss a suit brought against them by the city and county of Boulder, Colo. Their petition asks the judges to go...

The Register
Open 
Artemis II headed back to the bay; helium issues force another delay
Sending humans around the Moon in February, er, March - now April 2026, maybe The quest to return to the Moon has hit another snag. NASA is delaying Artemis II again, as interrupted helium flow to the rocket’s upper stage forces a rollback to the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and wipes out the March launch window.…

Gizmodo
Open 
2,000-Year-Old Skulls Reveal How Vietnam’s Early Influencers Dyed Their Teeth Pitch Black—For Life
The discovery presents some of the oldest physical evidence that tooth-blackening trends in Vietnam have stayed consistent for a very, very long time.

Gizmodo
Open 
Funko’s ‘Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Pops Are Filled With Knightly Honor (Exclusive)
We might have to wait another year for more 'Knight of the Seven Kingdoms', but you can carry on your own Dunk and Egg adventures on your shelf, thanks to Funko.

Gizmodo
Open 
This Is What Nothing’s Next ‘Transparent’ Phone Looks Like
Credit for standing out like always.

CNET News
Open 
Even Faster Than an Air Fryer: 'Golden Heater' Cooking Technology Makes Its Debut
Meet the Celerity oven -- a high-speed oven with "golden heater" technology that can cook a chicken three times faster than a standard oven.

CNET News
Open 
Apple Could Launch at Least Five New Products, Including iPhone 17E, Next Week
A Bloomberg report suggests a potential one-two-three punch of product launches over consecutive days from Apple, including three new MacBooks and an iPad with M4 chip.

Mail Online
Open 
British Airways cabin crew member accused of masturbating in front of female colleague was unfairly dismissed, tribunal rules
Okan Dalkiran was arrested aboard a flight in August 2023 after a female colleague reported seeing him masturbating in a Heathrow Airport 'rest centre'.

Mail Online
Open 
Why do some people with Tourette's shout racial slurs - and does it mean they're racist? Experts weight in amid BAFTAs 'N-word' backlash
Leading experts have condemned the backlash against a tourette's campaigner after he was heard shouting racial slurs from the audience at the BAFTA's.

Mail Online
Open 
RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: We don't know the identity of the officer who faced down a group of Muslim men and reminded them in Britain we have a tradition of free speech. But she deserves a medal
The East End has always been a multicultural melting pot. Huguenots, then Jews, then Turks, then immigrants from the Indian subcontinent. These days, however, it feels like a Muslim monoculture.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Farhan has Hundred hopes despite Indian owners not signing Pakistan players
Sahibzada Farhan ‘very hopeful’ of securing a dealPakistan players make up 63 of 710-man auction longlistPakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan remains hopeful of securing a contract to play in the Hundred this year, despite reports that the tournament’s four Indian-owned teams will not consider signing players from the country, but he admitted that selection decisions are “not in our hands”.Farhan, who is the leading run-scorer at the T20 World Cup, is one of 63 Pakistani players on the 710-name longlist put forward for the men’s auction on 12 March. Despite the rumours, more Pakistani players have made themselves available than those from any other foreign nation, with all but two of the country’s 15-man World Cup squad hoping for a deal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Keir Starmer opens investigation into Josh Simons over targeting of reporters
PM asks ethics adviser to examine conduct of Cabinet Office minister amid Labour Together scandal falloutUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has opened a formal investigation into a Cabinet Office minister involved in falsely accusing journalists of having links to pro-Russian propaganda.The prime minister’s decision follows revelations in the Guardian that Josh Simons, who was running the thinktank Labour Together at the time, was also involved in telling British intelligence officials that another journalist was “living with” the daughter of a former adviser to Jeremy Corbyn. Officials were told by Simons’ team that the former adviser was “suspected of links to Russian intelligence”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fewer children in England to get EHCPs by 2035 under Send overhaul
Bridget Phillipson announces plans to make special educational needs system less reliant on cash-strapped councilsUK politics live – latest updatesBridget Phillipson has presented sweeping plans to overhaul special educational needs provision in England, with a package of measures designed to make the system less reliant on cash-strapped councils and give schools greater responsibility.The education secretary’s long-awaited Send proposals will result in hundreds of thousands fewer students getting education, health and care plans (EHCPs) than would otherwise have been the case. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Video footage shows former peer being driven away shortly after being escorted from his London home by officersUK politics live – latest updatesPeter Mandelson has been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office, the Metropolitan police have said.Video footage showed him being driven away from his home in an unmarked car shortly after being escorted from his home by officers. Continue reading...

BBC Technology News
Open 
'The end of Xbox': fans split as AI exec takes over Microsoft's top gaming role
The executive shake-up has sparked online debate about new boss Asha Sharma's gaming credentials.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Sports App Expands to More Countries and Leagues
Starting today, the Apple Sports app on the iPhone is available in 36 additional countries across the Caribbean and Latin America, including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Peru, and others.





Apple Sports first launched in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. in February 2024, and it later expanded to Europe and Mexico. The app shows scores, stats, standings, upcoming games, and more for a variety of leagues and competitions. With the Caribbean and Latin America expansion, the app is now available in 80 countries.



Also as of today, the app now supports the following six Latin men's soccer (fútbol) leagues:

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Categoría Primera A

Liga de Primera

Liga Pro

Liga Profesional de Fútbol

Primera División del Perú

In the "Search" section of Apple Sports, there is a new "Soccer" category that contains all of the soccer leagues that are available in the app.



Finally, Apple says fans can now follow men's and women's NCAA tournaments in real time, with brackets showcasing matchups and results at a glance for each round.



These changes arrived in version 3.8 of the app, which is available now in the App Store.Tag: Apple SportsThis article, 'Apple Sports App Expands to More Countries and Leagues' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 18 Pro to Revive Feature Samsung Dropped Years Ago
Apple's iPhone 18 Pro and ‌iPhone 18‌ Pro Max are expected to resurrect a major feature Samsung's flagship Galaxy smartphones dropped years ago, according to a multitude of rumors.





The ‌iPhone 18‌ Pro and ‌iPhone 18‌ Pro Max are now widely expected to feature a significantly upgraded main camera with a variable aperture. An aperture is the opening within a camera lens that controls the amount of light reaching the image sensor.



In December 2024, Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo was first to say that that the main rear camera on both ‌iPhone 18‌ Pro models will offer variable aperture. A more recent report from October 2025 said Apple was moving ahead with plans to bring the technology to next-generation iPhones and was discussing components with suppliers.



A variable aperture allows the camera to adjust the amount of light that reaches the sensor with tiny blades. This means that in dark environments, the aperture can be opened to receive more light, while in light environments, it can be closed to prevent over-exposure. It also should provide users with greater control over depth of field, which refers to how sharp a subject appears in the foreground compared to the background.



Apple has never used a variable aperture on an iPhone camera before. The main cameras on all of the ‌iPhone‌ 14 Pro through iPhone 17 Pro models have a fixed aperture of ƒ/1.78, and the lens is always fully open and shooting with this aperture.



Samsung previously brought a variable aperture camera to its Galaxy S9 and Galaxy S10 models in 2018 and 2019. The feature has appeared on other Android smartphones in recent years, such as the Xiaomi 14 Ultra, Honor Magic 7 Pro, and Huawei Mate series. Due to the way that the components increased device thickness and raised its cost, Samsung dropped the feature in 2020, even though it was more advanced than the fixed-aperture cameras it moved to.



Interestingly, Samsung is reportedly planning to follow Apple in adding a variable aperture to its smartphone cameras. Samsung apparently sees adding a variable aperture as "necessary to increase camera competitiveness," replacing software correction with physical hardware. The company hopes that in investing in variable aperture camera technology, thickness can be reduced and costs will reduce over time.



Samsung has reportedly asked multiple camera module partners to develop variable apertures and provide samples in light of Apple's plans. The feature is in early development and final installation on future Galaxy devices has not yet been confirmed, but there is said to be a "strong will" to introduce it.



Beyond a variable aperture, the ‌iPhone 18‌ Pro models are rumored to feature a smaller Dynamic Island, the A20 chip, longer battery life, the C2 modem, a simplified Camera Control button, the N1 wireless chip, and more. They are expected to launch in the fall alongside the first foldable ‌iPhone‌. This article, 'iPhone 18 Pro to Revive Feature Samsung Dropped Years Ago' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
These are the best mattresses for back pain, recommended by an osteopath
All provide crucial spinal support and pressure relief to help you sleep in more comfort

BBC UK News
Open 
Woman 'cowered' before man accused of killing her, trial hears
Lee Milne has denied culpable homicide after Kimberley Milne fell from a motorway bridge in July 2023.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bath BachFest review – joyous and mesmerising music making
Guildhall & St Mary’s Bathwick, BathThe festival’s new artistic director Adrian Brendel presided over – and was a key part of – a day of virtuosic and adventurous performances Taking up the mantle of the late Amelia Freedman as artistic director of Bath Bachfest is no small task for Adrian Brendel, but his determination to breathe new life into the three-day festival is apparent, not least in establishing the BachFest Ensemble that unites highly talented players in the early stages of notable careers.The energy and commitment of the younger players was palpable and, in a concert of music by Handel, Purcell, Bach and Vivaldi, their collaboration with an older cohort – Brendel himself anchoring the ensemble as cellist, together with oboist Nicholas Daniel and the American countertenor Reginald Mobley – there was a very real sense of their joy in performing together and the audience’s in being part of the equation. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
No business like snow business: blizzard shuts down the north-east US – in pictures
As another major storm brings to the area up to 2ft of snow, people brave the weather to commute and shovel Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Truly accessible to everyone’: how to start yoga
Some think yoga isn’t for them – but there’s ‘something for everybody’. Experts share what to know about the mindful practice that can improve strength and sleepCountless articles and studies tout the benefits of yoga. It can improve balance, strength, flexibility, digestion and sleep. It can also reduce stress and support mental wellbeing. And yet many people feel like yoga isn’t for them because their bodies don’t look or move a certain way.“That is how I felt before I started practicing yoga,” says Jessamyn Stanley, who has written two books about yoga and co-founded the yoga app The Underbelly. “I always thought yoga was just for thin, white women,” she says. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners producer says BAFTA British Tourette's guest also hurled N-word at her after he shouted it at stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo
Hannah Beachler says John Davidson also said the racist term to her at
Sunday's ceremony in London.

Mail Online
Open 
Dark truth about Mexico: It's sold as a family holiday paradise. But I live there and know the unsavoury truth - from hotel shootings to the rot beneath the surface. These are the hard questions to ask before booking
Having clocked up four years living in Mexico, I've heard countless wide-eyed travellers call it paradise on Earth. And in many ways, they're not wrong.

Mail Online
Open 
The nine steps I took which changed my middle-aged body forever, by DR AMY SHAH: How I finally shifted my perimenopausal 'mum tum' - and the breakfast that really works
'I was always rushing. My cortisol, my adrenaline, was always going. I thought that sleeping, stopping or going for a walk outside were for people who were retired or lazy.'

Mail Online
Open 
Peter Mandelson is arrested by police amid probe into alleged misconduct in public office
The former Labour grandee was seen getting into a vehicle flanked by detectives this afternoon.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
PinkPantheress makes history by winning Brit Award for best producer
The pop star is the first woman to be named best producer since the award was created in 1977.

Mail Online
Open 
Met Gala fans vow to boycott as Vogue announces the 2026 theme... but fails to disclose major supporter
Met Gala guests finally received word about the dress code for this year's upcoming ball - but some fashion fans have already vowed to boycott the event over Bezos and Sanchez footing the bill.

Mail Online
Open 
I rented for 10 months without missing a single payment. Then I received a call from my landlord that changed everything... and discovered I'd been victim of this shocking new rental scam. These are the signs I missed
As an organised person, I've never missed a payment on anything. I have a perfect credit score and live a law-abiding life. How was I, a professional and trustworthy individual, in this position?

Mail Online
Open 
Money saving expert Martin Lewis apologises for gatecrashing GMB interview with Kemi Badenoch, admitting 'you handled it far better than I would have'
The Conservative Party leader was 'ambushed' as she discussed plans to cut student loan repayments for struggling graduates with hosts Susanna Reid and Ed Balls.

Mail Online
Open 
LIZ JONES: This picture of Kate at the Baftas says it all. We are tired of reading between the lines - it's time for the truth
It was business as usual for the Prince and Princess of Wales at the Baftas. Kate wore a chiffon Gucci gown she debuted in 2019. And indeed it felt as though we were all inhabiting a time warp.

Mail Online
Open 
Jamie Foxx hits out at BAFTA N-word controversy - as Tourette's charity says involuntary tics are 'not a reflection of the sufferer's beliefs'
John Davidson, who has Tourette's, was heard yelling the racial slur while black actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented at Sunday's awards ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Peter Mandelson is led away by police amid probe into alleged misconduct in public office
The former Labour grandee was seen getting into a vehicle flanked by detectives this afternoon.

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners producer says BAFTA British Tourette's actor also hurled N-word at her after he shouted it at stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo
Hannah Beachler says John Davidson also said the racist term to her at
Sunday's ceremony in London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lovejoy episode helps antiques dealer identify stolen Napoleon III artefacts
Repeat of BBC series gave clue to Paul Gostelow about 19th-century altar cards taken from crypt in HampshireTwo priceless artefacts stolen more than a decade ago from the crypt of Napoleon III in England have been recovered after an antiques dealer realised he had them while watching a repeat of the comedy drama Lovejoy.The wooden 19th-century altar cards were taken in a burglary at St Michael’s Abbey in Farnborough, Hampshire in February 2014 and were feared lost for ever. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Football Daily | James Milner and a record number of shifts keeping his heart rate above resting
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!When James Milner made his Premier League debut for Leeds he was 16 years old. He came on as an 84th-minute substitute for Jason Wilcox, the current Manchester United director of football, to help close out a win over West Ham in which Harry Kewell, Nick Barmby and Mark Viduka scored. Pathé news reports from the time reveal that Westlife were top of the charts and a few days later Michael Jackson would dangle his baby from a Berlin balcony. Fabian Hürzeler, Milner’s current gaffer at Brighton, was a nine-year-old urchin, learning his times tables and being tucked into his race-car bed. More than 20 years later, Milner is 40, still playing in the top flight, and is the living personification of a hard-working, clean-living, low maintenance model professional who has finally eclipsed Gareth Barry to make the all-time Premier League appearance record his own. Frankly, after 23 seasons at six different clubs doing the bare minimum just to stay relevant, the most obvious conclusion to draw is that the universally admired and well-liked “Millie” is apparently not all he’s cracked up to be.In the film The Thursday Murder Club, Pierce Brosnan’s character is an ardent West Ham fan, which got me thinking. Relegation would be A Long Way Down. Is there No Escape for the Hammers? They may not be The Greatest, but they’ve got the mentality of a Survivor. The Final Score on the weekend didn’t do them any favours but I don’t see it as The World’s End because there are plenty of matches left to play” – Peter Oh (and no other Pierce Brosnan superfans).I’m sure that Barry Glendenning would be able to look after himself and have a quiet word with your correspondent who took him to task about using the term ‘centred around’ (Friday’s letters). But if he’s otherwise engaged, I’ll weigh in and point out that it’s a perfectly legitimate phrase, and, if Professor Google Ngrams is to be believed, has been on the rise since around 2010. It still only manages to account currently for 0.000037% of all two-word combinations in English, but since the figure for the rival ‘centred on’ is the only slightly more impressive 0.00013, I think honour is satisfied” – Charles Antaki.Maybe this is just the myopic view of an unmarried bachelor, but on the topic of how to make VAR better (Friday’s letters), officials must be tying themselves in knots working out whether something is both ‘clear’ and ‘obvious’ – maybe if they just concentrated on meeting one of these criteria, they would feel less pressure and take less time” – Nick Livesey.Lads, it’s Spurs” – Marc Meldrum.This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
I almost lost my leg after crash, says Vonn
Lindsey Vonn says she nearly lost her leg from the injuries she sustained in a heavy crash at the Winter Olympics - and thanks the doctor who saved her from an amputation.

Mail Online
Open 
Post-mortem test for teenage couple, aged 15 and 17, found dead at holiday park are 'inconclusive'
Cherish Bean, 15, and Ethan Slater, 17, were found at a rental property at Little Eden Holiday Park in Bridlington, East Riding, last week.

Mail Online
Open 
First look at Waitrose's Easter 2026 line-up - as it brings back fan favourite with a new twist
The British retailer has unveiled its highly-anticipated Easter 2026 line-up, and there's an impressive selection of moreish sweet treats and savoury delights to mark the special occasion.

Mail Online
Open 
Files related to Peter Mandelson's appointment as ambassador by Starmer to be published in weeks
Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister Darren Jones told MPs in the Commons that officials have been trawling through the files.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Falling giants? Werder Bremen, Wolfsburg and Gladbach circle Bundesliga drain | Andy Brassell
Threat of relegation looms over former league champions who can still be accused of living off past glories“We currently have zero self-confidence,” lamented Marco Friedl, “and it shows.” Werder Bremen had just come to the end of a 13th successive winless game and there was a sense that they didn’t realise that the bottom was quite this low – if indeed they are quite there. “I often have the right words, but today I’m pretty much speechless because I couldn’t have imagined the game ending like this.”It is difficult to predict quite how this season will finish at the bottom of the Bundesliga but it feels like it has a big ending in store, with at least one big name set to tumble. This felt like a big moment for Bremen, the 2004 double winners, in freefall for months and unable to find the decisive moment away to St Pauli as Sunday evening drew in. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘There are so many images I’d like to forget’: Julia Kochetova’s astonishing photographs of war in Ukraine
From the frontline to underground shelters to children’s funerals, Kochetova has captured the war in Ukraine with power and humanity for the Guardian. ‘I have the same scars as the people I photograph,’ she says ahead of a major showJulia Kochetova is unlike most of the people who cover Russia’s invasion of Ukraine for the Guardian. The photographer lives in Kyiv; she is Ukrainian. It is her country that is being invaded, her friends who are being killed.The war that began in 2014 and brutally escalated on 24 February in 2022 has infused every part of her existence. It is fundamental to her life choices, her relationships, her friendships, her career (when she was younger she had planned to go to art school in Germany, but photojournalism beckoned). She is at home on the frontline, and could give you battlefield first aid if you needed it. She is also a vegetarian who makes an exception for meat-based borsch; reads poetry when we’re on the road together; and can wash and brush out her waist-length hair in unusual locations and at surprising speed. Her driving style lies somewhere on the spectrum between chaotic and shrewd, and she can recommend you a good place for a manicure in Kyiv. She is 32 years old. She has organised more funerals than anyone should have to do in a lifetime. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sam Altman defends AI’s energy toll by saying it also takes a lot to ‘train a human’
OpenAI CEO also downplayed concerns about how much water datacenters require at AI summit in IndiaThe OpenAI boss, Sam Altman, has tried to ease concerns about how much power is used by artificial intelligence models by comparing it to the amount of energy required by human development.“People talk about how much energy it takes to train an AI model – but it also takes a lot of energy to train a human,” Altman told the Indian Express recently while in India for the AI Impact summit. “It takes about 20 years of life – and all the food you consume during that time – before you become smart.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fewer children in England to get EHCPs by 2035 under Send overhaul
Bridget Phillipson announces plans to make special educational needs system less reliant on cash-strapped councilsUK politics live – latest updatesBridget Phillipson has presented sweeping plans to overhaul special educational needs provision in England, with a package of measures designed to make the system less reliant on cash-strapped councils and give schools greater responsibility.The education secretary on Monday announced her long-awaited Send proposals, which will result in hundreds of thousands fewer students getting education, health and care plans (EHCPs) than would otherwise have been the case. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
AIs can generate near-verbatim copies of novels from training data

Sky News Home
Open 
Police investigating 'abhorrent' online racist abuse of top flight footballers
An investigation has been launched after several football clubs reported online racial abuse of their players over the weekend.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
What to Know About At-Home STI Tests: Pros, Cons, and Recommendations (2026)
It’s easier than ever to test for sexually transmitted infections at home. We break down whether you should.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Lamborghini is the Latest Automaker to Pull the Plug on Luxury EVs
The CEO of the supercar company says demand for high-end full electric cars is “almost zero.” Could this mean Ferrari's Luce will be dead on arrival?

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The US Had a Big Battery Boom Last Year
Despite Donald Trump’s unrelenting attacks on renewable energy, there’s a quiet revolution happening on US grids.

Mail Online
Open 
Internet star trapped in Mexico by cartel is told to stop complaining by one of her followers... as she says water supplies are running low
Conservative beauty coach Tracy Lane is stuck in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico after the killing of cartel boss Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes caused violent uproar across the country.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Duterte at ‘very heart’ of murderous drug crackdowns in Philippines, ICC told
Ex-president, accused of crimes against humanity, selected targets and promised immunity for death squad members, prosecutor saysRodrigo Duterte, the former president of the Philippines, was “at the very heart” of brutal anti-drugs campaigns that led to the killing of thousands of people, prosecutors at the International criminal court (ICC) have argued, as they called for charges against him to proceed to trial.Duterte, 80, who was arrested in Manila last year and flown to The Hague, is facing three counts of crimes against humanity over campaigns against drug users and dealers during his presidency, and his earlier tenure as mayor of the city of Davao. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Farhan has Hundred hopes despite Indian owners not signing Pakistan players
Sahibzada Farhan ‘very hopeful’ of securing a dealPakistan players make up 63 of 710-man auction longlistPakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan has said he remains hopeful of securing a contract to play in the Hundred this year, despite reports that the tournament’s four Indian-owned teams will not consider signing players from the country, but he admitted that selection decisions are “not in our hands”.Farhan, who is the leading run-scorer at the T20 World Cup, is one of 63 Pakistani players on the 710-name longlist put forward for the men’s auction on 12 March. Despite the rumours, more Pakistani players have made themselves available than those from any other foreign country with all but two of the country’s 15-man World Cup squad hoping for a deal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Study reveals whistling secret of horses’ whinny
Scientists have discovered source of neigh’s unique combination of high- and low-pitched sounds Horses whinny to find new friends, greet old ones and celebrate happy moments like feeding time.How exactly horses produce that distinctive sound – also called a neigh – has long eluded scientists. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sam Altman defends AI’s energy toll by saying it also takes a lot to ‘train a human’
OpenAI CEO also downplayed concerns about how much water datacenters require at AI summit in IndiaOpenAI boss Sam Altman has tried to ease concerns about how much power is used by artificial intelligence models by comparing it to the amount of energy required by human development.“People talk about how much energy it takes to train an AI model – but it also takes a lot of energy to train a human,” Altman told The Indian Express recently while in India for the AI Impact summit. “It takes about 20 years of life – and all the food you consume during that time – before you become smart.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Profoundly moving’: Netflix’s posthumous celebrity interview series is a marvel
Famous Last Words is a series of interviews conducted with notable names and only released after their death and it offers an incredible opportunityExactly one day after the death of actor Eric Dane, a new show appeared on Netflix. Entitled Famous Last Words, it consisted of an interview with none other than Eric Dane himself. While at first the timing of the release might have seemed coincidental at best and exploitative at worst, the reality of the interview was something else entirely.Dane, it transpired, had recorded the interview in full knowledge that he was dying. What’s more, he conducted it on the understanding that it would only be released in the event of his death. Because this is the conceit behind Famous Last Words. It exists as a living obituary, as an opportunity to go on the record for the very last time to contextualise their life in a manner of their choosing. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Moment determined woodpecker named Rambo attacks Ring doorbell for 15 minutes... before breaking it
Stephen Brough, 71, was surprised to see the bird attacking the Stick Up Cam outside his home in Tonbridge, Kent, when he tuned into the livestream recently.

Mail Online
Open 
Actor who starred in movie about Tourette's sufferer John Davidson says BAFTAs should have warned stars before N-word outburst
Scottish actor Thierry Mabonga, who was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said actors should have been warned about Davidson's condition.

Mail Online
Open 
Melania Trump slammed for making 'disgraceful' fashion choice at the Governors Dinner: 'It's inappropriate'
The First Lady's outfit had everyone talking as she stepped out at the Governors Dinner in Washington, DC.

Mail Online
Open 
Virus experts warn new triple wave of winter bugs battering Britain
Britain is being battered by a tidal wave of winter viruses, despite flu cases steadily falling, experts warned today.

Sky News Home
Open 
Benfica player provisionally suspended by UEFA amid Vinicius Junior racism allegations
Gianluca Prestianni has been provisionally suspended by UEFA for Benfica's Champions League game against Real Madrid on Wednesday following allegations he racially abused Vinicius Junior.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
What could Mexico cartel violence mean for World Cup?
BBC Sport explores the unfolding security situation in Mexico and the potential impact on this summer's World Cup.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11058 Domain Hosting - shcp23 services down (Close)
Services have been restored and SHCP23 is working as expected.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 09:30

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 14:00

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 14:30

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 15:44

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Deutsche Welle
Open 
EU freezes US trade deal after Supreme Court tariff ruling
European officials are asking Washington for clarity on Donald Trump's new 15% tariff before they can move ahead with the deal.

TechRadar News
Open 
The Disco Elysium studio's next game just got a free demo — here's where to play it

TechRadar News
Open 
After a few hours with WWE 2K26, the wrestling sim keeps getting better, even if the changes are not too flashy

TechRadar News
Open 
WWE Champion Drew McIntyre 'had them all' when it came to wrestling games: 'Those War Zone days were some of the greatest days of my life'

TechRadar News
Open 
Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today after alleged DDoS attack

TechRadar News
Open 
Working outdoors or in extreme conditions? The SanDisk Extreme Portable is one of the best external SSDs we ever tested— and it’s $250 off

TechRadar News
Open 
Beat the RAM crisis: Get the TeamGroup DDR5-6000 RAM for under $200 right now using this voucher code

TechRadar News
Open 
Ditch the desktop tower: This Windows 11 Pro mini PC deal is perfect for home offices - but be quick, the clock is ticking on this $278 compact computer

TechRadar News
Open 
Mullvad VPN takes its banned anti-surveillance ad to the streets after UK TV rejection

TechRadar News
Open 
Sam Altman says ChatGPT water use claims are 'completely untrue' — but admits AI energy use is a concern

WikiNews
Open 
Caloundra through to next round of 2026 Australia Cup preliminaries
Monday, February 23, 2026
 


Australia
Related articles


14 October 2025: Taskforce launched as search for Gus Lamont expands in South Australia's north
10 September 2025: Shark attack kills Australian surfer off Long Reef Beach, Sydney
10 September 2025: Wikinews interviews Australian Fusion Party President Drew Wolfendale
2 July 2025: Third person charged in relation to Pheobe Bishop's alleged murder
3 June 2025: NSW DCCEEW researchers discover critically endangered Leadbeater's possum in Kosciuszko National Park, Australia

Location of Australia



Collaborate!

Pillars of Wikinews writing
Writing an article
Australia

Caloundra have qualified for the next round of soccer's Australia Cup qualifiers with a 4-1 win over Pacific Pines on Saturday night in Meridan Plains, Queensland.

Caloundra celebrate a goal against Pacific Pines. Image: Patrick Gillett.
"[We had a] good second half," said Caloundra captain Kaine Frew. "Obviously first competitive match [of the year] tonight. It was good for the boys to get the cobwebs out. We've played a few easier sort of preseason games and obviously they've come up from the Gold Coast."
Three goals in the space of ten minutes secured Caloundra's advancement after the scores were tied at 1 all at half time.
"We started a bit slow and obviously we got a few new players," Frew said. "So we're all just still gelling. But yeah, no, it was a really good second half. We're happy with that. And we'll take that into training next week and be ready for round one."
Caloundra's next game is scheduled to be against Brisbane Knights as part of the Football Queensland Premier League 2 opening round on February 28.
"[Brisbane Kights are] a big club, but we really don't know [what to expect], to be honest," said Frew. "We're just going to worry about ourselves. Obviously, we think we can be competitive this year there's no doubt about that. As long as we can play 90 minutes. Not like tonight where, you know, first half an hour wasn't great. We need to play like we did in the second half for the whole game."




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources[edit]




Wikinews

This article features first-hand journalism by Wikinews members. See the collaboration page for more details.





Wikinews

This article features first-hand journalism by Wikinews members. See the collaboration page for more details.


Kappa Queensland Cup — Football Queensland, February 23, 2026 (date of access)
Caloundra FC v Pacific Pines — Squadi, February 22, 2026
Patrick Gillett. Caloundra on to next round of Cup competition — Pattman Sport, February 22, 2026.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#FFFFFF;border:1.5px solid #a7d7f9;border-radius:9px;padding:4px 6px;width:36%}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header{font-size:1.1em}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{content:"";display:block;width:60%;height:2px;background-color:#a7d7f9;margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:6px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{margin:2px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{display:inline-flex;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:36px;height:36px;background-color:#e0e5ec;border:1px solid #dddddd;border-radius:3px;cursor:pointer;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.05);transition:transform 0.15s ease,box-shadow 0.15s ease,background-color 0.15s ease,border-color 0.15s ease}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{transform:translateY(-2px);box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.14)}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{transform:none;box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.08)}@media(max-width:768px){.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{width:100%;padding:10px 14px}}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}@media(prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra{flex-basis:100%;display:flex;justify-content:center}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra .mw-collapsible-content{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin-top:3px}







  Share this article

Mail Online
Open 
Parents are charged with the murder of their three-month-old baby boy after he was found at home with 'significant injuries'
Paramedics were called to a report of an unresponsive baby at a house in North Finchley, London, at 11.34am on January 30.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC removes article amid claims it suggested care home boss stole £250,000 from residents after failing to get help for his gambling addiction because he's gay
Readers reacted with fury after convicted fraudster Ben Howard was 'portrayed as the victim'.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother, 40, who was devastated by 'empty nest syndrome' tells Ben Fogle how she's spent five YEARS walking across the US to escape her grief
Randilyn Allred, 40, grew up in suburban Missouri , and has worked a number of odd jobs over the years, including stints as a veterinary technician and aircraft mechanic.

Mail Online
Open 
Black actor who starred in movie about Tourette's sufferer John Davidson says BAFTAs should have warned stars before N-word outburst
Scottish actor Thierry Mabonga, who was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said actors should have been warned about Davidson's condition.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘It’s an expensive piece of equipment’: My neighbor asked to borrow my snowblower. Do I say yes?
Heavy snowfall rates of 2-3 inches per hour and gusty winds of 40-70 miles per hour hit the Northeast on Monday.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Snowstorm hits airline stocks as flight cancellations near 5,000
Airline stocks are taking a hit as a major Northeast snowstorm is leading to thousands of flight cancellations.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Domino’s earnings show it’s ‘just not true’ that people are eating less pizza
Domino’s stock was rallying Monday after a sales beat showed that the quick-service pizza category remains healthy, despite the weakness seen by rivals.

Slashdot
Open 
Climate Physicists Face the Ghosts in Their Machines: Clouds
Climate scientists trying to predict how much hotter the planet will get have long grappled with a surprisingly stubborn problem -- clouds, which both reflect sunlight and trap heat, account for more than half the variation between climate predictions and are the main reason warming projections for the next 50 years range from 2 to 6 degrees Celsius.

Two research groups are now racing to close that gap using AI, though they disagree sharply on method. Tapio Schneider at Caltech built CLIMA, a model that uses machine learning to optimize cloud parameters within traditional physics equations; it will be unveiled at a conference in Japan in March. Chris Bretherton at the Allen Institute for AI took a different path -- his ACE2 neural network, released in 2024, learns from 50 years of atmospheric data and largely bypasses physics equations altogether.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
AOC’s 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED gaming monitor is down to $380
It’s tough not to gush about a 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED gaming monitor that costs under $400 (I’ve done it before!). AOC’s G-Sync-compatible model with a 240Hz refresh rate and a near-instant response time is down to $379.99 at Best Buy, which matches the lowest price I’ve ever seen for a model with these specs. This […]

The Verge
Open 
Yep, it’s fast: Donut Lab’s solid-state battery gets its first test result
Since announcing earlier this year that it was on the cusp of a major battery breakthrough, Finnish startup Donut Lab has faced a lot of questions, and plenty of skepticism, about its production-ready, solid-state battery. Could the company really make a fast-charging battery at scale while avoiding some of the theoretical production headaches that have […]

The Verge
Open 
If Big Tech cared about fighting AI slop, it wouldn’t be drowning us in it
As 2025 drew to a close, Instagram head Adam Mosseri ended the year by doom-posting about AI. "Authenticity is becoming infinitely reproducible," Mosseri lamented. "Everything that made creators matter - the ability to be real, to connect, to have a voice that couldn't be faked - is now accessible to anyone with the right tools." […]

The Verge
Open 
Kohler’s new shower reuses dirty water to get you clean
Kohler claims its new Anthem EvoCycle smart shower system can deliver "up to 80% water savings" without the use of showerheads that limit flow or pressure. The system instead relies on a reservoir in the shower's base that collects used water and passes it through a filtration system before sending it back up through the […]

The Verge
Open 
Discord distances itself from Persona age verification after user backlash
Discord is attempting to distance itself from the age verification provider Persona following a steady stream of user backlash. In an emailed statement to The Verge, Discord's head of product policy, Savannah Badalich, confirms the company "ran a limited test of Persona in the UK where age assurance had previously launched and that test has […]

UK Government News
Open 
Recruitment for the Head of Enforcement Section
Head of the Enforcement Section, leading a team of enforcement officers dealing with breaches of the regulations

UK Government News
Open 
Councils to get exceptional financial support to balance books
This follows the confirmation of £78 billion for councils through the settlement, helping them restore public services for communities and tackle deprivation.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
EU To Freeze Trade Deal With US After Supreme Court Overturns Trump Tariffs
EU To Freeze Trade Deal With US After Supreme Court Overturns Trump Tariffs

Update (9:40am ET): In response to the EU's decision to freeze ratification of Trump's landmark deal, the US president has come out swinging and on Truth Social threatened any countries that "play games" with the supreme court decision that they "will be met with a much higher tariff." It just isn't clear what the procedure for these much higher tariffs - aside from Section 122 which is limited to 150 days - will be now that IEEPA has been ruled unconstitutional.



Earlier:

In the aftermath of Friday's SCOTUS decision to reverse Trump's tariff policy, one lingering question is what happens to the bilateral trade deals Trump struck with various countries (and which supposedly would lead to hundreds of billions of fresh investment into the US). Well, in the case of the EU we no longer have to wonder:

The morning, the European Union said it would freeze the ratification process of its trade deal with the US and was seeking more details from the Trump administration on its new tariff program. Zeljana Zovko, the lead trade negotiator in the European People’s Party group on the US deal, said in an interview with Bloomberg that “we have no other option” but to delay the approval process to seek clarity on the situation. 

The main political groups in the European Parliament say they’ll suspend legislative work on approving the trade deal on Monday, days after the US Supreme Court struck down Trump’s use of an emergency-powers law to impose his so-called reciprocal tariffs around the world.

The center-right EPP, which is the largest political bloc in parliament, will be joined by parties including the Socialists & Democrats and the liberal Renew group to back freezing the process. 



According to Bloomberg, Bernd Lange - chairman of the parliament’s trade committee - called an emergency meeting later Monday to reassess the EU-US trade accord. He said over the weekend that parliament should delay work on the trade accord until the EU receives more clarity on the new tariffs. EU ambassadors will also meet Monday afternoon to discuss the US trade relationship.

Trump’s announcement following the court decision to impose a 10% global tariff, which he then increased to 15%, left many questions unanswered for American trading partners, stirring up more economic turbulence and uncertainty about the US policy.

As a reminder, the deal struck last summer between Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen would impose a 15% tariff rate on most EU exports to the US while removing tariffs on American industrial goods heading into the bloc. The US would also continue to impose a 50% tariff on European steel and aluminum imports. The bloc agreed to the lopsided deal in the hopes of avoiding a full-blown trade war with Washington and retaining US security backing, particularly with regards to Ukraine. Parliament had been aiming to ratify the agreement in March.

The trade deal had already faced a rocky path to ratification. After the initial agreement, the US expanded its 50% metals tariff to hundreds of additional products, angering EU lawmakers and European officials. Trump’s Greenland threats amplified that frustration, leading some to call for the deal to be canceled.

EU lawmakers froze the approval process once before, after Trump threatened to annex Greenland. After Trump backed down from his push to annex Greenland, a Danish territory, EU lawmakers briefly restarted the trade deal ratification process. But they also introduced changes such as a sunset clause, meaning that even if parliament ultimately approves the agreement, it will have to go back to other EU institutions for further negotiations. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 09:36

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Core US Factory Orders Better Than Expected In December
Core US Factory Orders Better Than Expected In December

While sentiment is sagging to multi-year lows, 'hard' data is helping support growth forecasts (GDPNOW) and holding stocks at record highs.

This morning we get a fresh glimpse at America's manufacturing segment - hard data - with Orders data (which is expected to drop MoM in December).

After surging higher in November (+2.7% MoM), analysts expected US Factory Orders to drop 0.6% MoM in December but the actual print disappointed, dropping 0.7% MoM



Source: Bloomberg

Interestingly, Core Factory Orders rose 0.4% MoM - better than expected



Source: Bloomberg

The final December prints for Durable Goods Orders fell 1.4% as expected (and in line with the preliminary data).\

New orders non-defense, ex-air - a proxy for spending - rose 0.8% MoM (better than expected).

The bottom line is this data is overall supportive for GDP guesstimates (and earnings).

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 10:06

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Enablers
Enablers

Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance

There’s an obvious growing failure at the center of modern markets that, as a former short seller, has become beyond obvious to me over the years.

It isn’t just fraud or aggressive accounting. It’s the ecosystem that allows both to thrive: financial media that won’t press, and a sell side that won’t risk upsetting management teams they depend on for access.

We’ve seen this movie before. Enron did not implode because there were no warning signs. It imploded because the warning signs were inconvenient. There were whistleblowers. There were people inside the system who knew the numbers didn’t add up. But complexity was treated as brilliance, and skepticism was treated as cynicism. Analysts admired the innovation. Television hosts admired the executives.

And the stock went up—until it didn’t.

The same institutional shrug preceded the collapse of Bernard Madoff. And one line is enough about Harry Markopolos: he handed regulators a mathematical proof Madoff’s returns were impossible, and they filed it away until the financial crisis caused Madoff to collapse.

The common thread wasn’t ignorance. It was incuriosity. Or, more precisely, selective incuriosity.



Now consider Carvana. For years, short sellers have argued that Carvana’s reported outperformance relative to peers strains economic logic. Short seller reports have laid out, in detail, why investors should be extremely cautious with the subprime used car dealer whose numbers blow away its competitors somehow. All you have to do is take an hour and read the damn reports — something apparently no one on the street is capable or doing, or cares to do.

Used car retailing is not software. It is capital intensive, cyclical, and brutally competitive. Yet the narrative presented has often been one of operational genius and dramatic margin recovery.

Skeptics have focused on the company’s web of related-party entities tied to the founding family, including DriveTime, Bridgecrest, and GoFi. The allegation is straightforward: reported earnings are materially influenced by transactions within that ecosystem—loan sales, internal transfers, and accounting treatments that allow gains to be recognized without corresponding arm’s-length economics.

Recent work by Gotham City Research didn’t merely wave at “aggressive accounting.” It walked through the structure in detail, connecting financial statements across entities and suggesting that the apparent profitability is deeply intertwined with highly leveraged affiliated companies. The gist of the allegation is that Carvana is selling off shitty subprime loans to an off-balance sheet entity controlled by the CEO’s father, booking the sales as earnings, while the private company takes on massive losses that it isn’t forced to report as transparently as a public company would. This would allow Carvana to post huge “earnings” while another entity absorbs massive losses.

It’s not so dissimilar to Enron, where debt was shifted into off-balance-sheet special purpose entities that were technically separate but effectively controlled by the company, allowing liabilities to disappear from reported financial statements.

If Gotham’s analysis of Carvana is directionally right (and I believe it is) then remove the internal scaffolding and the earnings picture changes dramatically. That is not a personality dispute. That is a bona fide accounting issue that should make any auditor blush.

And yet the scrutiny from mainstream financial media and much of the sell side has been tepid at best. One example stands out. On CNBC last week, CEO Ernie Garcia was asked whether he was selling loans to his father’s company. The answer was an emphatic no. Case closed, apparently. No follow-up. No clarification. No effort to explore whether loans were being sold to intermediaries that ultimately funneled them into the same related-party ecosystem. No attempt to dissect structure versus headline.

🔥 50% OFF FOR LIFE: Using this coupon entitles you to 50% off an annual subscription to Fringe Finance for life: Get 50% off forever

When Sara Eisen brings up a “new short seller report” on air, Garcia literally just says “Boo! Come on!” as though he shouldn’t even have to answer the question — on which hangs the balance of his entire company!

What the f**k?

Anyone familiar with related-party accounting understands how this works. The literal answer to a narrow question can be technically true while leaving the economic substance untouched. The job of a financial journalist is to ask the second question. And sometimes the third. Instead, too often the interview moves on to “walk us through your growth strategy.”

Meanwhile, short sellers are framed as villains for doing forensic accounting in public. Executives blame “misinformation.” Analysts reiterate price targets. Television panels debate “sentiment.” Accounting rules, it seems, are optional so long as the chart is pointing up.

There is an obvious incentive problem here. Sell-side analysts depend on management access and underwriting relationships. Media outlets depend on executives willing to come on air. Executives depend on elevated equity valuations. Retail investors depend on all of them to be honest brokers. Guess which group has the least leverage.

When a complex related-party structure appears to underpin reported results, that deserves relentless scrutiny. Instead, what we often get is narrative management. The burden of proof is inverted. Skeptics must prove fraud beyond a reasonable doubt, while promoters only need to gesture at “compliance with accounting standards.” As if technical compliance and economic transparency are interchangeable.

This dynamic is not just frustrating. It is unfair to retail investors. They do not have access to private diligence sessions. They do not have the resources to untangle off-balance-sheet relationships. They rely on media summaries and research notes to understand what they own. When journalists decline to press and analysts decline to challenge, informational asymmetry widens. Retail ends up buying the story long after the people closest to it understand the risks.

Drawing echoes of Enron is not to claim identical outcomes. It is to highlight a pattern: complex structures, related-party opacity, extraordinary reported performance, dismissal of critics, and an ecosystem oddly comfortable with all of it. The pattern is what should make people uneasy.

If Carvana’s accounting is sound, then it should survive granular, adversarial analysis. If it is not, then blaming short sellers will not change the math. Markets do not care about indignation. They care about cash flow.

The most disturbing part of all this is not any single allegation. It is the normalization of incuriosity. The willingness to accept the first answer. The comfort with surface-level questioning. The reflex to treat skepticism as hostility.

Companies do not implode because there were no red flags. They implode because too many people saw it coming and still and decided not to tug on the thread or say anything. And when that happens, it is not the executives, the analysts, or the television hosts who pay the price. It is the retail investor who trusted that someone, somewhere, was asking the second question when they weren’t.

Now read:

“Uniquely Destructive”: Matt Taibbi Talks Epstein Files
Sh*t Is Getting Ugly In This One Sector I'd Avoid
When Both Sides Go Quiet
Bitcoin Mining and the Electricity Grid: A Quiet Savior
Down 60%, One Stock I Still Love
Countdown to Detonation: America’s Leverage Problem


QTR’s Disclaimer: Please read my full legal disclaimer on my About page here. This post represents my opinions only. In addition, please understand I am an idiot and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning. Contributor posts and aggregated posts have been hand selected by me, have not been fact checked and are the opinions of their authors. They are either submitted to QTR by their author, reprinted under a Creative Commons license with my best effort to uphold what the license asks, or with the permission of the author.

This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any stocks or securities, just my opinions. I often lose money on positions I trade/invest in. I may add any name mentioned in this article and sell any name mentioned in this piece at any time, without further warning. None of this is a solicitation to buy or sell securities. I may or may not own names I write about and are watching. Sometimes I’m bullish without owning things, sometimes I’m bearish and do own things. Just assume my positions could be exactly the opposite of what you think they are just in case. If I’m long I could quickly be short and vice versa. I won’t update my positions. All positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice and at any point I can be long, short or neutral on any position. You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. If you see numbers and calculations of any sort, assume they are wrong and double check them. I failed Algebra in 8th grade and topped off my high school math accolades by getting a D- in remedial Calculus my senior year, before becoming an English major in college so I could bullshit my way through things easier. I am an investor in Mark’s fund.

The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates. I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but can’t guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because I’m impatient and lazy, so if you see a typo, check back in a half hour. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it twice because it’s that important.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 10:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score
Newsom Says He's Like Blacks Because He 'Can't Read' And Got Low SAT Score

California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) needs to work on his pandering skills - after telling a crowd of black people that he's just like them because he can't read and got a low SAT score. 



"I’m not trying to impress you, I’m just trying to impress upon you, ‘I’m like you. I’m not better than you.’ I’m a 960 SAT guy," Newsom told Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickins during a Sunday night event promoting his new book. 

"And I’m not trying to offend anyone," the potential 2028 Democratic contender continued. "I’m not trying to act all there if you got 940 … You’ve never seen me read a speech because I cannot read a speech."

Of note, the average SAT score for blacks is a 907 out of a possible 1600, according to 2024 College Board data, while white SAT takers received an average of 1083. 

Watch:
 


Gov. Newsom to a black crowd in GA: "I am like you. I'm a 960 SAT guy. I can't read." pic.twitter.com/4Gk0WKbIYz
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.

But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship.

“I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter. “The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.”

Newsom, 58, graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. He received a letter of recommendation from former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who had appointed Newsom’s father to serve as a state appellate judge.


Gavin "I Grew Up Poor" Newsom was in the SF Chronicle 1991 "Children of the Rich" pic.twitter.com/zhFE8vsN3Y
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 23, 2026
But the governor has insisted the only reason he was admitted was a partial baseball scholarship. “I don’t think it’s relevant at all,” Newsom told the New York Times earlier this month about the Brown letter.

“The ticket to Santa Clara came through the baseball, not anything else. And that was the point I was making in the book.” The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”


Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read.
I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t.
I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow. https://t.co/EsfKeZjWmi
— Congressman Randy Fine (@RepFine) February 23, 2026
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”


His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read.
This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.
Do you wanna know the craziest part of this footage that… https://t.co/llo1k7F7wB
— Nicki Minaj (@NICKIMINAJ) February 23, 2026
Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.” “Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.


Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028 https://t.co/ijXw9HjOLL pic.twitter.com/vTKDSDcMUp
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) February 23, 2026
The comments quickly drew backlash from Republicans and other critics.

“Gavin Newsom just said he is like a black person because he got a bad SAT score and can’t read,” Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) wrote on X. “I wish I could come up with something witty, but it’s so disgusting, I can’t. I look forward to all my Democrat colleagues in Congress demanding his resignation tomorrow.”

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Newsom of engaging in “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and amplified a post from political scientist Carol M. Swain that read: “Liberal racism on display.”

Music star Nicki Minaj also weighed in after previously criticizing Newsom at an event last month.

“His way of bonding with black ppl is to tell them how stupid he is & that he can’t read,” she wrote on X. “This means my first read on him was correct. He’s been handed so many things & put in high positions he never earned or deserved.”

Conservative podcaster Stephen L. Miller posted an image of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin’s character in the 1979 film “The Jerk,” who famously declared, “I was born a poor black child.”

“Gavin Newsom rolling into 2028,” Miller wrote.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 10:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Key Events This Week: PPI, Iran Talks, Nvidia Earnings, Fed Speakers Galore And State Of The Union
Key Events This Week: PPI, Iran Talks, Nvidia Earnings, Fed Speakers Galore And State Of The Union

While much digital ink has been spilled on the Supreme Court's striking down of Trump's IEEPA tariffs and the consequences of this decision (see "Full Analysis Of The Supreme Court IEEPA Decision: How It Impacts The Economy, Policy And Markets"), a lot more is on deck for this week when we will also have more geopolitical headlines to contend with, as the latest round of US-Iran talks is expected in Geneva on Thursday. The talks come amid a recent buildup of US forces in the region and yesterday the New York Times was the latest outlet to report that Trump is considering an initial targeted strike against Iran in the coming days, which could be followed by a larger attack if Iran does not give in to US nuclear demands. Other highlights for the week ahead include the State of the Union address in the US (late tomorrow), US PPI and preliminary CPIs in Europe (both Friday). In earnings, the focus will be on Nvidia, Salesforce (both Wednesday) and Home Depot (tomorrow). Nvidia’s earnings could be the most important of these but expect lots of headlines from the State of the Union speech.

Friday’s US PPI release - where headline and core inflation are both forecast at 0.3% - will matter less in isolation than for its implications for the core PCE deflator. While January CPI surprised to the downside, the implications for core PCE continue to appear less favorable, with DB economists currently looking for a 0.4% monthly increase. Depending on the strength of key PPI components such as medical services, airfares, and portfolio management fees, a 0.5% increase in January core PCE cannot be ruled out, which would lift the year-over-year rate to around 3.1%. So an important release, especially in the sub-components.



There is a fair degree of Fed speak this week, with Waller (today and tomorrow) a highlight given he dissented in favor of a 25bps cut in January due to concerns over the labor market. However, we’ve subsequently seen a firm January jobs report and a firm December core PCE print, so will he shift his stance a bit? See the day-by-day week ahead at the end as usual for the rest of the Fed speakers and the key global data.  

Elsewhere in the world, we have the German Ifo today and the preliminary European February CPI prints including for countries such as Germany, France and Spain, among others, on Friday. There will also be economic sentiment measures for key economies including consumer confidence in the UK, Germany and France, as well as the ECB’s consumer expectations survey due Friday.

Over in Asia, it’s a busy week ahead for Japan with key releases including the Tokyo CPI for February and the January industrial production both due on Friday. Our Chief Japan Economist expects core CPI inflation (ex. fresh food) of 1.7% YoY (2.0% in January) and core-core CPI inflation (ex. fresh food and energy) of 2.4% (2.4% in January). For industrial production, he sees a robust 4.5% MoM gain. See more in his full week-ahead here. Elsewhere, inflation will also be in focus in Australia and our economists expect a -0.2% MoM headline print and a 0.24% MoM trimmed mean print.

Other than Nvidia on Wednesday, other tech firms reporting include Salesforce, Intuit, Snowflake and CoreWeave. Amongst US consumer firms, the focus will be on Home Depot, TJX and Lowe’s. Over in Europe, there will be results from HSBC and Allianz in financials as well as other large firms such as Deutsche Telekom, Schneider Electric, Iberdrola and Rolls-Royce.
Source: earnings whispers

Courtesy of DB,  here is a day-by-day calendar of events

Monday February 23

Data: US January Chicago Fed national activity index, December factory orders, February Dallas Fed manufacturing activity, Germany February Ifo survey
Central banks: Fed's Waller speaks, ECB's Lagarde speaks, BoE's Taylor speaks
Earnings: Dominion Energy, Domino's Pizza
Tuesday February 24

Data: US February Conference Board consumer confidence index, Dallas Fed services activity, Richmond Fed manufacturing index, business conditions, Philadelphia Fed non-manufacturing activity, December FHFA house price index, wholesale trade sales, Q4 house price purchase index, China January 1-yr and 5-yr loan prime rates, France February business confidence, EU27 January new car registrations
Central banks: Fed's Goolsbee, Collins, Bostic, Waller, Cook and Barkin speak, ECB's Kocher speaks
Earnings: Home Depot, Constellation Energy, MercadoLibre, American Tower, Standard Chartered, NRG Energy, Workday, Axon Enterprise, Fidelity National Information, MTU Aero Engines, First Solar, Telefonica, Amer Sports, CoStar, HP
Auctions: US 2-yr Notes ($69bn)
Other: US President Trump’s State of the Union address
Wednesday February 25

Data: Japan January PPI services, Germany March GfK consumer confidence, France February consumer confidence, January retail sales, Australia January CPI
Central banks: Fed's Barkin and Musalem speak, ECB's Vujcic speaks
Earnings: NVIDIA, HSBC, TJX, Salesforce, Lowe's, Iberdrola, Synopsys, Medline, Snowflake, E.ON, Diageo, Ferrovial, Haleon, Heidelberg Materials, Alcon, Leonardo, Trip.com, Sandoz, Wolters Kluwer, Paramount Skydance
Auctions: US 2-yr FRN (reopening, $28bn), 5-yr Notes ($70bn)
Thursday February 26

Data: US February Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity, initial jobless claims, Italy February consumer confidence index, economic sentiment, manufacturing confidence, Eurozone January M3, February economic confidence, Canada Q4 current account balance
Central banks: ECB's Lagarde and Dolenc speak, BoJ’s Takata speaks, BoE's Lombardelli speaks
Earnings: Deutsche Telekom, Schneider Electric, Allianz, Rolls-Royce, Intuit, AXA, Munich Re, Dell, Engie, Warner Bros Discovery, Eni, London Stock Exchange Group, Rocket, Erste, Cie de Saint-Gobain, CoreWeave, Autodesk, Baidu, Rocket Lab, Block, Zscaler, Stellantis, Flutter Entertainment
Auctions: US 7-yr Notes ($44bn)
Friday February 27

Data: US January PPI, February MNI Chicago PMI, Kansas City Fed services activity, December and November construction spending, UK February GfK consumer confidence, Lloyds Business Barometer, Japan February Tokyo CPI, January retail sales, industrial production, housing starts, Germany February CPI, unemployment claims rate, January import price index, France February CPI, January consumer spending, PPI, Q4 total payrolls, Italy December industrial sales, Canada Q4 GDP, Sweden Q4 GDP, Switzerland Q4 GDP 
Central banks: ECB January consumer expectations survey, BoE's Pill speaks
Earnings: Holcim, BASF, Swiss Re, Amadeus IT
Finally, looking at just the US, Goldman writes that the key economic data release this week is the PPI report on Friday. There are several speaking engagements with Fed officials this week, including events with Governors Waller, Cook, and Bowman. 

Monday, February 23 

08:00 AM Fed Governor Waller speaks: Fed Governor Christopher Waller will give a keynote address at the annual NABE economic policy conference. Speech text and Q&A are expected. On January 30, Waller said, "With total inflation excluding tariff effects close to our target at just slightly above 2 percent and a weak labor market, the policy rate should be closer to neutral, which the median FOMC participant estimates is 3 percent, and not where we are—50 to 75 basis points above 3 percent."
10:00 AM Factory orders, December (GS -0.5%, consensus -0.7%, last +2.7%) 
Tuesday, February 24 

08:00 AM Chicago Fed President Goolsbee (FOMC non-voter) speaks; Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee will speak at the annual NABE economic policy conference. Q&A is expected. On February 17, Goolsbee said, "If...we can show that we're on path to 2% inflation, I still think there's several more rate cuts that can happen in 2026. But we've got to see it in coming data." 
09:00 AM Boston Fed President Collins (FOMC non-voter) speaks; Boston Fed President Susan Collins will give opening remarks at a Boston Fed conference on finance and payments.
09:00 AM Atlanta Fed President Bostic (FOMC non-voter) speaks; Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic will participate in a moderated discussion on monetary policy and the economic outlook. On February 20, Bostic said, "Our economy has remained remarkably resilient... [which] means that we have to worry about the implications for prices on a strong economy given inflation at around 3% is a long way from the 2% target."
09:00 AM S&P Case-Shiller home price index, December (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.4%, last +0.5%) 
09:00 AM FHFA house price index, December (consensus +0.3%, last +0.6%)
09:15 AM Fed Governor Waller speaks: Fed Governor Christopher Waller will give a keynote address at a Boston Fed conference on finance and payments. Speech text and Q&A are expected. 
09:30 AM Fed Governor Cook speaks: Fed Governor Lisa Cook will participate in panel discussion on AI at the annual NABE economic policy conference. Speech text and Q&A are expected. On February 4, Cook said, "There is an argument for being optimistic about the path of inflation, but, until I see stronger evidence that inflation is moving sustainably back down to target, that is where my focus will be, in the absence of unexpected changes in the labor market."
10:00 AM Conference Board consumer confidence, February (GS 87.0, consensus 87.0, last 84.5)
10:00 AM Wholesale inventories, December final (consensus +0.2%, last +0.2%)
03:15 PM Boston Fed President Collins (FOMC non-voter) and Richmond Fed President Barkin (FOMC non-voter) speak: Boston Fed President Susan Collins and Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin will participate in a panel discussion at a Boston Fed conference on finance and payments. 
Wednesday, February 25 

There are no major economic data releases scheduled. 
10:40 AM Richmond Fed President Barkin (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin will participate in a moderated Q&A panel at the Northern Virginia Chamber of Commerce. On February 4, Barkin said, "I think of the three cuts as having taken out some insurance to support the labor market as we work to complete the last mile to bring inflation back to target."
11:00 AM Kansas City Fed President Schmid (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid will participate in a fireside chat about monetary policy and the economic outlook. On February 11, Schmid said, "Further rate cuts [would] risk allowing high inflation to persist even longer."
01:20 PM St. Louis Fed President Musalem (FOMC non-voter) speaks: St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem will speak on the role of the Fed in the St. Louis region at the Missouri Athletic Club. Q&A is expected. On February 20, Musalem said, "A neutral real rate [right now] is appropriate, in my opinion, given my outlook for the economy... Policy is in a good place currently."
Thursday, February 26 

08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended February 21 (GS 220k, consensus 215k, last 206k); Continuing jobless claims, week ended February 14 (consensus 1,863k, last 1,869k)
10:00 AM Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Bowman speaks: Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman will testify before the Senate Banking Committee on bank supervision. Speech text and Q&A are expected. On January 30, Bowman said, "My view is that we should continue to focus on downside risks to our employment mandate. History tells us that the labor market can appear to be stable right up until it isn't." She also said, "I continue to see policy as moderately restrictive, and, looking ahead to 2026, my Summary of Economic Projections includes three cuts for this year."
Friday, February 27 

08:30 AM PPI final demand, January (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.5%); PPI ex-food and energy, January (GS +0.4%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.7%); PPI ex-food, energy, and trade, January (GS +0.3%, last +0.4%)
10:00 AM Construction spending, December (GS +0.5%, consensus +0.2%, last +0.5% [October]); Construction spending, November (GS +0.4%)
Source: DB, Goldman

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 10:45

Harvard Business Review
Open 
AI Is Upending Marketing on Two Fronts
It’s transforming how consumers both find and buy products. Companies need to catch up.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Are You Leveraging the Diverse Talent on Your Board?
Tapping into a range of views prevents the groupthink and blind spots that undermine decision-making and creativity.

Flightradar24
Open 
Flightradar24 expands global coverage with Aireon space-based ADS-B data
Flightradar24 is excited to expand its global flight tracking capabilities with the addition of Aireon space-based ADS-B data to the Flightradar24 platform, a major milestone in our commitment to truly global flight tracking coverage. The integration of Aireon data marks an important step toward ensuring visibility in areas not already covered by Flightradar24’s world-leading terrestrial […]
The post Flightradar24 expands global coverage with Aireon space-based ADS-B data appeared first on Flightradar24 Blog.

Mail Online
Open 
I was pregnant with my third child... I had no idea my itchy hands were a subtle sign of something much more sinister
When influencer Abbie Herbert posted what she thought was a normal TikTok video in early December, she had no idea that it would ultimately save her baby's life.

Mail Online
Open 
Danniella Westbrook unveils her new face after undergoing 'miracle' reconstruction surgery
The former EastEnders star, 52, cut a casual figure as she left a hair salon in London and showed off her freshly blow-fryed blonde locks.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC announces THREE brand new series with dark comedy, Tudor period drama and political thriller all in the works starring very familiar faces
It's set to be a busy year for BBC viewers, as the broadcaster has announced THREE brand new series for viewers to tune into which are currently filming.

Mail Online
Open 
Love Island's Lauren Wood reveals she's in lockdown at Mexican resort with no power but is 'safe' as violence explodes across country after killing of drug cartel leader
The reality star's holiday in Tulum has been thrown into chaos, after the death of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes on Sunday sparked a wave of violent outbreaks.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stephen Lillie on the fourth anniversary of the war in Ukraine – cartoon
Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
This solar-powered battery station is my new emergency backup - and it's priced well
The Aferiy P280 is engineered to be the perfect power hub for your RV or home backup.

ZDNet News
Open 
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra vs. S25 Ultra: My concerns as a longtime Galaxy user
The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra looks like another incremental upgrade. I just hope these rumored omissions aren't true.

ZDNet News
Open 
This low-cost networking option can seriously improve your internet - and it's easy to set up
MoCA 2.5 is a recommended alternative to Wi-Fi networks that leverage old coaxial cables to enable high-speed internet.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to set up Private DNS mode on your iPhone - and why you should do it ASAP
Unencrypted DNS can expose your browsing activity, but private DNS helps keep it secure on iPhone. Here's how to set it up.

ZDNet News
Open 
10 cheap gadgets that seriously upgraded my smart home (and are easy to install)
After testing hundreds of smart home devices, I rounded up the best options to get started with your smart home without hurting your wallet.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to FaceTime on Android (or your Windows PC) - no third-party app needed
Did you know that anyone can join a FaceTime call? It's as simple as clicking on a link.

ZDNet News
Open 
Google Pixel 10a vs. Pixel 10: I compared the two midrange models, and here's my choice
The Google Pixel 10a may not be the upgrade you expected, but it beats the more expensive Pixel 10 in a few ways.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11062 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Stockton (NES) (New)
Engineers will be performing maintenance affecting services at the exchange.

Services should be considered at risk for the full duration of this maintenance window.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 4th Mar 2026 01:00

End: Wed, 4th Mar 2026 06:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 16:23

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

BBC UK News
Open 
PM orders ethics investigation into minister over Labour Together claims
Josh Simons ran the think tank when it commissioned a report which investigated the background of a journalist.

The Hill
Open 
Cannon blocks release of Smith's report on Mar-a-Lago documents case
U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon sided with President Trump Monday in a ruling barring the release of former special counsel Jack Smith’s report reviewing the Mar-a-Lago documents case. Cannon wrote that release of the report “would cause irreparable damage to former defendants” in the case, which in addition to Trump includes former co-defendants Walt Nauta and Carlos...

The Hill
Open 
Speaker Johnson to bring daughter of detained Uyghur doctor as SOTU guest
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) will bring the daughter of a Uyghur doctor who has been imprisoned in China for more than seven years as one of his guests for Tuesday’s State of the Union address.  Ziba Murat’s mother, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, has been detained in China since 2018. Murat and her aunt, Rushan Abbas, have...

The Hill
Open 
DHS reverses on TSA PreCheck amid shutdown; Global Entry suspended
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reversed course on Sunday and lifted a suspension on the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) PreCheck program. DHS had announced a suspension of TSA PreCheck screenings set to take effect at 6 a.m. on Sunday, as the department operates amid a funding lapse that has dragged on for more than...

The Hill
Open 
Patel sparks outrage partying with Team USA as MAGA cheers him on
FBI Director Kash Patel is at the center of an online firestorm after videos captured inside Team USA's men's hockey locker room on Sunday showed him chugging beers, singing a Toby Keith song and partying with the Olympic gold medal-winning team. Patel, a noted hockey fan, was in Milan to watch the U.S. take down Canada...

The Hill
Open 
Kennedy doubles down on defense of Trump glyphosate order amid MAHA backlash
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is doubling down on his defense of President Trump's executive order boosting a controversial pesticide, which drew fury from members of the Make America Health Again (MAHA) movement. MAHA movement, spearheaded by Kennedy, is skeptical of Big Pharma — especially vaccines, Big Chemical and Big Agriculture....

The Hill
Open 
The State of the Union is dire: What Trump won’t say at his address
The state of the union under Trump is in disrepair and disarray.

The Hill
Open 
US evacuating non-emergency personnel from Beirut
The State Department has ordered the departure of non-emergency personnel from the U.S. embassy in Beirut, as President Trump has directed a major military buildup in the region for potential strikes against Iran. A State Department official confirmed to The Hill the mandatory evacuations as a “prudent” decision based on the current security environment. “The...

The Hill
Open 
Hegseth says he'll order random pizzas to throw off monitoring app
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth jokingly said any surge in takeout deliveries to the Pentagon — a phenomenon that has accurately predicted the start of major geopolitical events — could be him ordering pizza “just to throw everybody off.” Asked about the “Pentagon Pizza Report,” an account on X that tracks activity at local pizza joints near the...

The Hill
Open 
For Trump, corporate profits are more important than American lives 
When the Industrial Revolution came to the United States more than a century ago, it promised unprecedented prosperity for the American people. The revolution delivered. But it involved a Faustian bargain.  

The Hill
Open 
68 percent say Trump focused on wrong problems: Poll
Almost seven in 10 Americans say that President Trump is focusing on the wrong problems in the U.S., according to a new poll released ahead of his State of the Union address on Tuesday. In the CNN poll, published Monday, 68 percent of respondents said that the president "hasn't paid enough attention to the country's...

The Register
Open 
Global regulators say AI image tools don't get a free pass on privacy rules
Watchdogs warn models that can generate realistic images of people must comply with data protection laws A global coalition of privacy watchdogs has fired a warning shot at the generative AI industry, saying companies churning out realistic synthetic images can't pretend that data protection rules don't apply.…

Gizmodo
Open 
After ‘Cosmic Orange’ This Could Be the iPhone 18 Pro’s Must-Have Color
Apple is finally leaning into fun colors.

Gizmodo
Open 
Heated Rivals Musk and Altman Disagree on One More Thing: Data Centers in Space
In a recent appearance, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman called the idea "ridiculous."

Gizmodo
Open 
Go Inside the Worlds of Andrew Stanton’s Sweeping New Sci-Fi Film (Exclusive)
'In the Blink of an Eye,' starring Rashida Jones, Kate McKinnon, and Daveed Diggs, hits Hulu February 27.

Gizmodo
Open 
Apple’s AI Gadgets Don’t Sound Groundbreaking at All
Apple will reportedly focus on computer vision to make AI gadgets that sound a lot like other, existing, AI gadgets.

Gizmodo
Open 
Historic East Coast Blizzard Knocks Out Power for Hundreds of Thousands—and It’s Not Over Yet
Utilities warn that outages could be prolonged as snow and high winds are interfering with restoration efforts.

The Right Scoop
Open 
DUDE VIDEO – Gavin Newsom just told Black Americans that he’s just like them, he can’t read either…
It came out late last night that Gavin Newsom told an audience of Black Americans that he’s no better than them, that he’s just like them. Then he proceeds to tell them . . .

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Berlinale faces difficult balancing act in polarized Gaza debate
A Palestinian award-winner's accusation that Germany has supported genocide sparked political after the closing gala, while others criticized the festival's attempts to remain neutral on Gaza.

Mail Online
Open 
Schoolboy who idolised Adolf Hitler and decorated bedroom with Nazi memorabilia while amassing arsenal of weapons guilty of terrorism offences
The 16-year-old, who cannot be named because of his age, posed in a Nazi cap and wearing a moustache resembling Hitler's when he was just nine and by 15 had amassed knives and guns.

Mail Online
Open 
Drug dealer high on cannabis kicked a mother, 56, to death at random after flipping his BMW on its roof, court hears
Chukwuemeka Ahanonu, 23, launched a vicious assault on 56-year-old mother Nila Patel, whom he did not know, moments after flipping his BMW on its roof in broad daylight in Leicester city centre.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Telegraph suitor considers legal action against UK government over rival bid
Exclusive: Figures led by New York Sun owner may seek judicial review after restrictions lifted on DMGT offerFigures involved in a rival bid for the Telegraph are drawing up legal action against the government, after ministers gave the owner of the Daily Mail permission to take a significant step towards clinching its £500m takeover.The Telegraph titles, which include the daily and Sunday editions, have been in limbo for three years after previous owners, the Barclay family, lost control of them over huge unpaid debts. Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Sports App Expands to More Countries and Leagues
Starting today, the Apple Sports app on the iPhone is available in dozens of additional countries across the Caribbean and Latin America, including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Peru, and others.





Apple Sports first launched in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. in February 2024, and it later expanded to Europe and Mexico. The app shows scores, stats, standings, upcoming games, and more for a variety of leagues and competitions.



Also as of today, the app now supports the following six Latin men's soccer (fútbol) leagues:

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Categoría Primera A

Liga de Primera

Liga Pro

Liga Profesional de Fútbol

Primera División del Perú

In the "Search" section of Apple Sports, there is a new "Soccer" category that contains all of the soccer leagues that are available in the app.



Finally, Apple says fans can now follow men's and women's NCAA tournaments in real time, with brackets showcasing matchups and results at a glance for each round.



These changes arrived in version 3.8 of the app, which is available now in the App Store.Tag: Apple SportsThis article, 'Apple Sports App Expands to More Countries and Leagues' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
Which are the best wireless printers for home? I tried Brother, Canon, Epson and HP models to decide
I assessed the print quality of the latest inkjet, ink tank, laser and LED machines from the market leaders

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'We'll give them a tough time' - England face another trial by spin
With Pakistan's spinners promising to provide a "tough time", England's frequent batting weakness stand between them and a World Cup semi-final.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Analysts: Media neglects hunger crises
Not enough media or political attention is given to grave hunger crises in the Global South, according to analysts. Reports also say far more is spent on weapons than food relief.

Mail Online
Open 
Techno DJ who sold faulty aircraft engine parts to major airlines causing them to be grounded in 'audacious' £39million fraud is jailed
Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala, 38, admitted to forging more than 60,000 authenticity certificates for engine parts on his home computer between 2019 and 2023, costing airlines millions.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
All You Need Is Kill review – time loop anime offers giant alien flower for Groundhog Day with mechs
New version of the sci-fi day-on-repeat sees a perplexed duo repeatedly battle monstrous plants but leaves you feeling as bored as the protagonist appearsThe second film adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s 2004 eponymous novel, this new one is considerably inferior to Edge of Tomorrow from 2014, Tom Cruise’s own Groundhog D1ay with mechs. It’s not a question of budget or aesthetics – simply a gaping hole of engaging characterisation and inner spark that makes this time loop a grinding chore, rather than a thrilling jailbreak from eternal recurrence.Directors Ken’ichirô Akimoto and Yukinori Nakamura do, to be fair, switch things up. Instead of the original story’s extraterrestrial “Mimics”, they concoct an entirely new big bad: a dormant alien flower, nattily named Darol, that one day begins spitting out what look like killer nasturtiums. The protagonists have been swapped: the point of view in this version is Rita (voiced by Ai Mikami), the female badass working for the United Defense Force that surveys the colossal plant. Exposure to its quartz spores are what forces her to live her imperfect day over and over. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New datacentres risk doubling UK electricity use, regulator says
Ofgem says about 140 proposed projects, driven by AI use, could require more power than current peak demandThe amount of power being sought by new datacentre projects in the UK would exceed the country’s current peak electricity consumption, according to an industry watchdog.Ofgem said about 140 proposed datacentre schemes, driven by use of artificial intelligence, could require 50 gigawatts of electricity – 5GW more than the country’s current peak demand. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Unlicensed gambling firms could be barred from sponsoring Premier League clubs
Top clubs agree not to have gambling sponsors on front of shirts, but government is consulting on total banUnlicensed gambling firms could be barred from sponsoring Premier League football clubs, after a string of controversies involving pornographic videos, failures in anti-money laundering rules and concerns about links to organised crime.Shirts worn by players for several major English football teams, including Everton, Fulham and Wolverhampton Wanderers, feature the logos of unlicensed online casinos or bookmakers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fatigue has shaped the balance and madness of today’s Premier League | Jonathan Wilson
The ever-increasing number of games, combined with financial regulation, has produced flat play on the field but a tighter table overallSign up for Soccer with Jonathan Wilson hereA constant feature of this season has been the background grumble of dissatisfaction. You don’t have to spend long on social media to see moans about the quality of play, the sense that everything has somehow gone backwards since the tactical focus began to shift away from the pure possession and positional football of the peak Pep Guardiola years to something more direct and focused on set plays.And yet, as we enter the run-in, there appears to be a proper Premier League title race. There is an extremely competitive battle to finish in the top five and qualify for next season’s Champions League and, although Wolves and Burnley are probably doomed, there are four teams scrapping to avoid that last relegation slot with another three glancing a little nervously over their shoulders. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lindsey Vonn says she almost had leg amputated after crash at Winter Olympics
41-year-old developed compartment syndromeSkier credits Team USA surgeon with saving legLindsey Vonn says she came close to having her leg amputated in the aftermath of her crash during the Olympic downhill earlier this month.The 41-year-old suffered a complex tibia fracture to her left leg in the crash and underwent multiple surgeries in Italy before being flown back to the US for further treatment last week. But in an Instagram post on Monday, the American said the crash also led to compartment syndrome in her leg. The condition occurs after traumatic injuries such as falls from heights and car crashes. According to the Cleveland Clinic, “compartment syndrome happens when there’s too much pressure around your muscles. The pressure restricts the flow of blood, fresh oxygen and nutrients to your muscles and nerves. Compartment syndrome is extremely painful.” The lack of blood flow can lead to permanent damage to patients. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms has saved the Game of Thrones universe
The original show might have ended on a whimper and the first spin-off might have disappointed but this lighter, shorter series has been a genuine joyI can’t speak for anyone else, but I first entered into A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms extremely gingerly. Game of Thrones (as we all know) all but cratered during its final season, to the point that watching it almost felt like a punishment. House of the Dragon was somehow even worse, for reasons we’ll come to shortly.And so, presented with an opportunity to dip my toes back into Westeros, I hesitated. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me repeatedly due to a capitalist desire to permanently entrench all existing IP in order to minimise subscriber churn, shame on me. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Horror on a shocking scale’: resurgent US movement calls for end to family ICE detention
Solidarity campaign mobilizes as thousands of children like Liam Ramos taken amid Trump’s immigration crackdownOn 28 January, hundreds of protesters gathered near the Dilley immigration processing center in south Texas, where hundreds of children are being held. Days earlier, immigration lawyer Eric Lee filmed a video of detainees screaming and chanting “libertad,” or “freedom.”Soon after, solidarity events arose in the state. “Community members saw the children and families crying out [and] having their own protests from within and said to everybody: we need to show up there too,” said Rev Erin Walter, executive director of the Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yorkshire Water fined over £700,000 for repeated sewage releases
Company admits three pollution events that killed fish and insects in Pools Brook country park near ChesterfieldA water company has been fined more than £700,000 for repeatedly releasing sewage into a stream.Yorkshire Water was issued with the penalty after pleading guilty to three offences of sewage pollution in Pools Brook country park near Chesterfield. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reform UK’s ICE-style deportation plan condemned as ‘sadistic’
Zia Yusuf sets out proposals and calls migration an ‘invasion’, as refugee groups decry ‘grotesque’ measuresUK politics live – latest updatesReform UK’s plan to create an ICE-style deportation agency has been condemned as “sadistic”, after the party’s home affairs spokesperson vowed to face down “progressive outrage”.Zia Yusuf, introduced as “the shadow home secretary” at a press conference in Dover, said mass deportations carried out by a planned UK Deportation Command would not trigger the same kind of violent showdowns seen in the US because “policing is done by consent” in the UK. He also described the number of migrants arriving in the country as an “invasion”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into minister involved in targeting journalists to conclude ‘very soon’ - UK politics live
The Tories said it was ‘difficult to see’ how Josh Simons could continue in his roleBridget Phillipson, the education secretary, has been speaking about the Send reforms at an event in Peterborough.This is what she said about the need for inclusion.Inclusion is a choice. It is an educational choice, and it is also a political choice because we could duck this challenge, ignore the injustice of a postcode lottery in life chances putting off fixing the Send system yet again.The system works well for some at least.We welcome the scale of vision contained in the white paper which has the potential to create an education system that fully values children and young people with additional needs and their families.We also welcome the commitment to retain statutory education, health and care plans (EHCPs) for children and young people whose needs cannot be met through this new model. We know that many parents will welcome the legal requirement for schools to create individual support plans (ISPs) for all children with Send. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
At least 25 National Guards killed in violence after death of Mexican drug lord
Violence has erupted across Mexico since a powerful drug cartel boss died after being captured by special forces.

Mail Online
Open 
Rob Reiner's son Nick could enter plea today as he appears in court charged with parents' brutal murders
Nick Reiner is due back in court on Monday morning in Los Angeles, California. His parents, Rob and Michele Reiner, were found dead inside their Brentwood home on December 14.

Mail Online
Open 
Manchester United star Leny Yoro banned from driving after speeding past a school in his £170,000 Porsche at 72mph
The 20-year-old centre back's £170,000 Porsche Cayenne was clocked at 72mph by a camera in the Manchester suburb of Withington last August.

Mail Online
Open 
Will AI kill Ed Miliband's Net Zero fantasy? Proposed data centres 'need more energy than the whole of Britain does now'
The Energy Secretary was told the vast data centres needed for AI systems will require more energy than is currently used by the whole country.

Mail Online
Open 
Iron Age crime scene is discovered in Serbia: Scientists find the remains of 77 women and children who were brutally MURDERED then buried together 2,800 years ago
Dozens of women and children were collectively rounded up before being bludgeoned and stabbed to death 2,800 years ago, new findings suggest.

Mail Online
Open 
Google Pixel 9a review: I'm making a case to keep this older, more affordable version as the 10a lands in stores
The Pixel 9a is described as a more accessible alternative to the flagship Pixel 9. However, with early reviews of the Pixel 10a coming in, we ask if you are better off buying last years model.

Mail Online
Open 
Techno DJ who sold faulty aircraft engine parts to major airlines causing them to be grounded in 'audacious' £39million fraud is jailed
Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala, 38, admitted to forging more than 60,000 authenticity certificates for engine parts on his home computer between 2019 and 2023, costing airlines millions.

BBC UK News
Open 
Care home boss sexually abused children for decades
A jury hears children were preyed upon by Malcolm Phillips and his assistant for more than 20 years.

Russia Today News
Open 
Why the West fears a final settlement with Russia

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico: Troops killed after raid on drug lord 'El Mencho'
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced killing Mexico's most-wanted drug lord. At least 25 National Guard troops were killed in clashes. DW has the latest.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Why authoritarianism won't fix corruption in Southeast Asia
As governments across Southeast Asia respond to public anger over corruption, experts warn that crackdowns could serve as an excuse for those in power to punish their rivals and protect vested interests.

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC removes BAFTAs from iPlayer and apologises for racial slur
The BBC is facing a growing backlash after failing to edit out a racial slur shouted by a Tourette's campaigner from its BAFTAs broadcast - which was available to watch on iPlayer for over 12 hours.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Unlicensed gambling firms could be barred from sponsoring Premier League clubs
Top clubs agree not to have gambling sponsors on front of shirts, but government is consulting on total banUnlicensed gambling firms could be barred from sponsoring Premier League clubs, after a string of controversies involving pornographic videos, failures in anti-money laundering rules and concerns about links to organised crime.Shirts worn by players for several major English football teams, including Everton, Fulham and Wolverhampton Wanderers, feature the logos of unlicensed online casinos or bookmakers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
It hurt when the N-word was shouted out at the Baftas – because we are also hearing it so much outside | Nadine White
I was disturbed, but I wasn’t shocked. It’s a bigger problem that in these toxic times, so many of us endure this and other slurs in our daily livesAt the outset of the Baftas, the gilded crowd anticipated historic wins, emotional speeches and enjoying the familiar glow of a cultural institution congratulating itself on progress – whether fully warranted or not.Then, as proceedings began and as Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, two of the leading actors of our time, stood on stage, there was the N-word – shouted from the audience by John Davidson, a Tourette syndrome campaigner who also lives with TS and is the inspiration for the Bafta-winning film I Swear.Nadine White is a journalist and film-maker Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Murder accused's tearful 999 call was an act, prosecution claims
Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she died at her home in Lurgan in December 2022.

BBC UK News
Open 
'Sadistic' pair behind bars for blowing up sheep
Leighton Ashby and Oakley Holland beat the animal to death, then inserted fireworks in its body.

Mail Online
Open 
David Beckham's best friend Dave Gardner takes a swipe at Brooklyn as he poses with Marc Anthony in birthday tribute to godson Cruz - after singer accused estranged son of lying
David Beckham's best friend Dave Gardner shared an image showing him posing with singer Marc Anthony and Cruz Beckham to mark the latter's 21st birthday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Scientists are baffled by a rule-breaking black hole that's growing at 13 TIMES the cosmic 'speed limit'
An exceptionally hungry black hole from the dawn of the universe is growing at 13 times the cosmic 'speed limit', experts say.

Mail Online
Open 
Melania Trump slammed for making 'disgraceful' fashion choice at the Governors Dinner: 'It's inappropriate'
This weekend, Melania and husband President Donald Trump stepped out for the Governors Dinner in Washington, D.C. - but it was the First Lady's fashion that had everyone talking.

Mail Online
Open 
Two people are arrested over death of TV star 'the Lip King': Police probe whether he was 'undergoing cosmetic procedure' before he passed away
Jordan James Parke, who underwent cosmetic surgery more than 50 times and shot to fame on reality TV show Botched, passed away on Wednesday February 18, 2026.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
German tourists trying to create floating sauna rescued from Swedish ice floe
Authorities mounted rescue operation after group of five lost control of ice sheet in Stockholm archipelagoFive people have been rescued from an ice floe carrying a sauna tent, a motorised saw and an onboard motor after they lost control of their DIY vessel in the Stockholm archipelago.Swedish authorities believe the passengers, who were German tourists, had been attempting to create their own motor-powered floating sauna when the swell from a passing passenger ferry broke the piece of ice and stranded them near Värmdö, an island near Stockholm. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EU fails to agree on new sanctions on Russia ahead of fourth anniversary of war – Europe live
Hungary’s veto prevents EU countries from adopting latest round of sanctionsOne other thing we will be keeping an eye on today is the latest on the EU-US trade relationship after last Friday’s US supreme court ruling on Trump’s tariffs.The European Parliament is expected to discuss what to do with the EU-US trade deal later today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Award ceremonies can be anodyne – but Prince William’s Bafta moment broke through | Zoe Williams
It used to be accepted fact that nothing political or controversial would be mentioned within spitting distance of a podium. In the last few weeks that silent agreement has endedThe rule on a red carpet or a parti-coloured podium is that none of the victors say anything about politics. None of the surrounding players – the losers, the judges, the spouses, the hangers-on – should say anything either, because it draws attention to the vast lacuna where normal opinions should be. Some people, such as the Olympic committee, have explicit strictures, while other bodies merely create the expectation that nothing will be said, and can I just remind everyone that many years passed when this was no big deal. Politics was 9-to-5 work, and sports and showbiz were weekend-casual work, and nobody expected the two to intersect.It’s 2026, however, and the outside world intrudes on everything. Prince William said at Sunday night’s Bafta ceremony that he hadn’t seen the winning film, Hamnet, explaining: “I need to be in quite a calm state and I am not at the moment. I will save it.” Look, you could get on your high horse and say: “Mate, you’re the president of Bafta, could you not have found a moment of peace in which to watch the film that was likely to win everything?” Or you could speculate on what, between the arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and the rising swell of voices wanting to know who knew what, when, could have caused William’s disquiet. Or you could say: “Actually, Hamnet would be the perfect film for your troubled mind, being immensely soporific and yet quite forgiving; you can sleep through a large chunk of it and still know exactly what’s about to happen”.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Teen guilty of belonging to banned neo-Nazi group
The boy, 16, is also convicted of the possession of terror documents and sharing terror publications.

Mail Online
Open 
Horrific executions of El Mencho's 'cannibal cartel': From hitmen who cut out and ate victim's heart to mass beheadings and rivals 'blasted with flame throwers', how slain drug lord used extreme violence to spread fear
Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) frontman Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, 59, was eliminated on Sunday in a joint Mexican military and US-backed operation in Tapalpa.

Mail Online
Open 
Sleepover killer Damien Bendall who murdered his pregnant partner and three children is jailed for life for second time after attacking inmate with hammer in HMP Frankland
Cocaine-fuelled Damien Bendall killed his pregnant partner Terri Harris, 35, and her three children in September 2021.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour minister being probed by Keir Starmer's ethics tsar over his think-tank's 'dirty dossier' attack on journalists
Josh Simons, the Cabinet Office minister, will be investigated by Sir Laurie Magnus, who is the Prime Minister's independent adviser on ministerial standards.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Why Leeds would be flying high without league-worst late-goal record
After conceding another late goal on Saturday, we look at the stats that show Leeds would be seventh in the Premier League if games ended after 85 minutes.

Mail Online
Open 
Queen Camilla puts on a brave face as she attends a racing event near her East Sussex childhood home amid Andrew arrest drama
Camilla, 78, attended Jamie's Race Day at Plumpton Racecourse, East Sussex, on Monday, February 23.

Mail Online
Open 
How John Davidson became a household name in iconic BBC documentary about debilitating Tourette's tics that made him swear at the Queen, spark a bomb threat and yell racial slurs at the BAFTAs
John Davidson became prominent after the programme John's Not Mad, back in 1989 - and now faces fresh scrutiny after shouting the N-word at an awards showcase.

Mail Online
Open 
Sleepover killer Damien Bendall who murdered his pregnant partner and three children is jailed for minimum term of 15 years for attempting to murder inmate at HMP Frankland
Cocaine-fuelled Damien Bendall killed his pregnant partner Terri Harris, 35, and her three children in September 2021.

Sky News Home
Open 
Who is BAFTA winner Robert Aramayo?
It's not often an actor from Hull pips Hollywood actors to a top award, but Robert Aramayo has done just that.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
German tourists trying to create floating sauna rescued from Swedish ice floe
Authorities mounted rescue operation after group of five lost control of ice sheet in Stockholm archipelagoFive people have been rescued from an ice floe carrying a sauna tent, a motorised saw and an onboard motor after they lost control of their DIY vessel in the Stockholm archipelago.Swedish authorities believe the ice sheet’s passengers, who were German tourists, had been attempting to create their own motor-powered floating sauna when the swell from a passing passenger ferry broke the piece of ice and stranded them near Värmdö, an island near Stockholm. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Award ceremonies can be anodyne – but Prince William’s Bafta moment broke through | Zoe Williams
It used to be accepted fact that nothing political or controversial would be mentioned within spitting distance of a podium. In the last few weeks that silent agreement has endedThe rule on a red carpet or a parti-coloured podium is that none of the victors say anything about politics. None of the surrounding players – the losers, the judges, the spouses, the hangers-on – should say anything either, because it draws attention to the vast lacuna where normal opinions should be. Some people, such as the Olympic committee, have explicit strictures, while other bodies merely create the expectation that nothing will be said, and can I just remind everyone that many years passed when this was no big deal. Politics was 9-to-5 work, and sports and showbiz were weekend-casual work, and nobody expected the two to intersect.It’s 2026, however, and the outside world intrudes on everything. Prince William said at Sunday night’s Bafta ceremony that he hadn’t seen the winning film, Hamnet, explaining: “I need to be in quite a calm state and I am not at the moment. I will save it.” Look, you could get on your high horse and say: “Mate, you’re the president of Bafta, could you not have found a moment of peace in which to watch the film that was likely to win everything?” Or you could speculate on what, between the arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and the rising swell of voices wanting to know who knew what, when, could have caused William’s disquiet. Or you could say: “Actually, Hamnet would be the perfect film for your troubled mind, being immensely soporific and yet quite forgiving; you can sleep through a large chunk of it and still know exactly what’s about to happen”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rise of the ‘daycap’: is this the end of late-night drinking?
Forget nightcaps – an afternoon tipple is the new way to squeeze socialising into your evening, while still getting to bed on time. A great idea or a recipe for disaster?Name: The daycap.Age: As old as fermentation, and impatience. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer FINALLY visits by-election battleground and accuses Greens of wanting his teenage son to be able to buy heroin... but will he meet any actual voters?
After weeks of seemingly avoiding visiting Gorton & Denton amid concerns about his miserable poll ratings, Keir Starmer made a surprise appearance today.

Autosport F1
Open 
Why Melbourne will be more challenging for F1 – and what a plan B might look like
The moment Max Verstappen voiced his concerns about the new Formula 1 regulations, he immediately added: “On this circuit in Bahrain it's not too bad, but when we go to Melbourne, that's when you will really see how much we run out of energy on the straights.”The Red Bull driver has received backing from others in the paddock since then. Among them, Oliver Bearman and Oscar Piastri have ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
How to listen to T20 World Cup on BBC Radio 5 Live from anywhere in the world

TechRadar News
Open 
Boys of Tommen — everything we know so far about the Prime Video TV series adaptation

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Tuesday, February 24 (game #723)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Tuesday, February 24 (game #989)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Tuesday, February 24 (game #1492)

TechRadar News
Open 
2026: Beginning the year with an ethics-first strategy

TechRadar News
Open 
Russian hacker uses multiple AI tools to break hundreds of firewalls

TechRadar News
Open 
Waaaa! A new Super Mario Galaxy Movie leak has spoiled a major character reveal — and it's another of the Nintendo mascot's popular foes

TechRadar News
Open 
Are you tradeshow-ready? Because VistaPrint just cut up to 25% off premium business cards, custom mugs, and promo gear

Digital Trends
Open 
Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch
Nothing has officially teased the Phone 4a ahead of its March 5 launch, showcasing a refreshed back panel with a new Glyph Bar.
The post Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
BBC edits out 'Free Palestine' at BAFTAs, leaves in racial slur from man with Tourette Syndrome
The BBC did people with Tourette Syndrome no favors by broadcasting a racial slur at the BAFTA awards. That they could have spared audiences was evident from the two-hour tape delay and the editing out of Nigerian filmmaker Akinola Davies Jr's cry of "Free Palestine!" — Read the rest
The post BBC edits out 'Free Palestine' at BAFTAs, leaves in racial slur from man with Tourette Syndrome appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Cartel violence engulfs Mexico after military kills El Mencho
Mexican special forces killed Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes — the cartel boss known as "El Mencho" — on Saturday in a firefight in Tapalpa, Jalisco. He was 59. The US had put a $15 million bounty on his head.
El Mencho ran the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), which the FBI considers Mexico's most powerful drug trafficking organization. — Read the rest
The post Cartel violence engulfs Mexico after military kills El Mencho appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here are Trump’s affordability proposals — and where they stand
President Donald Trump is likely to tackle the elevated cost of living in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night. Here’s a look at what he has promised on that front — and whether he’s delivering.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tariff ruling sparks ‘refund chaos’ that small businesses and families can’t afford
Employers and workers need a stable, predictable U.S. trade policy.

BBC UK News
Open 
Accused's tearful 999 call was an act, prosecution claims
Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she died at her home in Lurgan in December 2022.

BBC UK News
Open 
Teen guilty of belonging to banned neo-Nazi group
The boy, 16, is also convicted of possession of terror documents and sharing terror publications.

Slashdot
Open 
Sam Altman Would Like To Remind You That Humans Use a Lot of Energy, Too
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is pushing back on growing concerns about AI's environmental footprint, dismissing claims about ChatGPT's water consumption as "totally fake" and arguing that the fairer way to measure AI's energy use is to compare it against humans.

In an interview with Indian Express, Altman acknowledged that evaporative cooling in data centers once made water usage a real concern but said that is no longer the case, calling internet claims of 17 gallons of water per query "completely untrue, totally insane, no connection to reality."

On energy, he conceded it is "fair" to worry about total consumption given how heavily the world now relies on AI, and called for a rapid shift toward nuclear, wind and solar power. He took particular issue with comparisons that pit the cost of training a model against a single human inference, noting it "takes like 20 years of life and all of the food you eat" before a person gets smart -- and that on a per-query basis, AI has "probably already caught up on an energy efficiency basis."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Stressful People in Your Life Could Be Adding Months To Your Biological Age
A study published last week in PNAS found that people who regularly cause problems or make life difficult -- whom the researchers call "hasslers" -- are associated with measurably faster biological aging in those around them, at a rate of roughly 1.5% per additional hassler and about nine months of additional biological age relative to same-age peers.

The research drew on DNA methylation-based epigenetic clocks and ego-centric network data from a state-representative probability sample of 2,345 adults in Indiana, aged 18 to 103. Nearly 29% of respondents reported at least one hassler in their close network. The biological toll varied by relationship type: hasslers who were family members showed the strongest and most consistent associations with accelerated aging, while spouse hasslers showed no significant effect on either epigenetic measure.

The damage also went beyond aging clocks -- each additional hassler was associated with greater depression and anxiety severity, higher BMI, increased inflammation, and higher multimorbidity. When benchmarked against smoking, a major behavioral risk factor for aging, the hassler effect corresponded to roughly 13 to 17% of smoking's estimated impact on the same aging clocks.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Benfica's Prestianni gets provisional one-match ban after alleged racial abuse
Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni receives a provisional one-match Uefa suspension after Real Madrid's Vinicius Jr reported alleged racist abuse during last week's Champions League meeting.

The Verge
Open 
Inside Microsoft’s big Xbox leadership shake-up
Xbox fans had been anticipating the retirement of Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer for years, but what most hadn't expected was the departure of Xbox president Sarah Bond too. For many outside the company, Bond seemed like Spencer's natural successor, a deputy of sorts. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Microsoft CFO Amy Hood clearly didn't […]

The Verge
Open 
Hank Green will gladly take billionaire money for education videos
Today, I’m talking with Hank Green, a longtime friend of Decoder and the cofounder and now former owner of Complexly, an online education company he started with his brother John in 2012. I say former owner because Hank and John have just converted Complexly into a nonprofit and given up their ownership of the company […]

Cabinet Office
Open 
Over 17 million saved in past six months through government office closures
The government has saved over £17 million in the past six months by closing three expensive central London offices and relocating staff to existing spaces.

Department for Education
Open 
Bridget Phillipson's speech on the schools white paper
Bridget Phillipson's speech on the schools white paper, delivered at Ormiston Bushfield Academy in Peterborough

UK Government News
Open 
Bridget Phillipson's speech on the schools white paper
Bridget Phillipson's speech on the schools white paper, delivered at Ormiston Bushfield Academy in Peterborough

UK Government News
Open 
Over £17 million saved in past six months through government office closures
The government has saved over £17 million in the past six months by closing three expensive central London offices and relocating staff to existing spaces.

UK Government News
Open 
SFO secures 4-year prison sentence for aircraft parts fraud
Director jailed for scheme that deceived aviation industry.

Mail Online
Open 
NHS Trust spent £600,000 defending changing room policy that saw female nurses share with a trans colleague
County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust splurged £603,000 on a legal battle against eight nurses who objected to a trans nurse using a female changing room.

Mail Online
Open 
Incredible moment abducted girl, 3, is rescued after dad let stranger 'who needed a hand' come into family home
Kehlani Rogers, 3, was found safe on Sunday after she was stolen from her home in Arizona.

Mail Online
Open 
American couple trapped in Puerto Vallarta during first trip away from son, four, tell family where to find their WILLS as cartel violence kills 14, resorts run out of food and Cancun vacationers ordered to shelter in place
The US State Department has issued a shelter in place order that encompasses vacation hotspots like Puerto Vallarta, Cancun, Playa del Carmen and Tulum.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine has made 'astonishing' battlefield gains in recent weeks with Russian economy creaking under the strain of war on fourth anniversary of Putin's invasion, German chancellor Merz reveals
The German leader proclaimed that Ukraine's fight against Russia was more effective than it has been made out to be, pointing to major territorial gains made by their military this month.

BBC World News
Open 
Watch: Yosemite waterfall turns molten orange
The event occurs only in February, when the setting sun hits Horsetail Fall in Yosemite National Park at just the right angle.

Sky News Home
Open 
Parents charged with murder of three-month-old son
Two parents have been charged with the murder of their three-month-old baby.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni provisionally suspended by Uefa after Vinícius incident
Benfica appeal against ban from Real Madrid second legVinícius alleged he was racially abused by ArgentinianUefa has provisionally suspended Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni for Wednesday’s Champions League playoff match against Real Madrid after allegations that he racially abused Vinícius Júnior during last week’s first leg.The ban has been imposed pending the completion of a Uefa investigation and Benfica said they would appeal against the decision. The Portuguese club said they regretted being “deprived” of the player while the process was continuing but acknowledged their appeal was unlikely to prevent Prestianni from being suspended for the return in Madrid. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andrew’s former protection officers urged to share what they saw on duty
Call comes amid fresh scrutiny of Mountbatten-Windsor’s alleged links to Epstein, including claims over security arrangements at his New York homeThe intense focus on the former Prince Andrew’s association with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has centred on the women who were trafficked for sex as young girls by the latter, and the police investigation into claims Mountbatten-Windsor handed him sensitive information while serving as the UK trade envoy.Over the weekend, it shifted slightly to the police officers who were tasked with guarding Andrew for years as he carried out his public role as a senior royal. They are now being told to come forward and speak to detectives about what they saw and heard while on duty. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Accused's tearful call 999 was an act, prosecution claims
Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she died at her home in Lurgan in December 2022.

Ministry of Defence
Open 
UK submarine arrives in Australia in AUKUS partnership first
Royal Navy submarine HMS ANSON arrives in Western Australia for maintenance with AUKUS partners.

ZDNet News
Open 
Don't buy the wrong touchscreen gloves this winter - here's which ones I recommend most
These Cross Point Gear Sports gloves are the best outdoor gloves with touchscreen support that I've used.

ZDNet News
Open 
I tried the first car charger with Apple and Google's location tracking, and it's the real deal
The Scosche FoundIT 12V charger has dual USB ports and a built-in finder for Apple Find My and Google Find Hub.

ZDNet News
Open 
AI project stalled? Blame your outdated, fragmented workflow - and redesign it now
If AI is underperforming at your company, it's because adding it on top of old systems is holding you back. But you can fix it before it's too late.

ZDNet News
Open 
What we're expecting at Apple's March event: iPhone 17e, MacBook M5, new iPads, and more
Here's what the rumor mill says Apple will and won't reveal during its big product drop next week.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
CME Group to Roll Out 24/7 Cryptocurrency Futures and Options Trading Starting May 29
In response to surging institutional interest in digital assets, CME Group, the world’s derivatives marketplace, announced it will introduce continuous around-the-clock trading for its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options products. The expanded schedule is scheduled to take effect on May 29, 2026, subject to regulatory... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
SEC Staff Guidance Update Impacts Reg A
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has updated Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations (C&DIs) that impact Regulation A (Reg A). The update occurred last week (February 17, 2026) and is part of the SEC’s periodic process. These C&DIs serve as an interpretive resource for exempt securities... Read More

UK Legislation
Open 
The Criminal Legal Aid and Assistance by Way of Representation (Miscellaneous Amendment) (Scotland) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend several regulations made under the Legal Aid (Scotland) Act 1986 (“the 1986Act”). They remove assistance by way of representation (“ABWOR”) for summary criminal proceedings other than those following conviction, make summary criminal legal aid under section24 of the 1986 Act the primary form of legal aid for such proceedings, amend some solemn procedure first instance preparation fees, and also make related provision including in respect of automatic legal aid and legal aid in matters of special urgency.

The Hill
Open 
The challenge of the current generation of Black politicians
Black political power has reached a high point, with record numbers of Black members in the House and Senate, but Black voters are still asking what Black political power has done for them, as they face issues such as police brutality, income inequality, and Trump's undermining of affirmative action programs.

The Hill
Open 
Trump administration ending collections on tariffs deemed illegal
The Trump administration on Tuesday will stop collections on sweeping tariffs that were deemed illegal by the Supreme Court in a notable ruling last week, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said Sunday. CBP said that tariffs, which had been imposed through the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) by President Trump, are set to...

The Hill
Open 
Cannon blocks release of Smith's report on Mar-a-Lago documents case
U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon sided with President Trump in a ruling barring the release of former special counsel Jack Smith’s report reviewing the Mar-a-Lago documents case. Cannon wrote that release of the report “would cause irreparable damage to former defendants” in the case, which in addition to Trump include former co-defendants Walt Nauta...

The Hill
Open 
Women suffer heart attacks too: The risks, symptoms and how to save yourself
Be aware that heart attacks don’t happen like they do in the movies.

The Hill
Open 
Supreme Court won’t hear Boeing’s bid to end pilot union’s 737 Max suit
The Supreme Court on Monday turned away Boeing’s attempt to stave off a lawsuit over its 737 Max aircraft brought by the Southwest Airlines pilot union. In a brief order without any noted dissents, the justices left in place a Texas state court ruling that allows the case to move forward toward trial. Boeing had argued the lawsuit is preempted by federal law. Boeing came under intense scrutiny after two 737 Max aircraft crashed in 2018 and 2019, tragedies later blamed on...

The Register
Open 
Altman: You think AI is wasted energy? Try raising 100 billion humans
OpenAI CEO takes really, really long view on energy efficiency AI is being unfairly targeted over its energy use, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman claims, as the naysayers ignore the vast amount of resources humans have consumed over millennia – not least to avoid being eating by predators.…

The Register
Open 
O say, can you see: FCC pushes patriotic programming for US 250th
Stations urged to mark milestone with pro-America content The head of the Federal Communications Commission has called on broadcasters to start the day with the Star Spangled Banner or the Pledge of Allegiance to celebrate the US's 250th birthday.…

The Register
Open 
Gemini users say their chat histories have quietly vanished
Complaints pile up from users after months of conversations disappear. Google insists it’s just a temporary bug Over the past few days, complaints have stacked up from people who say months of conversations with Google's AI chatbot have simply vanished, with Reg readers noting the disappearances seemed to coincide with the rollout of Gemini 3.1.…

The Register
Open 
Break free of Ring's servers, earn a five-figure bounty
Goal is to run software locally and stream only to owners' computers If the sour taste has still not left your mouth after Ring's Super Bowl ad, there is a $10,000 prize for anyone who can find a security flaw in the company's cameras.…

Gizmodo
Open 
‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Ends With a Tease of Adventures to Come
Dunk bids a melancholy farewell to Ashford Meadow in ‘The Morrow.’

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Federal Judge PERMANENTLY blocks release of corrupt Jack Smith classified docs report
A federal judge in Florida just permanently blocked the release of the corrupt Jack Smith’s classified documents report, saying it would be unfair to President Trump and the other defendants if they . . .

CNET News
Open 
Is It Snowing Where You Are? I Hope You Have a Roof Rake
Pay attention to the snow on your roof. If you don't clear it off in a timely manner, you're asking for trouble.

Mail Online
Open 
Wife of ex-boss of music giant Marshall Amps died from cancer caused by inhaling asbestos fibres when hugging her factory worker father after work, inquest hears
Elaine Ellery, 67, would run to Walenty Snoch when he got in from the factory which employed him and inadvertently inhaled asbestos fibres his clothes had come into contact with.

Sky News Home
Open 
Teenager found guilty of terror offences after joining banned far-right group
A schoolboy has been found guilty of terror offences after joining a banned far-right group and researching a synagogue, encouraged by Russian extremists.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bath BachFest review – joyous and mesmerising music making
Guildhall & St Mary’s Bathwick, BathThe festival’s new artistic director Adrian Brendel presided over – and was a key part of – a day of virtuosic and adventurous performances Taking up the mantle of the late Amelia Freedman as artistic director of Bath Bachfest is no small task for Adrian Brendel, but his determination to breathe new life into the two-day festival is apparent, not least in establishing the BachFest Ensemble that unites highly talented players in the early stages of notable careers.The energy and commitment of the younger players was palpable and, in a concert of music by Handel, Purcell, Bach and Vivaldi, their collaboration with an older cohort – Brendel himself anchoring the ensemble as cellist, together with oboist Nicholas Daniel and the American countertenor Reginald Mobley – there was a very real sense of their joy in performing together and the audience’s in being part of the equation. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
German tourists trying to create floating sauna rescued from Swedish ice floe
Authorities mounted rescue operation after group of five lost control of ice sheet in Stockholm archipelagoFive people have been rescued from an ice floe carrying a sauna tent, a motorised saw and an onboard motor after they lost control of their DIY vessel in the Stockholm archipelago.Swedish authorities believe the ice sheet’s passengers, who were German tourists, had been attempting to create their own motor-powered floating sauna when the swell from a passing passenger ferry broke the ice sheet and stranded them near Värmdö, an island near Stockholm. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni provisionally suspended by Uefa after Vinícius incident
Prestianni to miss second leg against Real MadridVinícius alleged he was racially abused by ArgentinianUefa has provisionally suspended Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni for Wednesday’s Champions League playoff match against Real Madrid after allegations that he racially abused Vinícius Júnior during last week’s first leg.The ban has been imposed pending the completion of a Uefa investigation and Benfica said they would appeal against the decision. The Portuguese club said they regretted being “deprived” of the player while the process was continuing but acknowledged their appeal was unlikely to prevent Prestianni from being suspended for the return in Madrid. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Highs, lows and halfpipes: the Guardian’s most memorable Winter Olympics moments
Curling cursing, podium camaraderie and stunning speed on skis linger for our writers after an astonishing GamesBest moment Matt Weston winning double gold. It was so well deserved. He fought hard for the victories and the emotions afterwards showed how much it meant to him.Biggest disappointment Seeing the second GB skeleton relay team, Freya Tarbit and Marcus Wyatt, take fourth place. The sense of almost getting that medal, the sadness was so visible. I was so impressed by their performance, I wanted to hug them both. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Profoundly moving’: Netflix’s posthumous celebrity interview series is a marvel
Famous Last Words is a series of interviews conducted with notable names and only released after their death and is offers an incredible opportunityExactly one day after the death of actor Eric Dane, a new show appeared on Netflix. Entitled Famous Last Words, it consisted of an interview with none other than Eric Dane himself. While at first the timing of the release might have seemed coincidental at best and exploitative at worst, the reality of the interview was something else entirely.Dane, it transpired, had recorded the interview in full knowledge that he was dying. What’s more, he conducted it on the understanding that it would only be released in the event of his death. Because this is the conceit behind Famous Last Words. It exists as a living obituary, as an opportunity to go on the record for the very last time to contextualise their life in a manner of their choosing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andrew’s former protection officers urged to share what they saw on duty
Call comes amid fresh scrutiny of Mountbatten-Windsor’s alleged links to Epstein, including claims over security arrangements at his New York homeThe intense focus on the former Prince Andrew’s association with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has centred on the women who were trafficked for sex as young girls by the latter, and the police investigation into claims Mountbatten-Windsor handed him sensitive information while serving as the UK trade envoy.Over the weekend, it shifted slightly to the police officers who were tasked with guarding Andrew for years as he carried out his public role as a senior royal. They are now being told to come forward and speak to detectives about what they saw and heard on duty. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Holiday park teens' cause of death 'inconclusive'
Cherish Bean, 15, and Ethan Slater, 17, died at Little Eden Holiday Park, near Bridlington.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Watch Series 11 Gets $100 Discounts on Amazon, Starting at $299
Amazon this week has all-time low prices on the Apple Watch Series 11, with $100 discounts across select models of the smartwatch. This time around the deals are more sparse, and we're only tracking these discounts on three models of the smartwatch.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



You can get the 42mm GPS Apple Watch Series 11 for $299.00, down from $399.00, and the 46mm GPS model for $329.00, down from $429.00. We're only tracking one model of each of these watches on sale right now.



$100 OFFApple Watch Series 11 (42mm GPS) for $299.00

$100 OFFApple Watch Series 11 (46mm GPS) for $329.00



If you're shopping for cellular models, you can get the 42mm cellular Apple Watch Series 11 on sale for $399.00, down from $499.00. Similar to the GPS models, only one model is being discounted at this time, and it's the Rose Gold Aluminum with Light Blush Sport Band in Small/Medium.



$100 OFFApple Watch Series 11 (42mm Cell) for $399.00



Head to our full Deals Roundup to get caught up with all of the latest deals and discounts that we've been tracking over the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Apple Watch Series 11 Gets $100 Discounts on Amazon, Starting at $299' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Doctor reveals how to maintain new physique after reaching weight-loss goal on Ozempic... and what to do if progress stalls
GLP-1 drugs have ushered in a new era in weight loss. But success brings a new question that millions of Americans are now confronting: What happens after the weight comes off?

Mail Online
Open 
M&S just dropped a £40 lookalike pair of Victoria Beckham's £390 designer jeans - and they're selling fast
Luckily for those of us wanting to copy Posh Spice's effortless style without breaking the bank, M&S have come through with a near-identical dupe for just a fraction of the price.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Farhan has Hundred hopes despite Indian owners not signing Pakistan players
Sahibzada Farhan ‘very hopeful’ of securing a deal63 Pakistan players on the 710-player auction longlistPakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan has said he remains hopeful of securing a contract to play in the Hundred this year, despite reports that the tournament’s four Indian-owned teams will not consider signing players from the country, but he admitted that selection decisions are “not in our hands”.Farhan, who is the leading run-scorer at the T20 World Cup, is one of 63 Pakistani players on the 710-name longlist put forward for the men’s auction on 12 March. Despite the rumours, more Pakistani players have made themselves available than those from any other foreign nation with all but two of the country’s 15-man World Cup squad hoping for a deal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Most of us spoke’: crunch talks fired up Arsenal for derby win, reveals Gyökeres
Team meeting led to ‘honest’ exchange, says strikerArsenal five points clear but City have game in handViktor Gyökeres has revealed that Arsenal’s brutally honest team discussions after the draw at Wolves last Wednesday brought renewed purpose and helped them to Sunday’s restorative win at Tottenham.Gyökeres produced arguably his best performance for Arsenal in the 4-1 derby victory, threatening from start to finish and scoring two goals. It was the perfect way for Arsenal to respond to the Wolves game, when they surrendered a 2-0 lead for a 2-2 stalemate. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Which cordless drill wins at real-world DIY? I set up the Drillympics to find out
The power tools that took gold. Plus, sustainable subscriptions that make life easier and the best steam irons, tested• Don’t get the Filter delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereSpeed, power, endurance, precision … the best cordless drills share many traits with Olympic athletes. Subconsciously, this might have informed my method for testing these power tools: a gauntlet of DIY challenges, against the clock. We called this endeavour the “Drillympics”, made up of a series of workstations devised to thoroughly test each product’s key functions.It’s been claimed that sport reveals character, and the testing certainly taught me a lot about the drills. I found out which ones worked the quickest (congrats to our Drillympic champion, the Makita DHP490Z), as well as which provided the easiest drill bit changeover (handy for working on multifaceted projects) and whether the drills were capable of doing all the jobs they claimed to. I also learned, much to my alarm, that drilling into wood with the drill bit turning in the wrong direction is an efficient way to start a fire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Musicians drank too much and slept on my barn floor’: Andrew Bird on making cult album The Mysterious Production of Eggs
‘I was playing all day and night in a kind of fever, throwing in pop, jazz, violin, guitars and polyrhythms, while wrestling with some demons’We had a family farm three hours west of Chicago, and when I was scoping out potential studio spaces I remembered some barns where my brother and I used to make forts out of hay bales when we were little. One was in rough shape and had racoons living in it, but I got a local carpenter to do the skilled jobs and I did the mundane stuff such as boards for the ceiling. Then I just moved in, but I hadn’t realised how isolating it would be. It was February and snowing and none of my friends had cars. I’d go for two weeks at a time without speaking to anyone. So I started experimenting with a loop pedal, messing around with songs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump threatens ‘more powerful and obnoxious’ tariffs, amid confusion in UK and EU; Wall Street drops – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsThe London stock market has dipped slightly in early trading.The FTSE 100 index is down 19 points, or 0.18%, at 10,668 points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Keir Starmer opens investigation into Josh Simons over targeting of reporters
PM asks ethics adviser to examine conduct of Cabinet Office minister amid Labour Together scandal falloutUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has opened a formal investigation into a Cabinet Office minister involved in falsely accusing journalists of having links to pro-Russian propaganda.The prime minister’s decision follows revelations in the Guardian that Josh Simons, who was running the thinktank Labour Together at the time, was also involved in telling British intelligence officials that another journalist was “living with” the daughter of a former adviser to Jeremy Corbyn. Officials were told by Simons’s team that the former adviser was “suspected of links to Russian intelligence”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
With N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the foot | Catherine Shoard
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have allowed their successful diversity drive to be overshadowedBBC apologises again for Baftas N-word incident as show removed from iPlayer for re-editWhy the Baftas must get rid of their two-hour delay and broadcast liveBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversyBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling racial insult, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
O'Sullivan signs up for World Seniors Championship
Ronnie O'Sullivan, 50, is set to make his debut in the World Seniors Snooker Championship at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre in May.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany weighs China risks in new trade era
Chancellor Friedrich Merz is traveling to China for a belated inaugural visit. A lot is at stake as Germany is in search of global partners after the US has relinquished much of its longstanding role.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico: Troops killed after drug lord 'El Mencho' captured
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced killing Mexico's most-wanted drug lord. At least 25 National Guard troops were killed in clashes. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Nottingham triple killer was freed by mental health workers who feared detaining him would be racist - because there were too many 'young black men in custody'
Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar were all killed by Valdo Calocane during a stabbing rampage in Nottingham in 2023.

Russia Today News
Open 
White House taunts Canada after hockey loss

Deutsche Welle
Open 
China boosts profitable renewables as Trump clings to coal
The Trump administration has rolled back environmental protections and blocked green energy development, China is forging ahead.

Mail Online
Open 
Terror in the terminal: Moment panicking tourists sprint through Mexican airport fearing a cartel attack hours after death of drug lord El Mencho
Travelers are seen sprinting away from suspected cartel attacks in Guadalajara International Airport in Jalisco state after plumes of smoke were seen rising from blazing vehicles outside.

Mail Online
Open 
Bringing home the gold! Team GB's Winter Olympic heroes land back at Gatwick - and double champion Matt Weston is straight in to wedding planning after packing on the PDA
Team GB's Winter Olympics stars received a rapturous reception as they returned from Italy on Monday following a hugely successful Games.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wegovy and Ozempic owner dealt blow as next-gen weight-loss drug is branded ‘obsolete’
Novo Nordisk’s shares fall sharply after testing of CagriSema falls short of investors’ expectationsBusiness live – latest updatesThe owner of Wegovy and Ozempic has suffered a significant setback, as its highly anticipated new weight-loss treatment was labelled “obsolete” after disappointing clinical trials.Novo Nordisk’s shares fell sharply on Monday after the results from testing the Danish company’s CagriSema drug fell short of investors’ expectations. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New details emerge about armed man shot and killed at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago
Austin Tucker Martin, 21, was killed by Secret Service after entering Trump’s Florida resort with a shotgun on SundayUS politics live – latest updatesThe 21-year-old man who was shot and killed after having entered Donald Trump’s Florida resort on Sunday – while carrying a shotgun – came from a North Carolina family of the president’s supporters and had reportedly become increasingly fixated on the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files.The focus of the FBI’s investigation into the intrusion attributed to Austin Tucker Martin is tightening on his movements and motives. Martin was confronted by Secret Service agents and a local sheriff’s deputy inside the secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago and killed after he had raised a shotgun into the shooting position at about 1.30am on Sunday, law enforcement said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dick Advocaat resigns as Curaçao head coach before country’s first World Cup
Dutchman steps down for personal reasonsCaribbean island only has population of 150,000Dick Advocaat led Curaçao to their first World Cup but will not be charge of the team at the tournament itself after resigning from the head coach’s post for personal reasons.“Dick Advocaat has stepped down with immediate effect as head coach of the national football team of Curaçao,” the country’s football federation confirmed on social media, the statement going onto say that the 78-year-old will “devote his full attention to his daughter, who is facing health issues”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni provisionally suspended by Uefa after Vinícius incident
Prestianni to miss second leg against Real MadridVinícius alleged he was racially abused by ArgentinianUefa has provisionally suspended Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni for Wednesday’s Champions League playoff match against Real Madrid after allegations that he racially abused Vinícius Júnior during last week’s first leg.The ban has been imposed pending the completion of a Uefa investigation and Benfica said they would appeal against the decision. The Portuguese club said they regretted being “deprived” of the player while the process was ongoing but acknowledged their appeal was unlikely to prevent Prestianni from being suspended for the return in Madrid. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics were again unrelatable and ‘useless’ and yet utterly astounding to watch | Andy Bull
The Games offer little fame or fortune but the purity of the athletes and their stories made them greatIt was the Olympics of politics and penises, of JD Vance being jeered and of Ukrainian bobsledders being banned from the competition, of a convicted criminal beating the teammate she was guilty of defrauding, of Lindsey Vonn crashing out 12 seconds into the race and of Ilia Malinin making one mistake too many, of the internet became momentarily obsessed with slow‑motion videos of a Canadian stroking a curling stone with the tip of his finger, and it was the Olympics where the Norwegian ski‑jump team refused to dignify questions about whether or not they were injecting acid into their genitals.Like I said right at the beginning, Pierre de Coubertin never wanted a Winter Olympics. If that line sounds a little familiar it might be because you read it here a fortnight or so ago. “The great inferiority of these snow sports is that they are completely useless,” Coubertin wrote, “with no useful application whatsoever.” But it’s true, too, that over time he changed his mind. And by the end of the International Olympic Committee’s very first Olympic “winter sports week” at Chamonix in 1924 he gave a speech in which he told his audience that “winter sports are among the purest”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC producers say they ‘didn’t hear’ N-word slur as ‘working in a truck’, following second Baftas apology
Corporation says it is sorry that words spoken involuntarily during ceremony by John Davidson, who has Tourette syndrome, were not edited outWith N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the footWhy the Baftas must pivot to broadcasting liveBacklash mounts as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstBBC producers overseeing coverage of the Bafta film awards say they did not hear a racial slur it mistakenly broadcast on BBC One, as the corporation apologised for the error that remained uncorrected for several hours.The broadcast containing the N-word remained on BBC iPlayer overnight before the coverage was taken down. The BBC later apologised and said the show would be re-edited, following a backlash. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
No 10 says 'nothing off the table' over new US tariffs as UK could be among worst hit
Downing Street says discussions are ongoing following US President Donald Trump's announcement of a 15% global tariffs.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico says at least 25 soldiers killed in separate attacks after killing of drug lord 'El Mencho.' Follow live
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced killing Mexico's most-wanted drug lord. At least 25 National Guard troops were killed in clashes. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Team GB Winter Olympics stars receive heroes' welcome on return from Italy - as double gold medallist Matt Weston reunites with fiancee
Team GB's Winter Olympics stars received a rapturous reception as they returned from Italy on Monday following a hugely successful Games.

Mail Online
Open 
Nelson Mandela's grandson turns his former home into 'hangout for drug users' and 'scantily-clad women'
In his will, Mandela stated that his grandsons could live at the Houghton Estate property in Johannesburg rent-free, however trustees have become worried about their treatment of the home

Mail Online
Open 
Lee Andrews finally removes the filters after weeks of youth-enhancing Instagram trickery and says people will see the real him when he returns to the UK in one week - despite feeling insecure without them
The businessman became Katie Price's fourth husband little more than a week after meeting the former glamour model in Dubai.

Ars Technica
Open 
Review: Knight of the Seven Kingdoms brings back that Westeros magic

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexico says at least 25 soldiers killed in separate attacks after drug lord 'El Mencho' captured. Follow live
Cartel members have gone on violent rampages after the army announced killing Mexico's most-wanted drug lord. At least 25 National Guard troops were killed in clashes. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Titanic director James Cameron SLAMS Netflix over 'ill‑conceived' Warner Bros. takeover attempt
In a deal estimated at $82.7 billion, the streamer is in talks to take over Warner Bros.' film and TV studios, as well as HBO and HBO Max.

Mail Online
Open 
Tourists love Japan - but the locals are sick of visitors doing this on trains. Are YOU guilty of these annoying habits?
You might be keen to ride the bullet train in Japan - but be warned, many tourist behaviours are considered to be highly annoying when displayed on board trains in the country.

Sky News Home
Open 
Palace unlikely to push back against calls to remove Andrew from line of succession
Since Thursday, there's been no sign of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, but the noise around his arrest has not abated, especially over his position as eighth in line to the throne.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK says 'nothing is off the table' in response to US tariffs
Downing Street says discussions are ongoing following US President Donald Trump's announcement of a 15% global tariffs.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Evidence in unsolved murder of Glasgow businessman being reviewed
The victim's brother Billy Blue says it is "an absolute disgrace" that no-one has been charged over the crime.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Stolen Napoleonic plaques found after TV show clue
An antiques dealer realised they were Napoleonic by the markings he recalled seeing on TV show Lovejoy.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
World's first virtual minister in court in Albania
Last fall, Albanian PM Edi Rama presented the world's first virtual minister, "Diella." Actor Anila Bisha says she never gave her consent for her voice and image to be used for the avatar and has filed a lawsuit.

Mail Online
Open 
Luis Suarez-Patrice Evra fears trigger UEFA to 'provisionally' BAN Benfica 'racist' Gianluca Prestianni from the Champions League before he faces Vinicius Jr again
The suspension means that Prestianni willbe ineligable for the second leg between the two teams at the Bernabeu on Wednesday night.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC Total Immersion: Icelandic Chill review – ambience, flowerpots and drones in varied day of new music
Barbican, London This celebration of Iceland’s outsize musical talents was a mixed bag, but highlights such as Bára Gísladóttir’s double bass concerto and Daníel Bjarnason’s I Want to Be Alive revealed singular and innovative voicesDespite its modest population of about 400,000 – that’s roughly the size of Bristol – Iceland punches significantly above its weight, artistically. Musicians from Víkingur Ólafsson to Björk, and composers from what has been called the First Icelandic School regularly top the bill in concert halls worldwide. But is there such a thing as an Icelandic sound?An afternoon programme of chamber and choral music suggested not. Casting its net wide, the 20th-century European mainstream was much in evidence. Hafliði Hallgrímsson’s Seven Epigrams for violin and cello, stylishly performed by Phoebe Rousochatzaki and Kosta Popovic, might have been by Schnittke. A homage to leading Soviet artists, it included a suitably jittery portrait of Shostakovich. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Charities condemn Reform UK’s ‘sadistic’ and ‘abhorrent’ migration plans – UK politics live
Amnesty says ‘UK does not need or want a British version of ICE’ as Tories claim proposals are copied from their ownBridget Phillipson, the education secretary, has been speaking about the Send reforms at an event in Peterborough.This is what she said about the need for inclusion.Inclusion is a choice. It is an educational choice, and it is also a political choice because we could duck this challenge, ignore the injustice of a postcode lottery in life chances putting off fixing the Send system yet again.The system works well for some at least.We welcome the scale of vision contained in the white paper which has the potential to create an education system that fully values children and young people with additional needs and their families.We also welcome the commitment to retain statutory education, health and care plans (EHCPs) for children and young people whose needs cannot be met through this new model. We know that many parents will welcome the legal requirement for schools to create individual support plans (ISPs) for all children with Send. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Benfica's Prestianni gets provisional one-match ban after Vinicius incident
Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni receives a provisional one-match Uefa suspension after Real Madrid's Vinicius Jr reported alleged racist abuse during last week's Champions League meeting.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Why has Alan Carr bought a castle and where is it?
The comedian has purchased a castle in the Scottish Borders which comes with 17 bedrooms and its own working railway.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Floods, a candlelight vigil and Olympic stars return home: Monday’s photo of the day
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wegovy and Ozempic owner dealt blow as next-gen weight-loss drug is branded ‘obsolete’
Novo Nordisk’s shares fall sharply after testing of CagriSema falls short of investors’ expectationsBusiness live – latest updatesThe owner of Wegovy and Ozempic has suffered a significant setback, as its highly anticipated new weight-loss treatment was labelled “obsolete” after disappointing clinical trials.Novo Nordisk’s shares fell sharply on Monday after the results from testing the Danish firm’s CagriSema drug fell short of investors’ expectations. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New details emerge about armed man shot and killed at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago
Austin Tucker Martin, 21, was killed by Secret Service after entering Trump’s Florida resort with a shotgun on SundayUS politics live – latest updatesThe 21-year-old man who was shot and killed after having entered Donald Trump’s Florida resort on Sunday – while carrying a shotgun – came from a North Carolina family of the president’s supporters and had reportedly become increasingly fixated on the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files.The focus of the FBI’s investigation into the intrusion attributed to Austin Tucker Martin is tightening on the his movements and motives. Martin was confronted by Secret Service agents and a local sheriff’s deputy inside the secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago and killed after he had raised a shotgun into the shooting position at about 1.30am on Sunday, law enforcement said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Benfica’s Prestianni provisionally suspended by Uefa after Vinícius incident
Prestianni to miss second leg against Real MadridVinícius alleged he was racially abused by ArgentinianUefa has provisionally suspended Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni for Wednesday’s Champions League match against Real Madrid after the incident with Vinícius Júnior in last week’s first leg.Vinícius alleged that Prestianni racially abused him during Madrid’s Champions League playoff win in Lisbon, prompting Uefa to appoint an ethics and disciplinary inspector to investigate. Prestianni will miss this week’s return and Uefa said further punishment could be handed out once its investigation is completed. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Benfica's Prestianni gets provisional one-match ban
Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni receives a provisional one-match Uefa suspension after Real Madrid's Vinicius Jr reported alleged racist abuse during last week's Champions League meeting.

Sky News Home
Open 
Benfica player provisionally suspended by UEFA amid Vinicius Junior racism allegations
Gianluca Prestianni has been provisionally suspended by UEFA for Benfica's Champions League game against Real Madrid on Wednesday following allegations he racially abused Vinicius Junior.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Patient with history of eating disorder calls for tighter weight-loss jabs checks
Emma Dyer says she collapsed on her bathroom floor and began vomiting blood after buying jabs online.

F1 Technical
Open 
F1MATHS: How much milage did the eleven teams cover during pre-season testing?
Across two intensive three‑day sessions in Bahrain, the eleven Formula 1 teams completed their full pre‑season running, offering the clearest early indication of reliability, preparation, and operational sharpness ahead of the new campaign. F1Technical's senior writer Balazs Szabo delivers his latest analysis.

TechRadar News
Open 
I've just seen the sun for the first time in weeks — and right on cue, one of Garmin's biggest solar watches with 'infinite battery life' is down to its lowest-ever price

TechRadar News
Open 
Forget billboards – Apple just used 3,000 drones to build a 500-foot Godzilla over Hollywood for Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season 2

TechRadar News
Open 
Anker is one of my favorite power bank brands — and its PowerCore 10K is a bargain

TechRadar News
Open 
India's streaming giant lodges criminal complaint against ExpressVPN over alleged copyright-breaching marketing

TechRadar News
Open 
Anthropic claims half of its agent tool calls are to do with software engineering - so are developers letting AI take over?

Boing Boing
Open 
Activists hang instantly-famous photo of arrested Andrew in Louvre
The striking photo of freshly-arrested Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, facing charges of public misconduct after allegedly sharing secret info with billionaire sex trafficker pal Jeffrey Epstein, was an instant classic. It belongs in an art gallery, people said. How about the Louvre? — Read the rest
The post Activists hang instantly-famous photo of arrested Andrew in Louvre appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Gamers need Windows 11 Pro — Now $13 instead of $199
TL;DR: Upgrade to Windows 11 Pro for $12.97 (MSRP $199) through 3/22 at 11:59 PM and keep your PC current without overspending.
We know you're out there — the gamer who dropped serious cash on a GPU, upgraded the RAM, maybe even built the rig from scratch… but still hasn't upgraded to Windows 11 Pro. — Read the rest
The post Gamers need Windows 11 Pro — Now $13 instead of $199 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley Calculate AI's Contribution To U.S. Growth May Be Basically Zero
The narrative that AI spending has been singlehandedly propping up the U.S. economy -- a claim that captivated Silicon Valley, Wall Street and Washington over the past year -- is facing serious pushback from economists [non-paywalled source] at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase, all of whom now calculate that the AI buildup's direct contribution to growth was dramatically overstated and possibly close to zero.

The debate hinges on how GDP accounts for imported components: roughly three-quarters of AI data center costs go toward computer chips and gear largely manufactured in Asia, and that spending gets subtracted from domestic output because it boosts foreign economies. Joseph Politano of the Apricitas Economics newsletter pegs AI's actual contribution at about 0.2 percentage points of the 2.2 percent U.S. growth in 2025, and even Hannah Rubinton at the St. Louis Fed -- whose own analysis attributed 39 percent of growth to AI-related business spending through the first nine months of the year -- acknowledges that figure is probably the ceiling. "It's not like AI is propping up the economy," Rubinton said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
Nothing couldn’t wait to show off the Phone 4A
After teasing the upcoming launch of its midrange Phone 4A last week, Nothing has now revealed what the rear of the device looks like. An official render of the Phone 4A shared on X shows off the brand's familiar transparent-industrial stylings, alongside a new "Glyph Bar" lighting feature located to the right of the triple […]

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Lætitia AVROT: What Does INSERT 0 1 Actually Tell You?
If you’ve ever run an insert statement in a terminal or an IDE, you’ve seen it: the cryptic insert 0 1 message. While it looks like a bit of ancient binary, it’s actually a precise status report from the database engine.
The Anatomy of a Command Tag 🔗In PostgreSQL, every successful command returns a “Command Tag.” For an insertion, the format is: INSERT [oid] [rows]
The “0” (oid1): Historically, Postgres could assign an internal Object ID to every row.

The Aviationist
Open 
YFQ-42 CCA Named Dark Merlin
GA-ASI has named its YFQ-42 Collaborative Combat Aircraft as Dark Merlin, a small, fierce falcon species which hunts other falcons while collaborating in groups. General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) has announced on Feb. 23, 2026, the decision to name Dark Merlin its YFQ-42A Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA). The selection of the name of a specific […]

Mail Online
Open 
Princess Beatrice's stylist reveals she's becoming a single mother at 43 as she announces first pregnancy: 'Just the two of us'
The Hong Kong-born British socialite, whose portfolio includes Princess Beatrice, Poppy Delevingne, and Carey Mulligan, revealed the happy news on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Lindsey Vonn finally leaves hospital after Winter Olympics horror crash and reveals how doctor 'saved her leg' from amputation
Lindsey Vonn has finally left hospital after her horrific leg break but the American skiing great has a very long road to recovery ahead of her.

Mail Online
Open 
Sentimental Value star Renate Reinsve issues an apology to Mia McKenna-Bruce as she accidentally stomps on her dress on the BAFTA red carpet
The Norweigan actress, 38, walked past former CBBC star Mia, 28, who was being interviewed by media outlets.

Mail Online
Open 
The secret to Vera Wang's youthful looks as the fashion designer, 76, who's 'ageing in reverse' shows off her toned abs at the BAFTAs
She was born in the same decade as Robert De Niro, King Charles and Kurt Russell - but you'd be forgiven for mistaking American designer Vera Wang for someone decades younger.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Neither saint nor sinner, Artemisia Gentileschi’s Mary Magdalene is electrifyingly alive
Soon to go on display at the National Gallery of Art in DC, it took a female artist to portray the biblical figure not as shamed and repentant but in the throes of ecstatic raptureA woman knocks her head back. Her eyes and mouth are closed but she is awake. With flushed cheeks, red lips and long, golden hair, she glows from a sharply lit flame in a room otherwise cloaked in darkness. Wearing textures ranging from a lace-trimmed chemise blouse – slipping down her right shoulder and exposing her porcelain skin – to a heavy yellow and purple material, she appears to be alone. Unaware of our presence, she exists in a state of sublimity, but also freedom.The woman we are looking at is Mary Magdalene “in ecstasy”, painted in the early 1620s by Artemisia Gentileschi, the Italian baroque artist famed for her heroic and powerful depictions of mythological and biblical women. Recently acquired by the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, it will go on view – free of charge – from 24 February. While it is, monumentally, the institution’s first acquisition by Gentileschi, it is also a picture that shows the saint “neither repentant nor suffering”, as curator Letizia Treves has written. An important distinction because, for centuries, Magdalene’s image has been shaped not just by scripture, but fabulated and conflated by powerful men. Continue reading...

UK Government News
Open 
Yorkshire Water fined £733k after polluting country park stream
Yorkshire Water is sentenced for polluting Pools Brook Country Park stream three times in less than a year.

UK Government News
Open 
UK submarine arrives in Australia in AUKUS partnership first
Royal Navy submarine HMS ANSON arrives in Western Australia for maintenance with AUKUS partners.

Ian Visits
Open 
Tickets Alert: Climb up inside the Old Royal Naval College domes
Seen by millions from the outside, but hardly ever from the inside, a couple of years ago, it became possible to climb up inside the Old Royal Naval College’s domes, and tours will resume in April.Read more ›

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mexican Resort Towns Burn As Special Forces Kill Jalisco New Generation Cartel Boss "El Mencho"
Mexican Resort Towns Burn As Special Forces Kill Jalisco New Generation Cartel Boss "El Mencho"

Update (1656):

Mexico's Ministry of Defense announced on X that a military operation targeting the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) in the Tapalpa area resulted in the death of cartel leader Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera.

According to the statement, troops came under attack and returned fire "in defense of their integrity," leaving four CJNG members dead at the incident area and three others critically wounded. The ministry stated that those three later died during a medevac transfer to Mexico City, including Mencho.


During this operation, military personnel were attacked, so in defense of their integrity they repelled the aggression, resulting in four members of the "CJNG" criminal group dead at the scene and three seriously injured, who lost their lives during their transfer via air to Mexico City; among the latter is Ruben "N" (a) Mencho, however, the corresponding authorities will handle the expert activities for their identification.


The ministry also reported that CJNG members had armored vehicles and rocket launchers.


In addition to the above, two other members of this criminal organization were detained and various weaponry and armored vehicles were seized, including rocket launchers capable of downing aircraft and destroying armored vehicles.


The statement noted that National Guard and Mexican Army units were being deployed into the Jalisco area, where CJNG operates, to "reinforce security" amid retaliatory unrest this afternoon.


Rubio realizing he’s going to have to be the new leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel pic.twitter.com/aBi0jNf7Ci
— Nostra, House of Gold (@Nostre_damus) February 22, 2026
Will there be spillover risks? 

*    *    * 

Update (1510):

"Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta, airlines are canceling flights at those airports," website tracker Flightrader24 wrote on X.


Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta airlines are canceling flights at those airports. Some flights remain inbound to Guadalajara at this time. https://t.co/cur1slMRld pic.twitter.com/fBFNjCI247
— Flightradar24 (@flightradar24) February 22, 2026
The situation in Guadalajara, Puerto Vallarta, and other areas controlled by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) remains fluid after Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of CJNG.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026

En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told Americans to "shelter in place" across Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State. 

*    *    * 

According to The Wall Street Journal, Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and assessed as one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders; footage on social media shows utter chaos unfolding across Guadalajara and other CJNG strongholds after Mencho's killing.

WSJ cited a senior Mexican official earlier Sunday who confirmed Oseguera was killed during a military operation against CJNG.

Additional color on CJNG from the outlet:


The cartel also controls vast fuel smuggling schemes and other underworld rackets across Mexico and the U.S., authorities said.

. . .

Oseguera was known for sophisticated paramilitary tactics and the deployment of hundreds of well-equipped and well-trained gunmen. He controlled vast swathes of territory, especially in his home state of Jalisco. He has been expanding his influence and was locked in a bloody struggle for control of Michoacán state in western Mexico.


Following the death of CJNG's leader, local media and X users have posted footage of chaos unfolding across the Guadalajara area, including reports of chaos at Guadalajara Airport and narco blockades spanning Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán, and Autlán.

Let's begin with the chaos at Guadalajara Airport:


Passengers and staff seen fleeing from reported gunfire inside Guadalajara International Airport, as members of the CJNG Cartel attempt to storm the airport and several other nearby locations in the Mexican state of Jalisco. pic.twitter.com/LL2axKaYZF
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 22, 2026

Another video pic.twitter.com/0OXofzHrKB
— Faytuks Network (@FaytuksNetwork) February 22, 2026

LIVE All flights to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico are diverting or returning due to smoke in the city following security incidents @wingbits pic.twitter.com/7xBFMEOXMr
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) February 22, 2026
CJNG blockades across CJNG territories:


Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, en el Salto, López Mateos Sur, macro periférico. Toda la ciudad hecha un caos. pic.twitter.com/7NufE0Cjqc
— Jorge García Orozco (@jorgegogdl) February 22, 2026

Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán y Autlán. Dominios del CJNG.#GuacamayaLeaks pic.twitter.com/PQHks2LGlR
— Guacamaya Leaks (@GuacamayanLeaks) February 22, 2026

⭕️ Reportan bloqueos del crimen organizado en tres estados con fuerte presencia del CJNG
🔹De manera simultánea, se registraron incendios de vehículos e invasiones a la vía pública en Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, la carretera Guadalajara-Colima, Uruapan (Michoacán) y Reynosa… pic.twitter.com/4MeQOpCDIV
— Código Magenta (@CodigoMagentaMx) February 22, 2026
Footage from Puerto Vallarta. 


#PuertoVallarta en estos momentos.#Vallarta #PV #Mexico #Jalisco
Fotografía de Dron DS. pic.twitter.com/1WpTRNFBho
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026

Ahorita en Puerto Vallarta.
No hay presencia de autoridad alguna, hora y media y nada. pic.twitter.com/wMCbsulL10
— Ricardo Badillo G (@Ricardo39687260) February 22, 2026

🚨🇲🇽 | #URGENTE Se registran balaceras en Puerto Vallarta atribuidas a un presunto enfrentamiento entre fuerzas federales y terroristas en medio de información que circula afirmando que Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", líder del CJNG, fue abatido. pic.twitter.com/bQCiRBUpVP
— La Derecha Diario México (@DerechaDiarioMX) February 22, 2026
Additional footage. 


🚨 Atención en #Tapalpa: Un operativo federal desató balaceras en el municipio, principalmente en Tapalpa Country Club. Se reportan helicópteros sobrevolando la zona y bloqueos en los accesos desde Tlajomulco.
📹 @JCMunguiaA92 pic.twitter.com/ZzeRMcBQ0C
— Telediario Guadalajara (@TelediarioGDL) February 22, 2026
Guadalajara is a World Cup Host City... 


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told all U.S. citizens in Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State to "shelter in place" amid "ongoing security operations in multiple states and related road blockages and criminal activity."


Locations: Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), areas of Michoacan State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo Leon State
Event: Due to ongoing security operations in multiple states and… pic.twitter.com/71gKVQ9ec1
— Embajada de EE.UU. en México (@USEmbassyMEX) February 22, 2026
*Developing...

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 06:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Obama's 'Gift' Sticks Taxpayers With $200M+ Bill As Chicago Hides True Costs Of Presidential Library
Obama's 'Gift' Sticks Taxpayers With $200M+ Bill As Chicago Hides True Costs Of Presidential Library

When former President Barack Obama announced plans for his presidential center on Chicago’s South Side, he described it as a privately funded investment in the city that would give back to the community that shaped his political career.
Former President Barack Obama is pictured next to construction of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago, a project facing delays, soaring costs and mounting scrutiny over its finances. (Scott Olson/Getty Images; Reuters/Vincent Alban) via Fox News

And while construction of the brutalist eyesore itself remains privately financed through the Obama Foundation, taxpayers are footing the bill for massive infrastructure costs. 

A review by Fox News found that state and city agencies have not produced a unified accounting of total public expenditures tied to the project’s surrounding infrastructure. While individual agencies have disclosed partial figures, no single office has reconciled those totals or clarified how they overlap.

At the time the project was approved in 2018, public infrastructure costs were projected at roughly $350 million, to be split between the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago. Those estimates covered roadway modifications, utility relocations and related improvements necessary to accommodate the 19.3-acre campus in Jackson Park that nobody asked for. 

In July, the Illinois Department of Transportation said that approximately $229 million in state-managed infrastructure spending had been committed to the project. That total includes about $19 million for preliminary engineering, $24 million for construction engineering and $186 million for construction activities. A department spokesperson described the earlier $174 million figure as a preliminary 2017 estimate.

Now, Chicago’s most recent 2024–2028 Capital Improvement Plan lists more than $206 million allocated to roadway and utility work associated with the project. However, much of that funding is labeled as “state,” and neither state nor city officials have clarified how the figures relate to one another or whether they represent overlapping commitments.
A map graphic shows the footprint of the Obama Presidential Center inside Jackson Park on Chicago’s South Side along Lake Michigan. (Fox News)

Fox submitted records requests to several agencies, including the Illinois Department of Transportation, Chicago’s Department of Transportation, the city’s Office of Budget and Management, the mayor’s office and Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration - yet, not one provided a consolidated, up-to-date accounting of total public infrastructure spending. The Illinois Attorney General’s Public Access Counselor is reviewing whether agencies complied with state transparency laws in responding to the requests.

The Obama Foundation defended the project, reiterating that the center’s construction - whose cost has grown from early projections of roughly $330 million to at least $850 million, according to its 2024 tax filings - is being financed by private donations. In a statement to Fox, foundation spox Emily Bittner said the organization is “investing $850 million in private funding to build the Obama Presidential Center and give back to the community that made the Obamas’ story possible,” adding that the project is intended to catalyze economic opportunity on the South Side. Bittner, of course, didn't address the infrastructure costs - which have been extensive. 
Chicago’s 2024–2028 Capital Improvement Program lists $206,078,058 for "Obama Presidential Center & Jackson Park – Infrastructure Improvements," with most funding labeled as state sources. (City of Chicago Capital Improvement Program)

Cornell Drive, a four-lane roadway along the eastern edge of Jackson Park, was removed and traffic rerouted farther west. Utilities, including water mains and sewer lines, were relocated, and new drainage systems were installed. City and state officials have said the changes were necessary to manage anticipated traffic and visitor demand.

The center occupies 19 acres of public parkland transferred under a 99-year agreement for $10, a decision that prompted legal challenges arguing that the arrangement was not in the public interest. Courts ultimately dismissed those lawsuits.

Though often described as a presidential library, the Chicago complex will not function as a traditional library operated by the National Archives and Records Administration. Former President Obama’s official records will be maintained by the federal government at a facility in Maryland, while the Chicago site will be operated privately by the Obama Foundation.

The foundation also pledged to establish a $470 million endowment intended to protect taxpayers in the event the project encounters financial difficulty. According to previous reporting by Fox News, that fund has received $1 million in deposits.

Who didn't see this coming?

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 07:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Intel Aided Mexican Special Forces In "El Mencho" Kill As Spillover Risks Rise
US Intel Aided Mexican Special Forces In "El Mencho" Kill As Spillover Risks Rise

The Sunday killing of Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, the leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), by Mexican security forces unleashed coordinated cartel retaliation attacks, driving rapid instability across Guadalajara (Jalisco's capital) and spilling into high-traffic resort areas, including Puerto Vallarta.

CNN reported that the US provided intelligence support to Mexican Army Special Forces, aided by aircraft and the National Guard's Immediate Reaction Force, during the operation to capture Oseguera. The operation, however, devolved into a fierce firefight with CJNG operatives and El Mencho that ultimately resulted in his death.

Almost immediately after El Mencho's death, Guadalajara, Mexico's third-largest city and the capital of Jalisco State, plunged into instant chaos as CJNG foot soldiers sparked narco-terrorism operations.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026
This violence spread into popular beach resort towns across Mexico, as gunmen torched retail shops, gas stations, and vehicles, and blockaded highways.


🚨Update: Fighting between Mexican military forces and Narco Terrorist Cartels after major Drug Overlord killed in joint operation with the United States. All Americans across Mexico are ordered to shelter in place. Major battles are being fought everywhere as Soldiers and Police… pic.twitter.com/nQySP7opgC
— US Homeland Security News (@defense_civil25) February 22, 2026
The popular tourist town of Puerto Vallarta was partially set on fire as American visitors watched in horror. The US Embassy issued a "shelter in place" order for the region, and airlines canceled flights to Guadalajara's international airport amid the chaos.


En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026

pic.twitter.com/2SPKp6ejq2
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026
This military operation in the state of Jalisco casts a negative light on the region, which is scheduled to host four matches of the 2026 soccer World Cup in June.


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
A key question is whether CJNG can survive. Its future depends on how quickly it appoints a successor; if not, the cartel may fragment as internal power struggles begin.

Two questions:


The first question concerns CJNG's survivability. It will hinge on how quickly the group can appoint a successor; if it fails to do so, the cartel could splinter as internal power struggles intensify.


A second question is whether Mexico's military can sustain a multi-front fight, as it now faces both CJNG and the Sinaloa Cartel.

"This is undoubtedly the most important blow that has been dealt to drug trafficking in Mexico since drug trafficking existed in Mexico," Eduardo Guerrero, a former Mexican security official and cartel expert, told the New York Times.

"Never in Mexico has there been an organization with the presence, territorial control or political penetration that the Jalisco New Generation Cartel has," Guerrero added. "The cartels we had in Mexico were more regional in nature."

On Sunday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote on X that the US provided "support to the Mexican government" to assist in the operation against CJNG.

"Last year, President Trump rightfully designated the Jalisco New Generation Cartel as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, because that's exactly what it is. In this operation, three additional cartel members were killed, three were wounded, and two were arrested," Leavitt said.

She noted, "President Trump has been very clear: the United States will ensure narcoterrorists sending deadly drugs to our homeland are forced to face the wrath of justice they have long deserved."


The United States provided intelligence support to the Mexican government in order to assist with an operation in Talpalpa, Jalisco, Mexico, in which Nemesio ‘El Mencho’ Oseguera Cervantes, an infamous drug lord and leader within the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was eliminated.… https://t.co/iKxsAMmnLN
— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) February 23, 2026
El Mencho's death could elevate near-term spillover risks into the U.S., especially given the Biden-Harris regime's years of facilitating an illegal alien invasion on the Homeland.


A reminder that a vast majority of the millions who crossed the border illegally during the Biden administration were lining the pockets of cartels like CJNG, paying thousands, sometimes tens of thousands of $ per head to be smuggled into the Unites States. Color coded cartel… pic.twitter.com/fJiw8hgtSE
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) February 22, 2026
The Trump administration has sought to address the national-security fallout by ramping up deportation operations, but legal challenges from unhinged left-wing judges have complicated efforts.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 08:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Backlash Over Disney's 'Captain Durag' Subsides Once Creator Revealed As Black
Backlash Over Disney's 'Captain Durag' Subsides Once Creator Revealed As Black

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Disney’s latest cartoon misfire, “Captain Durag,” sparked a firestorm of criticism for allegedly stereotyping black culture—until the black creator stepped forward, promptly defusing the leftist mob’s fury.



The character, a black superhero battling “grime” in Slime City with a durag as his cape and mask, debuted amid Black History Month on Disney Jr.’s “Hey AJ!” and was quickly branded an “abomination” online.

Social media erupted with complaints like one X user’s post: “They made a ‘Captain Durag’ in 2026 what the f–ck Disney.” Another called it “wildly tone deaf.”


The concept of Captain Durag is wildly tone deaf. A black superhero with a durag as both his cape and mask, with a literal snow bunny as his sidekick, that is more of a garbage man than a superhero… pic.twitter.com/Dk1SSH1nC3
— Black Culture Is Pop Culture (@BCisPC) February 18, 2026
The backlash intensified from within the black community, prompting Disney to yank several clips from YouTube without an official statement.


Captain Durag is low-key diabolical on black history month https://t.co/TcJ2cUgKhm
— I know u are but what am i? (@Only1ThxtHobbit) February 17, 2026
But then creator Camille Corbett, a 28-year-old Jamaican-American artist and comedian, defended her work on X, stating “I created the character Durag Man, now known as Captain Durag on the Disney Show, Hey AJ and I’m just finding out people are finding it problematic? I just wanted our culture to have a superhero of its own!”


I created the character Durag Man, now known as Captain Durag on the Disney Show, Hey AJ and I’m just finding out people are finding it problematic? I just wanted our culture to have a superhero of its own! pic.twitter.com/0Klh7soTPG
— Camille Corbett (@TheWittyGirl) February 16, 2026
Corbett told The New York Post that “as a scholar,” she’d “never speak on anything I’ve never experienced,” urging viewers to actually watch the show.

“Hey AJ!” creator Martellus Bennett echoed her on Instagram: “If that offends you, maybe the problem isn’t the durag. Maybe the problem is that you’ve never seen black imagination treated as sacred, heroic and worthy of a cape.”

Bennett described the character as a reflection of black life, pushing back against detractors who saw it as reducing black identity to caricature.

Once Corbett’s identity surfaced, the outrage mostly evaporated—exposing the hypocrisy of critics who slam “stereotypes” until ownership aligns with their identity politics playbook.


We didn't know if this came from one of us or one of them. Can't be too cautious
— Balliver Shagnasty (@BeautyfullZo) February 16, 2026
One of them? Who is them?

Also, if you can’t tell the difference between ‘heroic’ characteristics and a stereotype, it might be time to examine why that stereotype exists.


it was either a super black idea or a VERY bad stereotype and the internet couldn’t determine which cause it was too close on the line ?
— kenny (@relientkenny) February 17, 2026

and i couldn’t be happier someone black was behind this ???
— kenny (@relientkenny) February 17, 2026

I think it’s funny. I like this show.
And some of y’all need to get over your fucking selves.
Everything does not require a “we shall overcome” moment. Every Black character is not obligated to carry the weight of history on their back. Sometimes it’s just a joke. Sometimes…
— AceVane (@AcEvAne) February 17, 2026
Some were still intent on being offended.


Why isnt a durag positive?
— Savvy ( ?ˆ?ˆ? ) (@MadamSavvy) February 17, 2026

Ok you’re Jamaican. Please don’t ever try to do a character about black America again. It’s not your culture & you don’t understand us. Please do a Jamaican caricature
— Ms.OriginalBlackAmerican ?? (@OriginalBLKAmer) February 17, 2026

“We” you French and not Spanish today? You created a super hero and named him “duragman “ thus gas to be a God damn joke . You’re not FBA but you wish to use the worst of our culture. I feel like you Are you mocking us? Why don’t you create a character named “Flee Man” a super…
— Queen (@veraJameswalker) February 17, 2026

Looking through the comments, most of the people who praise this nonsense are non black people. That’s a major problem. It’s also not surprising coming from someone who isn’t a Foundational Black American. We unapologetically reject this trash representation of us.
— Lamar ???? FBA B1 (@HTownFBA) February 17, 2026
Let’s face it, there are far worse things to criticise Disney for.

For starters, the company recently abandoned a transgender storyline in a new Pixar show, backing off after internal pushback exposed their agenda to inject gender ideology into kids’ content.



Elon Musk has directly accused Disney CEO Bob Iger of endorsing child sex material, amplifying concerns over the company’s tolerance for predatory themes.



A few years back, Disney announced a new original series for called Pauline in which an 18 year old girl gets impregnated on a one-night stand then catches feelings for the individual responsible, with that individual being SATAN.



Leave it to Disney to call the birth of the Anti-Christ a ‘coming of age’ movie.”

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 08:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Futures Slide As Renewed Tariff Turmoil Shakes Global Markets
Futures Slide As Renewed Tariff Turmoil Shakes Global Markets

Stock futures slumped after Trump’s weekend tariff tantrum added uncertainty to American trade policy and was another blow to bullish outlooks for 2026. The Supreme Court’s tariff ruling means a big source of fiscal revenue from 2025 may have to be refunded (although if it is refunded to US consumers, who bore the brunt of tariffs as most liberals analysts concluded, it would represent a huge pre-midterm stimulus). As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures were 0.5% lower, giving up almost all Friday gains, while Nasdaq 100 contracts sliding -0.6%. In pre-market trading, there is a defensive tone as Mag7 names are mostly lower, Semis are coming for sale (NVDA flat ahead of earnings on Wednesday); and, most sectors are seeing weakness with pockets of positive performance in HC, Aero/Def, Materials, and Utilities.  “We started 2026 with a bullish outlook — but not even two months into the year, many of our assumptions are being challenged,” wrote the Bloomberg Economics team led by Anna Wong. The risk of war in Iran and the AI scare are also denting optimism. The dollar recouped losses while bond yields are flat-to-down 1bp after spiking on Friday on fears the SCOTUS ruling will unleash much more debt issuance. Commodities are seeing weakness in Energy with WTI down 60bp, Ags being sold perhaps on lower tariffs, and precious metals maintain their incessant bid. Today we get factory orders and the final December durable goods report. Key events this week include Trump’s State of the Union Address tomorrow, Nvidia earnings on Wednesday and PPI data on Friday.



In premarket trading, Magnificent Seven are mostly lower, with the lone exception being GOOGL which rises 0.3% as Wells Fargo upgrades to overweight, calling the search giant an “AI winner.” Others are all down (Nvidia -0.2%, Microsoft -0.5%, Apple -0.5%, Meta Platforms -0.7%, Amazon -0.9%, Tesla -0.9%)

Arcellx Inc. (ACLX) soars 78% after Gilead Sciences Inc. agreed to buy the biotech in a deal with an equity value of up to $7.8 billion.
Domino’s Pizza Inc. (DPZ) climbs 4% after the company reported a larger-than-expected rise in comparable sales, as consumers were drawn to the pizza chain’s budget-friendly pies.
International Paper (IP) falls 6% and Smurfit (SW) drops 6% as analysts note that a surprise price drop in domestic containerboard is negative for packaging companies.
MoonLake Immunotherapeutics (MLTX) rises 4% after the drug developer gave topline results from a mid-stage trial of its experimental therapy for patients with an inflammatory disease that mainly affects the spine.
Vanda Pharmaceuticals (VNDA) climbs 40% after the FDA approved the firm’s oral medication for treating manic or mixed episodes in bipolar I disorder and schizophrenia in adults.
Veris Residential (VRE) rises 12% after agreeing to be acquired by an investor consortium led by Affinius Capital in partnership with Vista Hill Partners, in an all-cash transaction for $19 per share.
VF Corp. (VFC) declines 3% as JPMorgan cuts its rating on the apparel and shoe company to underweight and trims profit estimates for upcoming years.
In corporate news, Honeywell slashed its price to acquire Johnson Matthey’s Catalyst Technologies business in a move to save the deal from falling apart. OpenAI is projecting that its revenue will grow at a fast clip in the next few years and exceed $280 billion in 2030, according to a person familiar. Hynix pledged to boost output of AI memory chips to meet a surge in demand.

The latest questions over tariffs following the SCOTUS rejection of Trump's signature trade policy are giving traders another focal point in markets that have been grappling with concerns about artificial intelligence and tensions in the Middle East. Investors will also closely follow Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday and Nvidia Corp.’s earnings the following day.

“Markets quickly realized that the ruling might not change much in the near term and will rather increase uncertainties,” said Stephan Kemper, chief investment strategist at BNP Paribas Wealth Management. “Donald Trump is not known to avoid a fight or give up easily.”

Trump responded to the ruling by imposing a new 10% global levy, vowing to use other powers to maintain his signature trade policies. He upped that to 15% the next day. US Trade Rep Jamieson Greer said the tariff-policy defeat won’t unravel individual deals the administration has sealed with trading partners. Still, the EU is poised to freeze the ratification process of its deal with the US and is seeking more details from the Trump administration. However, senior US officials, including Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, signaled over the weekend that the court decision wouldn’t unravel agreements already negotiated.

“The question is about the benefit of the rebates versus the extra uncertainty that the trade issues are causing, and for me the latter wins,” JPMorgan Asset Management Global Market Strategist Hugh Gimber told Bloomberg TV. “That for me risks putting business activity on hold, because companies simply don’t know what’s to come further down the line.”

For JPMorgan strategists, an equity-market pullback driven by global tariff policies or an escalation in Iran could create dip-buying opportunities as long as the macro backdrop remains positive. “Adverse geopolitical headlines” could lead to de-risking given the recent rally and stretched technicals, wrote the team led by Mislav Matejka. “But we believe that these will not be long-lasting, and should be seen as buying opportunities.”

Meanwhile, the hunt for AI losers (and winners) continues in both public and private markets. Today’s Big Take looks at the fallout in private credit after Blue Owl, a prominent software lender, permanently shut the gates on one of its funds. The biggest AI event this week comes in the form of Nvidia results. Still, the chip giant’s stock is stuck in a range and even blowout earnings may not lift it according to Bloomberg.



"We started 2026 with a bullish outlook — but not even two months into the year, many of our assumptions are being challenged,” wrote the Bloomberg Economics team led by Anna Wong. The Supreme Court’s tariff ruling means a big source of fiscal revenue from 2025 may have to be refunded. The risk of war in Iran and the AI scare are also denting optimism.

European indices are mixed, Stoxx 600 is down 0.4%. Trade uncertainty dominates the macro conversation with the EU set to halt its trade deal with the US. Technology and health care shares led declines, while banks and utilities were the biggest outperformers. Here are the biggest movers Monday:

Novo Nordisk shares fall 11% after the firm said its Cagrisema product fell short of Lilly’s Zepbound in a trial
Enel shares rise as much as 6.1%, the most since March 2022, after the Italian energy company forecast higher-than-expected dividends and EPS growth, and announced a €1 billion share buyback
ABN Amro Bank shares rise as much as 3.7%, the most since November, after BofA Global Research raises its recommendation on the lender to buy from neutral
JD Sports shares climb as much as 6.5% after the sportswear retailer said it plans to return £200 million to shareholders through buybacks in its 2027 fiscal year
Quilter shares rise as much as 3.9% after being placed on JP Morgan’s Positive Catalyst Watch ahead of its results for the full year of 2025 as analysts see upside risk due to the British wealth manager’s expected share buyback
Johnson Matthey shares fall as much as 17%, most since 2021, after Honeywell cut the price it’s paying for the UK company’s Catalyst Technologies business
Belimo shares fall as much as 12% after analysts expressed concerns over the heating and cooling equipment maker’s guidance for 2026 and the delayed impact of tariff decisions
Pernod Ricard shares drop as much as 4% after being downgraded at Deutsche Bank, with analysts pointing to the stock’s year-to-date outperformance and uncertainty about the alcoholic beverage maker’s growth
EQT falls as much as 4.5% on Monday as Citi trims its price target, while maintaining its buy rating on the Stockholm-based investment firm, amid concerns that AI-driven volatility could slow private-markets activity
Earlier in the session, Asia’s equities rose to hover near record highs, driven by gains in tech, while investors weigh the impact of US President Donald Trump’s latest slate of tariffs on the region.  The MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index advanced as much as 1.3%, with Tencent and Alibaba among the biggest boosts to the gauge. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 2.8%, while tech-heavy benchmarks in Taiwan and South Korea rose as well. After the US Supreme Court ruled Friday that Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose duties was illegal, China and India now stand to gain from lower tariff rates on exports to the US. Investors across the region are eyeing more economic turbulence after Trump’s latest vow to hike his global levy to 15%, from the 10% announced just a day earlier. The markets have largely looked past concerns over tariffs and are more focused on other factors such as the broader economic landscape and the AI trade, she said. Trading in Japan and onshore China is shut today and will resume tomorrow

In FX, the dollar kicked the session off on the backfoot versus most majors but has since turned positive. Trade sensitive currencies such as Aussie dollar, Swedish krona and Norwegian krone underperform.

In rates, treasuries were marginally higher, with the 10-year yield falling one basis point to 4.07%. US natural gas prices rose as a winter storm swept the northeastern region. 

In commodities, spot gold and silver have benefited from the risk aversion, up 1% and 2.6% respectively. Oil has pared the bulk of its declines, with US and Iran discussions set to resume this week. US natural gas prices jumped as powerful winter storms swept the northeastern region. Bitcoin briefly slid below $65,000 on Monday for the second time this month. Bitcoin is down 2% but recovering after a brief foray below $65,000.

The US economic calendar slate includes January Chicago Fed national activity index (8:30am), December factory orders (10am) and February Dallas Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speaker slate includes Waller, speaking on the economic outlook at 8am

Market Snapshot

&P 500 mini -0.5%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.6%
Russell 2000 mini -0.6%
Stoxx Europe 600 -0.3%
DAX -0.6%
CAC 40 +0.1%
10-year Treasury yield -1 basis point at 4.08%
VIX +0.8 points at 19.92
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1187.86
euro +0.1% at $1.1798
WTI crude -0.6% at $66.06/barrel
Top Overnight News

Iran has indicated it is prepared to make concessions on its nuclear program in talks with the U.S. in return for the lifting of sanctions and recognition of its right to enrich uranium, as it seeks to avert a U.S. attack. RTRS
Mexico Takes On Cartels as Killing of Drug Kingpin Sparks Violence... Gunmen Wreak Chaos in Mexican Coastal Retreat After Cartel Killing: WSJ
The European Union is poised to freeze the ratification process of its trade deal with the US and is seeking more details from President Donald Trump’s administration on its new tariff program: BBG
India is studying the implications for its bilateral trade deal with Washington after the US Supreme Court scrapped President Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs: BBG
German business confidence brightened more than anticipated in February, with an expectations index increasing to 90.5 from a revised 89.6 in January. BBG
India postponed talks on an interim trade deal with the US. China and Brazil are top winners from the Supreme Court decision, while the UK risks emerging as the main loser, according to Global Trade Alert. BBG
UK job vacancies dropped to their lowest in five years and graduate posts fell to a record low in January. BBG
The European Central Bank is asking individual lenders for details on their lending to areas including data centers amid concern over hidden credit exposures and financial-sector disruption: BBG
Blue Owl’s selloff is deepening fears about liquidity risks and excesses in the $1.8 trillion private credit market. Private equity returned fewer profits to investors for a fourth year as firms sit on $3.8 trillion of unsold assets. BBG
South Korea’s exports climbed 47.3% year on year in the first 20 days of February, fueled by AI-driven chip demand. The BOK said the country’s 2026 growth outlook improved on strong chip demand. BBG
U.S. Elite Troops Hardened by War on Terror Retrain for Arctic Combat: WSJ
Novo Nordisk Shares Plunge After Obesity Drug Fails to Beat Zepbound: WSJ
Singapore’s core CPI fell short of expectations in Jan, coming in at +1% (vs. the Street +1.5%) while the headline number was inline at +1.4%. BBG
Venezuela’s Leaders Killed the Economy. They Are Still In Charge.: WSJ
US natural gas futures jumped as the East Coast storm spiked heating demand and LNG exports climbed. BBG
Trade/Tarfiffs

US President Trump said on Saturday that he will increase the global tariff that was announced on Friday from 10% to 15% with immediate effect. Trump also stated that the 15% level is the maximum allowed by law and is still temporary, as Section 122 tariffs, and they will use the 150 days that the temporary tariff allows to work on issuing other legally permissible tariffs.
EU is set to freeze trade deal approval over US President Trump's tariff risk, Bloomberg reports.
US officials said that tariff deal partners should honour their agreements, while USTR Greer said he sought to separate the tariff agreements from the 15% global tariff that US President Trump recently announced.
White House clarified that goods shipped under the USMCA will be exempt from the new global tariff that US President Trump announced on Friday, although risks regarding the future of the USMCA loom.
German Chancellor Merz said expect the tariff burden on the German economy to be reduced following the US Supreme Court decision, while he added that they will have a very clear European position on this, as tariff policy is a matter for the EU, not individual member states, and he will go to Washington with a coordinated European position.
US to cease collecting duties under IEEPA from 00:01EST/05:01GMT on February 24th, according to the Customs Agency.
Goldman Sachs analysts indicate most Asian economies will experience slightly lower US tariffs after the Supreme Court ruling on IEEPA tariffs, with China expected to see the largest decline.
China's MOFCOM said it is assessing the US Supreme Court's ruling on tariffs and urges the US to lift unilateral tariffs on trading partners. US tariffs on reciprocal goods and fentanyl breach trade rules and US law, and are not in the interest of any party.
South Korea's Industry Minister said chips are not subject to Trump's new tariffs and noted uncertainty regarding US tariffs refund and that consultations with the US on tariffs and trade agreements will continue.
South Korea's Finance Minister said the trade deal with the US is still valid.
Japanese ruling LDP tax chief Onodera said the US tariff situation was a real mess following the SCOTUS tariff ruling.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent said nothing has changed on tariff revenue and trade deals; The tariff collection is closer to USD 130bln, probably not USD 175bln. Will get back to same tariff level for countries, and it will be less direct. Thinks that every country will honour the trade deals. Would call on all countries to honour their agreements and move forward.
All countries with trade agreements now drop to a 10% tariff, and the 10% rate applies until new authorities and processes kick in, according to CNBC citing a White House official.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were mixed amid trade uncertainty as the region digested the latest tariff developments after the US Supreme Court ruled against IEEPA tariffs on Friday, prompting President Trump to impose a global 10% flat-rate tariff, which he later raised to 15% over the weekend, while there were a couple of key market closures in the region with mainland China and Japan observing holidays. ASX 200 was dragged lower with underperformance seen in tech, healthcare and real estate, while participants also reflected on a deluge of earnings releases and the recent Trump 15% global tariff rate announcement, which would increase the levies on Australia from the previously agreed 10%. KOSPI initially benefitted from the tech strength amid gains in the likes of industry heavyweights Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, while South Korea's Industry Minister also noted that chips were not subject to Trump's new tariffs. However, the index then gradually gave back all its gains. Hang Seng rallied with tech stocks dominating the list of best performers in Hong Kong and with the local benchmark underpinned as a proxy to China, which is seen as the likely biggest winner from the US Supreme Court tariff ruling.

Top Asian News

China reportedly experienced robust consumer activity across sectors during the Spring Festival holiday, according to China Daily.
South Korea's Vice Finance Minister said to closely watch financial markets.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.3%) show a mixed picture following the shifting tariff environment in recent days. The IBEX 35 (+0.8%) and FTSE MIB (+0.7%) outperform their peers, while the AEX (-0.3%) and DAX 40 (-0.5%) lag. European sectors are mixed. Consumer Products and Services (+1.1%), Banks (+0.8%) and Utilities (+0.9%) gain at the start of the week, aided by multiple broker upgrades for banks while Enel (+5.9%) supports the Utilities sector. The Co. updated its 2026-28 strategic plan, raising its planned investment to EUR 53bln from EUR 43bln, seeing cuts of up to EUR 700mln by 2028 and approved the execution of a new tranche of its share buyback programme. On the other hand, Technology (-1.4%) and Health Care (-1.6%) underperform. European tech giant ASML (-1.9%) seems to have been hit on OpenAI planning USD 600bln in compute spending by 2030 (prev. cited USD 1.4tln).

Top European News

German Ifo Business Climate (Feb) 88.6 vs. Exp. 88.4 (Prev. 87.6).
German Ifo Expectations (Feb) 90.5 vs. Exp. 90.3 (Prev. 89.5).
German Ifo Current Conditions (Feb) 86.7 vs. Exp. 86.3 (Prev. 85.7).
Italian Inflation Rate MoM Final (Jan) M/M 0.4% vs. Exp. 0.4% (Prev. 0.2%).
FX

DXY is slightly lower this morning and trades within a 97.35 to 97.70 range. Further pressure could see a test of its 21 DMA at 97.15. All focus today on Trump’s latest decision to impose a sweeping 15% Section 122 import tariff, following the SCOTUS decision to rule IEEPA tariffs as unlawful. The implications of the decision are mixed, with the likes of the UK and Australia now worse off, whilst the likes of Brazil and China benefit from the lower rates. SEB writes that the preliminary estimate of the global average tariff rate is now marginally lower at 12%, which is 1-2 percentage points lower than the prior rate. The Budget Lab also sees the effective tariff rate at 13.7% (prev. 16% under IEEPA taxes).
As it stands, there is some near-term certainty regarding Section 122 tariffs, which can be implemented for a maximum of 150 days. Thereafter, any extension would need to be passed through Congress. Therefore, uncertainty stems from several points; a) how the US aims to “make-up” for lost tariff revenue, b) how trade partners react to the latest levies, c) the potential use of other trade-related policies (Section 301, Section 338, Section 232).
G10s are broadly firmer against the USD; the GBP and EUR leads, whilst the Aussie lags a touch. The latter is slightly underperforming, given Australia no longer benefits from its previously negotiated 10% rate, under IEEPA.
For the EUR specifically, European Parliament’s trade chief is to propose freezing the ratification of the EU’s trade agreement with the US until they receive details from the Trump administration regarding its trade policy. On data, the German Ifo report improved from the prior and surpassed expectations, suggesting the region's recovery is underway. Elsewhere, Japan's ruling LDP tax chief Onodera, described the US tariff situation as a real mess. USD/JPY currently trades shy of the 155.00 mark, with the high of the day at 154.90, a touch above its 100 DMA at 154.90.
Central Banks

Fed’s Hammack (2026 voter) said inflation has made amazing progress, but is still a problem, and the Fed can be very patient in considering future rate cuts. Hammack said monetary policy is only modestly restrictive and the economy was stronger than anticipated by December, while she added that tariffs have the potential to further complicate the inflation outlook.
ECB's Lagarde receives around EUR 140k a year as Bank for International Settlements board member, despite the ECB ban on third-party payments to staff, according to FT.
BoK Governor Rhee said FX market conditions have improved but still need to be stabilised.
Fixed Income

A relatively contained start for fixed income as markets continue to digest the latest tariff measures, and with APAC conditions thin on account of Japan's holiday for the Emperor's Birthday.
USTs are firmer by a few ticks in thin 112-27+ to 113-02+ parameters, within but at the top end of Friday's 112-23+ to 112-03+ confine; as a reminder, last week's peak was 113-14. Focus is primarily on the tariff situation, as the latest POTUS measures in response to the SCOTUS ruling have effectively lowered the global rate by a pp or two. However, we of course remain attentive to any further updates by President Trump and/or his administration in the near term. Additionally, we await remarks from Fed's Waller (voter), commentary that will be scrutinised for his tariff take. Thus far, Logan (2026) said the SCOTUS decision has led to more uncertainty and upside inflation risks remain, but noted that policy is well-positioned. Musalem (2028) stated that if the new tariffs are one-for-one, the outlook would be unchanged, but added that the ruling could introduce uncertainty. Note, the remarks were made before the weekend's move to 15%.
Bunds are contained, but at the lower end of c. 20 ticks parameters. The benchmark has found itself under modest pressure this morning as European cash bourses trade mixed and with futures attempting a move into the green. Ahead, supply from the bloc is scheduled, but the main focus will be on how the Hungarian block on Ukraine-related policies/sanctions by the EU shakes out.
Gilts gapped higher by 11 ticks and then climbed a handful further to a 92.51 peak. Upside that comes as the 15% global effective tariff lifts the UK above the 10% it used to be subject to, and thus skews the bias towards a March vs April cut by the BoE. The main input into that debate this week will be the appearance of Governor Bailey at the TSC.
Commodities

Crude benchmarks are more subdued in the early European session as the market continued to digest Trump’s 15% tariff decision in response to SCOTUS’ striking down his IEEPA tariffs. It’s worth noting that crude benchmarks have had their best year thus far since 2022 (the same year Russia invaded Ukraine), and as geopolitical tension continues to persist, US-Iran talks are set to resume this week.
Precious metals have kicked off the week glowing amid uncertainties from tariffs and geopolitical tension with Iran, increasing their prospect as a haven. Following the SCOTUS decision, US President Trump raised global tariffs to 15% over the weekend, fuelling market uncertainty. Following the tariff updates, the USD weakened, consequently aiding precious metals. Focus also remains on the US and Iran, with a NYT report that US President Trump is reportedly considering a targeted strike on Iran, followed by a larger attack on Iran. Iran also responded, saying that any US attacks, including limited strikes, will be considered an act of aggression. Any further escalation after both countries are set to meet on Thursday will further elevate the precious metals. XAU and XAG are trading at the upper range of USD 5117.815-5146.990/oz and USD 84.227-87.663/oz, respectively.
Copper appears to be paring some of its recent gains as markets digested the latest tariff developments, with US President Trump’s 15% flat-rate tariff seen as benefiting countries such as China and Brazil the most, while weighing on longer-term allies. Activity for the red metal has also picked up this morning, whilst mainland Chinese markets are due to reopen tomorrow. 3M LME copper trades in a tight range of USD 12,928-13,063/t. In other news, JPMorgan forecasts a copper deficit of 130k tonnes in 2026 and a 230k in the aluminium market in 2026
JPMorgan forecasts a copper deficit of 130k tonnes in 2026.
Lebanese bankers and politicians are eyeing a sale or lease of part of the central bank’s large gold reserves to rescue banks and the economy, according to FT.
Japan is mining for deep sea rare earths to combat China's chokehold, according to FT.
Goldman Sachs raises its 2026 Q4 Brent oil forecast by USD 6 to USD 60/bbl.
Morgan Stanley raises its near-term Brent forecasts as geopolitical risk premium likely persists for a period, still expects prices to soften to USD 60/bbl later in 2026.
Chevron (CVX) announces an agreement for Iraq's West Qurna 2 oil field.
Geopolitics - Middle East

US President Trump reportedly considers a targeted strike on Iran, followed by a larger attack and is open to deposing the Supreme Leader by force if Iran is stubborn, according to NYT.
US officials warned that if US President Trump orders strikes on Iran, Tehran could retaliate through proxies such as Hezbollah or Al-Qaeda, against American targets abroad.
US-Iran talks are set to resume in Geneva on Thursday, according to Omani mediators, while Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi expects to meet with US Special Envoy Witkoff for discussions and reiterated that Iran will not be pressured by the military buildup in the region.
Iran said any US attack, including limited strikes, will be considered an act of aggression.
Iran Foreign Ministry spokesperson said there are discussions about the presence of IAEA's Grossi in the third round of negotiations, Iran International reported; adds that Iran is working on a draft for any possible understanding.
Iran's Foreign Ministry said they hope to have another round of talks with the US in the coming days. Regarding IAEA Grossi's view that there cannot be an agreement unless the inspection of bombed nuclear facilities is allowed, Iran said it does not accept that precondition.
South Korean Embassy in Iran advised Korean nationals to leave Iran amid increasing tensions over a possible US military strike on Tehran, according to Yonhap.
Palestinian media reported that Israeli artillery shelling is targeting areas in northeast Gaza City, according to Sky News Arabia.
US officials warned if US President Trump orders strikes on Iran, Tehran could retaliate through proxies such as Hezbollah or Al-Qaeda against American targets abroad.
Palestinian media reported Israeli warplanes launched two raids on Khan Yunus in the southern Gaza Strip, according to Sky News Arabia.
US forces begin withdrawing their troops from Syria to Iraqi Kurdistan, according to Al Jazeera.
Geopolitics - Ukraine

Russian Defence Ministry said Russian forces struck Ukrainian transport, energy and fuel infrastructure.
EU Foreign Representative Kallas said she is not optimistic regarding potential progress in peace talks with Russia. Strong statements from Hungary indicate they will not change their stance on Russian sanctions today.
Hungarian Foreign Minister said they will block EU decisions in relation to Ukraine until flows to the nation resume through the Druzhba pipeline.
US Event Calendar

8:30 am: United States Jan Chicago Fed Nat Activity Index, est. -0.08, prior -0.04
10:00 am: United States Dec Factory Orders, est. -0.6%, prior 2.7%
10:00 am: United States Dec F Durable Goods Orders, est. -1.4%, prior -1.4%
10:00 am: United States Dec F Durables Ex Transportation, est. 0.9%, prior 0.9%
10:30 am: United States Feb Dallas Fed Manf. Activity, est. -0.75, prior -1.2
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

As we start a new week, a great deal has happened since early Friday afternoon European time. By now, readers will be aware that the US Supreme Court ruled, by a 6–3 margin, that the administration’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose broad based tariffs was unconstitutional.

In the immediate aftermath, the administration signaled that it would pursue a 10% global tariff under Section 122 authority. By Saturday, this was increased to 15%—which, importantly, is the maximum tariff that can be imposed using this route. Key implementation details remain unclear, including the treatment of existing trade agreements and how refunds (with interest) will be handled for tariffs collected under the now invalid IEEPA framework.

This leaves a substantial amount of uncertainty, even if markets initially welcomed the perceived clarity of “only” a 10% tariff on Friday. Looking ahead, the reality is that the 15% tariff imposed under Section 122 can only remain in place for 150 days (late July), after which Congressional approval would be required to extend it. Section 122 was designed as a temporary tool to address emergency balance of payments issues and would likely face further legal challenges if rolled over repeatedly.

That raises a key political question: will a small number of Republicans in either chamber be reluctant to support what could be framed as an extension of a consumer tax hike just three and a half months before the mid term elections? At that point, the administration faces a binary choice: try to secure an extension or allow the tariff to lapse. The latter appears the more likely outcome. In that scenario, the administration would probably pivot to other legal authorities—most notably Section 232 (national security) or Section 301 (unfair trade practices)—to re establish a more durable tariff regime. While the groundwork for such a move has almost certainly been laid, these measures are narrower in scope and would themselves be vulnerable to legal challenge.

Importantly US Trade Representative Greer seemed to suggest yesterday that trade deals already agreed will remain in place and not be exposed to the new higher rate. In addition, the new Section 122 tariff info sheet confirmed that the temporary duty taking effect midnight tomorrow will exempt various categories that were previously exempt under IEEPA tariffs, such as critical minerals, pharma, electronics and USMCA-compliant goods. Put together, the Yale Budget Lab estimates the effective tariff rate at 14% under the 15% Section 122 tariffs, down from 16% before the Supreme Court IEEPEA ruling, and that this would fall to 9% if the Section 122 tariffs expired.

This confirms the DB house view that we continue to expect the effective tariff rate to fall in 2026. Indeed, since October the average customs duty collected has already declined by around two percentage points, to roughly 11%, largely due to carve outs and exemptions. Some of this easing has been attributed to the administration’s weak showing in local elections in early November, highlighting the domestic political constraints on another aggressive tariff escalation.

It will be interesting to see if the assurances from the likes of Greer ease concerns of those who have already agreed deals. Ahead of an emergency meeting today, European Parliament trade committee chair Bernd Lange suggested freezing ratification of the Turnberry Agreement “until we have a comprehensive legal assessment and clear commitments from the US.” As he put it: “Nobody can make sense of it anymore—only unanswered questions and growing uncertainty for the EU and other US trading partners.” So the only thing that’s certain is that we are certain that we don’t quite know how this is going to pan out but net net we still believe the effective tariff rate is coming down in 2026.

The weekend news has helped S&P (-0.74%) and Nasdaq (-0.94%) futures decline along with the Dollar index (-0.34%). Euro Stoxx futures (-0.54%) are also lower. US and European bond futures are rallying slightly with US cash trading closed due to the holiday in Japan. Elsewhere in Asia markets are more bouyant with the Hang Seng (+2.29%) leading gains after significant losses last week, buoyed by strength in technology, industrial, and automotive stocks, whereas the KOSPI (+0.18%) is just about holding onto its gains after an initial rise of over +1.0%. In contrast, the S&P/ASX 200 (-0.69%) is lower.

If we can move on from the latest tariff news, we will also have more geopolitical headlines to contend with this week, as the latest round of US-Iran talks is expected in Geneva on Thursday. The talks come amid a recent buildup of US forces in the region and yesterday the New York Times was the latest outlet to report that Trump is considering an initial targeted strike against Iran in the coming days, which could be followed by a larger attack if Iran does not give in to US nuclear demands. Brent oil prices are -1.21% lower this morning trading at $70.85/bbl as we go to press as some of the weekend risk premium is being unwound.

Other highlights for the week ahead include the State of the Union address in the US (late tomorrow), US PPI and preliminary CPIs in Europe (both Friday). In earnings, the focus will be on Nvidia, Salesforce (both Wednesday) and Home Depot (tomorrow). Nvidia’s earnings could be the most important of these but expect lots of headlines from the State of the Union speech.

Friday’s US PPI release—where headline and core inflation are both forecast at 0.3%—will matter less in isolation than for its implications for the core PCE deflator. While January CPI surprised to the downside relative to our expectations, the implications for core PCE continue to appear less favourable, with our economists currently looking for a 0.4% monthly increase. Depending on the strength of key PPI components such as medical services, airfares, and portfolio management fees, a 0.5% increase in January core PCE cannot be ruled out, which would lift the year-over-year rate to around 3.1%. So an important release, especially in the sub-components.

There is a fair degree of Fed speak this week, with Waller (today and tomorrow) a highlight given he dissented in favour of a 25bps cut in January due to concerns over the labour market. However, we’ve subsequently seen a firm January jobs report and a firm December core PCE print, so will he shift his stance a bit? See the day-by-day week ahead at the end as usual for the rest of the Fed speakers and the key global data.  

Elsewhere in the world, we have the German Ifo today and the preliminary European February CPI prints including for countries such as Germany, France and Spain, among others, on Friday. There will also be economic sentiment measures for key economies including consumer confidence in the UK, Germany and France, as well as the ECB’s consumer expectations survey due Friday.

Over in Asia, it’s a busy week ahead for Japan with key releases including the Tokyo CPI for February and the January industrial production both due on Friday. Our Chief Japan Economist expects core CPI inflation (ex. fresh food) of 1.7% YoY (2.0% in January) and core-core CPI inflation (ex. fresh food and energy) of 2.4% (2.4% in January). For industrial production, he sees a robust 4.5% MoM gain. See more in his full week-ahead here. Elsewhere, inflation will also be in focus in Australia and our economists expect a -0.2% MoM headline print and a 0.24% MoM trimmed mean print.

Other than Nvidia on Wednesday, other tech firms reporting include Salesforce, Intuit, Snowflake and CoreWeave. Amongst US consumer firms, the focus will be on Home Depot, TJX and Lowe’s. Over in Europe, there will be results from HSBC and Allianz in financials as well as other large firms such as Deutsche Telekom, Schneider Electric, Iberdrola and Rolls-Royce.

Recapping last week now, which was full of fast-shifting narratives, moving on from AI worries to fears of geopolitical escalation between the US and Iran to a clearly upbeat tone on Friday after the Supreme Court ruling on IEEPA tariffs. With all said and done, the S&P 500 rose +1.07% (+0.69% on Friday). Tech stocks led the recovery, with the NASDAQ (+1.51%, +0.90% on Friday) rising for the first time in six weeks and the Mag-7 (+2.31%, +1.55% Friday) having its best week since November. But it was the equal-weighted S&P (+0.55%, +0.50% Friday) that ended the week at a new record high. Those gains came even as private credit worries resurfaced after Blue Owl Capital (-12.11% over the week) announced it wouldn’t re-open a withdrawal from one of its retail-focused private credit funds, which also weighed on other private equity companies.

The equity gains were even stronger in Europe, as the Stoxx 600 advanced +2.08% over the week (+0.84% on Friday) to a fresh high, with the FTSE 100 (+2.30%, +0.56% on Friday), and CAC 40 (+2.45%, +1.39% on Friday) also breaking new records. In addition to the breather from the AI turmoil and the SCOTUS overrule of IEEPA tariffs, European markets were supported by better-than-expected flash PMIs on Friday. The Euro Area composite PMI (51.9 versus 51.5 exp, 51.3 prev.) rose after three consecutive declines, led by Germany (53.1 vs 52.3 est.), supporting our European analysts’ view that Germany is starting to benefit from its fiscal expansion.

Over in the US, data releases included strong January industrial production (+0.7% m/m vs +0.4% est.) on Wednesday and initial jobless claims (206k vs 225k est.) on Thursday. While Q4 GDP growth came in weaker (+1.4% q/q vs +2.8% q/q expected) on Friday, this was accompanied by a stronger core PCE inflation reading for December (+0.4% m/m vs +0.3% m/m expected) which brought the annual rate of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge back up to +3.0% for the first time in ten months.  With investors dialling back their expectations for Fed rate cuts this year and the SCOTUS ruling raising questions over the US fiscal outlook, the Treasury curve moved higher, with the 2yr yield up +7.0bps (+1.9bps Friday) and the 10yr up +3.6bps to 4.09% (+1.7bps Friday).

European bonds outperformed, with yields on 10yr bunds (-1.7bps, -0.5bps Friday) and OATs (-4.1bps, -1.5bps on Friday) falling. And 10yr gilt yields (-6.3bps, -1.5bps Friday) saw a larger decline, after weaker labour market data on Wednesday raised expectations that the BoE will cut rates in March, with pricing of a March rate cut rising from 71% to 81% over the week.

Finally, oil saw its largest two-day jump since October 2025, as reports circulated that a conflict between the US and Iran could be imminent and Trump escalated his rhetoric against Tehran. Brent crude rose +5.92% over the week (+0.14% on Friday). Metals also rallied, with gold (+1.30%, +2.23% Friday) rising to $5,107/oz.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 08:37

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AI Agent OpenClaw Confirms Ban On Bitcoin/Crypto Discussions In Discord
AI Agent OpenClaw Confirms Ban On Bitcoin/Crypto Discussions In Discord

Authored by Amin Haqshanas via CoinTelegraph.com,

The developer behind the fast-growing open-source AI agent framework OpenClaw has confirmed that any mention of Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies on its Discord server can lead to removal.



In a Saturday post on X, a user revealed that they were blocked from OpenClaw’s Discord simply for referencing Bitcoin block height as a timing mechanism in a multi-agent benchmark.

In response, OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger confirmed the action, writing that members had accepted “strict server rules” upon joining and that the community maintains a “no crypto mention whatsoever” policy.



OpenClaw confirms ban on crypto. Source: Steinberger

Steinberger later agreed to re-add the user, asking them to email their username so he could restore their access to the server.

OpenClaw’s crypto problem began with a fake token

Trouble began during a rebrand after Steinberger received a trademark notice related to the project’s original name.

In the short window between releasing old social accounts and claiming new ones, scammers seized the abandoned handles and promoted a Solana-based token called $CLAWD.

The token surged to roughly $16 million in market capitalization within hours before collapsing more than 90% after Steinberger publicly denied involvement. Early buyers accused the developer.

Steinberger responded at the time by warning users he would never launch a cryptocurrency and that any token claiming association with him was fraudulent. Security researchers later identified hundreds of exposed OpenClaw instances online and dozens of malicious plug-ins, many designed to target crypto traders.

OpenClaw has expanded rapidly since launching in late January, surpassing 200,000 GitHub stars within weeks and attracting a wide developer audience interested in autonomous agents.

Crypto firms bullish on AI agents

Industry leaders increasingly see crypto as the default payment rail for AI. Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire predicted that billions of agents will use stablecoins for routine payments within a few years

Earlier this month, Coinbase launched “Agentic Wallets” infrastructure that lets AI agents hold wallets and autonomously spend, earn and trade crypto onchain.

Built on its AgentKit developer framework and powered by the x402 payments protocol, the system enables software agents to actively manage DeFi positions, rebalance portfolios, pay for compute and data services, and participate in digital marketplaces.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 09:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Worst-Case Scenario": Novo Nordisk Plunges After Next-Gen Obesity Drug Falls Short Of Lilly Rival
"Worst-Case Scenario": Novo Nordisk Plunges After Next-Gen Obesity Drug Falls Short Of Lilly Rival

Shares of Novo Nordisk A/S plummeted again on Monday after the company reported trial results showing its next-generation obesity shot, CagriSema, delivered 20.2% weight loss at 84 weeks, compared to 23.6% for Eli Lilly & Co.’s tirzepatide (Zepbound).

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Michael Shah explained, "This outcome is the worst-case scenario for Novo and heightens the need for M&A with Novo’s other GLP-1/Amylin drug."

Shares of Novo in Copenhagen plunged as much as 16.5%, breaking below a support level that had held since August 2025. The stock is now down about 75% from its 2024 peak and is near its 2021 low.



The result is yet more trouble for Novo’s new leadership, led by Mike Doustdar, following Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen's recent exit, along with board turnover linked to disagreements over a turnaround plan to regain GLP-1 market share. There’s also the copycat GLP-1 compounding issue involving the telehealth firm Hims & Hers.

Novo’s strategy revolves around CagriSema as Wegovy and Ozempic face longer-term patent pressure; it combines semaglutide and another gut hormone called amylin. Early studies have shown mixed results, and at least one large trial failed to meet Novo’s targeted weight loss.

Another CagriSema trial, due later this year, could yield better results because it aims to move patients to the highest dose.

“Clearly this weakens Novo Nordisk’s competitive stance in the obesity market - especially if the obesity market develops into a ‘winner takes it all’ market,” Danske Bank Credit Research analyst Brian Borsting wrote in a note. “That said, we continue to believe that Novo Nordisk’s product portfolio in the obesity market is diversified and solid although we see today’s news as credit negative.”

Meanwhile, Goldman analyst and Novo super bull James Quigley provided clients with an update on the CagriSema trial:


This morning (23rd February), Novo announced that CagriSema did not achieve the primary endpoint of non-inferiority in REDEFINE-4, with weight loss of 23% for the CagriSema arm vs. 25.5% for the tirzepatide 15mg arm, after 84 weeks of treatment. Previously, we had said that in a non-inferiority scenario, taking the PoS of CagriSema down to 0% in obesity, leaving $5bn in sales only for cagrilintide monotherapy, would lead to a -12% impact to our DCF, all else equal, but noted that investor expectations were likely lower for CagriSema. These data points could further reduce market expectations for CagriSema, even ahead of the REDEFINE 11 trial (1H'27), and while we continue to expect approval for CagriSema and likely some use by physicians as part of a portfolio approach in obesity, investors are not likely to give credit here until the sales start to come though post approval. Novo is looking to explore higher doses of CagriSema with a Phase 3 trial planned for 2H26 - although we believe investors are unlikely to give any credit until the sales trajectory is seen. Therefore, given our expectations noted above, the share price reaction at the time of writing of c.-12% appears in line, as any residual potential for CagriSema moves out of the expectations built in for the stock. Continued momentum for the launch of the Wegovy pill is even more important, we believe, as shifting volumes to the oral market could be advantageous, given Novo has a more competitive profile on weight loss.




CagriSema failed to meet the primary endpoint of demonstrating non-inferiority vs tirzepatide on weight loss at 84 weeks. On an efficacy-estimand basis, 2.4mg/2.4mg CagriSema showed -23.0% weight loss at 84 weeks, vs 25.5% weight loss with 15mg tirzepatide over the same time period. On a treatment-regimen estimand basis, CagriSema showed -20.2% weight loss at 84 weeks vs -23.6% with 15mg tirzepatide. As a result, REDEFINE-4's primary endpoint of CagriSema demonstrating non-inferiority on weight loss vs tirzepatide was not reached.


CagriSema showed a well-tolerated safety profile, per Novo. While no tolerability data was given, in the release Novo said that overall CagriSema appeared to show a well-tolerated and safe profile, with the most common AEs being GI AEs. Of these, the vast majority were mild to moderate and improved over time, which was consistent with other drugs in the GLP1 agonist class.


In terms of next steps, Novo anticipates a decision from the FDA on CagriSema by y/e 2026. This is following the company's submission to the FDA in December 2025 based on data from REDEFINE 1 and 2. Novo also expects to initiate an additional Phase 3 trial of higher dose CagriSema in 2H26, and expects the readout from REDEFINE 11 of 2.4mg/2.4mg CagriSema in 1H27 (longer term trial looking at the full weight loss potential of CagriSema in obesity).



Not surprisingly, Quigley's continued "Buy" rating on the stock even as it has collapsed 75% from the peak and nears 2021 lows. "We are Buy rated on Novo Nordisk," he said.



Related:


Novo Nordisk CEO To Step Down Following Brutal Bear Market


"Big Miss": Wall Street Disappointed After Dismal Novo Nordisk GLP-1 Sales Outlook, Shares Plunge


GLP-1 Feud: HIMS Fires Back At Novo Nordisk, Slams Lawsuit As "Blatant Attack" By Big Pharma


GLP-1 Anti-Obesity U.S. Drug Market In Four Charts

Bloomberg data shows 17 "Buy" ratings, 14 "Hold" ratings, and 3 "Sell" ratings on Novo. The average 12-month price target among Wall Street analysts is 353 kroner.



How many Goldman clients are furious with Quigley's Novo coverage?

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 09:25

Harvard Business Review
Open 
The Upside of Opening Up DEI Programs to Everyone
There are costs to the decline of targeted diversity programs—but there are also hidden benefits to the new era of universality.

ZDNet News
Open 
This tiny $15 precision screwdriver just earned a permanent spot in my repair kit - here's why
The Hoto 24-in-1 is beautiful, lightweight, and expertly engineered.

ZDNet News
Open 
This simple Starlink Mini upgrade just solved my biggest power problem - here's how
The Stargear 3-in-1 cable gives me more power options, no matter where I am.

ZDNet News
Open 
Don't buy the wrong touchscreen gloves this winter - here's the one I recommend most
These Cross Point Gear Sports gloves are the best outdoor gloves with touchscreen support that I've used.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Anthropic’s $380 Billion Valuation Marks a Turning Point for Enterprise AI
Earlier this month, Anthropic announced a massive $30 billion Series G funding round, pushing its post-money valuation to an astonishing $380 billion. Just five months after a $183 billion mark in September 2025, the AI company—founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers who left over... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Blockchain Analytics Firm Elliptic Exposes Ongoing Russia-Linked Crypto Services Driving Sanctions Evasion
In a detailed analysis released on February 21, 2026, blockchain analytics firm Elliptic has shed new light on how several cryptocurrency platforms with deep ties to Russia continue to facilitate the circumvention of Western sanctions. These services enable Russian entities to convert rubles into digital... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Fintech GoCardless Introduces MCP : An AI-Native Solution for Bank Payment Integration
GoCardless has launched its Model Context Protocol (MCP), a tool that lets developers and merchants interact with its bank payment platform using everyday natural language. Announced recently this month, this AI-driven innovation marks a major shift in how businesses engage with complex payment systems, eliminating... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Regtech : ID Verification Provider iProov Advances Biometric Security with Certification and JFK Airport Deployment
In February 2026, biometric technology provider iProov unveiled two major developments that reinforce its position at the forefront of secure identity verification. The company’s Dynamic Liveness solution became the world’s first and only system to earn both the CEN/TS 18099 High certification and Ingenium Level... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Payra Receives $15 Investment From Edison Partners
Payra, a B2B payments and accounts receivable automation platform, has raised a growth equity investment of $15 million from Edison Partners. Payra helps construction and building supplier companies modernize cash collection without replacing existing ERP systems. The company’s software integrates directly with accounting systems such... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
RevSpring Acquires TrustCommerce
RevSpring has acquired TrustCommerce, a provider of end-to-end integrated healthcare payment and security solutions. The combined company will accelerate innovation in financial engagement and integrated payments, helping provider and payer organizations simplify payment complexity, consolidate vendors, and improve operational control from transaction through reconciliation. “This... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Reg CF: SEC Updates Crowdfunding Guidance on Platform Switches, Caps and Issuer Filings
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s Division of Corporation Finance issued revised staff interpretations on Regulation Crowdfunding (Reg CF), offering new guidance on how issuers can switch intermediary platforms, calculate fundraising caps, and comply with filing obligations for longer-running offerings. Reg CF was part of the... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Fintech and Crypto Startups Pursue Bank Buyouts to Fast-Track Mainstream Finance Integration
In a shift reshaping the boundaries between technology-driven finance and traditional banking, cryptocurrency firms and fintechs are increasingly viewing bank acquisitions as an expedited pathway into established financial systems. This, according to an update from the WSJ, which noted that instead of enduring the protracted... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Wallet Operator Badge Raises $17.1M
Badge, the operating platform for Apple and Google Wallets, has raised $17.1 million, including a $13.8 million Series A led by TTV Capital with participation from Stripe, Synchrony Ventures, and Infinity Ventures, as well as a previously unannounced $3.3 million seed round from QED Investors... Read More

Chatham House
Open 
Saudi–UAE Tensions: Yemen and Regional Implications
Saudi–UAE Tensions: Yemen and Regional Implications
5
March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 2:15PM
Anonymous (not verified)
19 February 2026

Online
Panellists examine how tensions between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi reflect broader divergences in regional strategy, security priorities, and approaches to influence.
Panellists examine how tensions between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi reflect broader divergences in regional strategy, security priorities, and approaches to influence.

In the final days of 2025, tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), once key partners in the Yemen coalition, became more visible as differences over the conflict’s endgame resurfaced. A central source of friction was their opposing relationships with local actors, particularly the UAE’s support for the Southern Transitional Council (STC), whose push for southern autonomy conflicted with Saudi Arabia’s backing of Yemen’s internationally recognized government and its preference for preserving territorial unity. As Saudi Arabia intensified efforts to stabilize the front lines and advance a political settlement, the UAE’s announcement of a full withdrawal from Yemen brought these underlying disagreements into sharper focus.Panellists will discuss how the episode underscores not only differing assessments of Yemen’s political future and security architecture but also broader divergences in regional strategy that had been developing between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi in recent years. Speakers will also discuss how the Yemen file became one arena in which evolving economic ambitions, security priorities, and approaches to regional influence have increasingly shaped the relationship between the two Gulf states, with implications likely to extend beyond the conflict itself.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Criminal Legal Aid and Assistance by Way of Representation (Miscellaneous Amendment) (Scotland) Regulations 2026

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Trump to honor 'Angel Families'
President Trump on Monday will honor “Angel Families” who have lost family members to crimes committed by people in the country illegally. The White House event comes one day before Trump is set to deliver a high-stakes State of the Union address. Watch Monday's event, scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. EST, in the video player above.

The Hill
Open 
Trump predicts Supreme Court will rule against him on birthright citizenship after tariffs loss
President Trump predicted on Monday morning that the Supreme Court will also rule against him when it comes to birthright citizenship, comments that come after the nation’s highest court rejected some of his most sweeping tariffs. “The next thing you know they will rule in favor of China and others, who are making an absolute...

The Hill
Open 
The fault lines that could imperil Democrats 
They are issues that have long divided Democrats within their party’s political spectrum.

The Hill
Open 
MAGA made Trump — it won't disappear when he does
The spirit of what we now call "MAGA" was circulating long before Trump arrived.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: DHS shutdown hits 10th day as Congress returns to DC
Lawmakers are making their way back to Capitol Hill, where they will grapple with stalled talks to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) ahead of Tuesday's State of the Union address. The government has been partially shut down for 10 days now, and Democrats and Republicans remain far apart on what they'd like to...

The Hill
Open 
Europe’s rearmament push recalls a chilling history
European citizens are right to worry about what life will be like as talk of rearmament becomes normalized once again on their continent. They have seen this before, and the results were devastating.  

The Register
Open 
Ex-Amazon UK boss lined up to chair Britain's competition watchdog
Business Secretary praises Doug Gurr's pro-growth agenda Britain's competition regulator has tapped former Amazon UK chief Doug Gurr as preferred candidate for chair – a notable appointment given the watchdog's active investigations into major cloud providers.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Russell T Davies Has Planned Out Multiple Versions of the Return of ‘Doctor Who’
Plus, somehow, 'Charlie's Angels' returned?

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer continues to back minister despite dozens of Labour MPs demanding probe into his think-tank's 'dirty dossier' attack on journalists
Downing Street today said the Prime Minister continues to have full confidence in Josh Simons amid the mounting pressure on the Cabinet Office minister.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tell us about your experience living with PCOS
Many experts and women living with the disease say the name polycystic ovary syndrome is reductive and misleadingMore than one in 10 women of reproductive age have a hormonal disorder which can have wide-ranging health effects, including on metabolism, skin, mental health and the reproductive and cardiovascular systems.Despite these diverse symptoms, the condition is known as polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS. It is a name many experts and those living with the disease says is reductive and misleading, prompting a global initiative working to formally rename PCOS to something that more accurately reflects the disease. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
I Tried Every Popular Frozen Fry Brand. This $3 Bag Blows Them Out of the Water
These frozen fries may be better than most restaurants' offerings.

CNET News
Open 
Half of US Adults Who Use Social Media Want Better Labels on AI Posts, CNET Finds
Growing frustrations with AI on social media have us clamoring for better solutions.

Mac Rumours
Open 
The MacRumors Show: What's Coming at the 'Apple Experience'?
We talk through everything to expect at Apple's upcoming "Experience" on March 4, on this week's episode of The MacRumors Show.



Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel for more videos

Earlier this week, Apple announced a "special Apple Experience" for the media in New York, London, and Shanghai, taking place on March 4, 2026 at 9:00am ET. It is notable that Apple is specifically using the word "experience," rather than "event." Unlike a full live-streamed event from Apple Park, the March 4 event in other cities is likely to be smaller in scale.



The launch of several new Apple products is believed to be imminent. We're most likely to see the announcement of the iPhone 17e, a spec-bumped successor to the iPhone 16e, with rumored upgrades including an A19 chip, MagSafe, and Apple's C1X and N1 wireless chips. The device will apparently have a notch despite earlier rumors mentioning a Dynamic Island, and pricing will continue to start at $599 in the United States.



The all-new low-cost MacBook is likely to arrive, featuring the A18 Pro chip, a 12.9-inch display, and a selection of fun color options. The MacBook Pro is also expected to receive the M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, and PCIe 5.0 support for faster SSD speeds.



Additionally, the iPad Air is due a bump up to the M4 chip, while the entry-level iPad is expected to get the A18 chip with Apple Intelligence support.



A refreshed MacBook Air, Mac Studio, and Studio Display are also possibilities, along with a new Apple TV and HomePod mini. The event could could include a demo of immersive Formula 1 content on the Apple Vision Pro, too.



We also discuss iOS 26.4, which is now available in beta. The update includes a new Playlist Playground feature that lets users create a playlist with a text-based prompt, refinements to Apple Music's design, videos in Apple Podcasts, end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for ‌RCS‌ messages, and more. The MacRumors Show has its own YouTube channel, so make sure you're subscribed to keep up with new episodes and clips.



Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel!



You can also listen to ‌The MacRumors Show‌ on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, or other podcast apps. You can also copy our RSS feed directly into your player.







If you haven't already listened to the previous episode of The MacRumors Show, catch up to hear our discussion about the upcoming ‌iPhone‌ 17e and ‌iPad‌ models, as well as Apple's apparent issues finalizing the revamped version of Siri.



Subscribe to ‌The MacRumors Show‌ for new episodes every week, where we discuss some of the topical news breaking here on MacRumors, often joined by interesting guests such as Kayci Lacob, Kevin Nether, John Gruber, Mark Gurman, Jon Prosser, Luke Miani, Matthew Cassinelli, Brian Tong, Quinn Nelson, Jared Nelson, Eli Hodapp, Mike Bell, Sara Dietschy, iJustine, Jon Rettinger, Andru Edwards, Arnold Kim, Ben Sullins, Marcus Kane, Christopher Lawley, Frank McShan, David Lewis, Tyler Stalman, Sam Kohl, Federico Viticci, Thomas Frank, Jonathan Morrison, Ross Young, Ian Zelbo, and Rene Ritchie.



‌The MacRumors Show‌ is on X @MacRumorsShow, so be sure to give us a follow to keep up with the podcast. You can also email us at podcast@macrumors.com or head over to The MacRumors Show forum thread. Remember to rate and review the podcast, and let us know what subjects and guests you would like to see in the future.Tag: The MacRumors ShowThis article, 'The MacRumors Show: What's Coming at the 'Apple Experience'?' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
Is Ninja still king? We put the latest air fryers to the test to find out
From ease of use and consistent results through to speed and cost-efficiency, we trialled appliances to cover off your cooking needs

Mail Online
Open 
Relegation-threatened football club accused of deliberately flooding their pitch to postpone match - by turning on the sprinklers in heavy rain
King's Lynn Town's match against South Shields in the National League North was due to take place on February 14 at 3pm but was postponed 'due to a high amount of rainfall and insufficient drainage'.

Mail Online
Open 
Terrifying moment footballers run from the pitch for safety in Mexico as they hear 'explosions' while violence erupts across the country after drug lord was killed months before the World Cup
A women's football match in Mexico was suspended mid-game following reports of gunfire near the stadium, prompting both teams to run off the pitch after hearing the sounds.

Mail Online
Open 
Can YOU guess which dress costs £2,700...and which is just £30 from Tesco? F&F unveils lookalikes from Chanel, Toteme, and SKIMS
The British supermarket's most recent collections have sparked such a frenzy on social media that many of F&F's most popular launches sell out within days.

Mail Online
Open 
Nottingham triple killer was freed by mental health workers who feared detaining him would be racist because of the 'over-representation of young black men in custody'
Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar were all killed by Valdo Calocane during a stabbing rampage in Nottingham in 2023.

Mail Online
Open 
American couple trapped in Puerto Vallarta during first trip away from son, 4, tell family where to find their WILLS as cartel violence kills 14, resorts run out of food and Cancun vacationers ordered to shelter in place
The US State Department has issued a shelter in place order that encompasses vacation hotspots like Puerto Vallarta, Cancun, Playa del Carmen and Tulum.

BBC UK News
Open 
Accused's 999 call was an act, court hears
Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she died at her home in Lurgan in December 2022.

Russia Today News
Open 
‘Britons deserve better’ – Putin aide on Starmer and Epstein-linked ex-prince

Mail Online
Open 
Graduate jobs apocalypse: Opportunities tailor-made for university leavers crash to record low as Labour prices the young out of work
In a bleak report that fuelled fears of a 'lost generation', jobs website Adzuna said the number of graduate roles has fallen 45 per cent in the past year.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My rookie era: I wasn’t immediately good at oil painting, but it taught me to find pleasure in struggle
One week I spent three miserable hours trying to paint a satin ribbon, and went home in a filthy moodRead more summer essentialsAs a five-year-old, I loved fairies, Spice Girls and Vincent van Gogh. It wasn’t the famous ear incident or the existential despair that I found fascinating, but a picture book. For the Love of Vincent, by Brenda V Northeast, told the story of Van Gogh’s life but with one minor change: Vincent was a teddy bear, not a depressed Dutchman. It was this book that lead me to the real Van Gogh and to his art, which was vibrant and alive and made complete sense to a small child who mainly painted with her fingers. I loved Vincent, man and bear; I even went as Vincent Van Bear to Book Week, and confused the hell out of everyone.I was a happy painter for years, until I reached high school and I started getting marked for it. When art went from something I simply did to something I could be judged for, that made it terrifying. And as I learned more about artists like Vincent (man, not bear), I began to suspect that an artist’s life was for other people, who seemed to experience life a lot more vibrantly than I did, good and bad. Taking solace in the fact that I would never have been exceptional made it easier to just stop. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Robert Mugabe’s son charged with attempted murder over Johannesburg shooting
Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, known for lavish lifestyle, also accused of theft and being illegal immigrant after man allegedly shot in backA son of the late Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe has been charged with attempted murder after a 23-year-old man was allegedly shot in the back on 19 February in an upmarket area of Johannesburg.Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, 28, appeared in court on Monday for a brief hearing alongside co-accused Tobias Mugabe Matonhodze. Mugabe’s lawyer Sinenhlanhla Mnguni declined to comment when asked by reporters whether the two men were related. Mnguni said he would request bail for his clients at the next hearing on 3 March. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police investigate racist abuse aimed at Premier League players after ‘appalling weekend’
Four reports of online abuse over last three daysKick It Out says ‘action must follow’ as anger growsPolice are investigating online abuse directed at Premier League footballers over the weekend, with offenders warned: “Anyone who believes they can hide behind their keyboards should think again.”The UK Football Policing Unit (UKFPU) said it had received four separate reports of abuse towards top-flight players in the last three days. The Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and the Sunderland midfielder Romaine Mundle became the latest players to be targeted by online abuse on Sunday, following on from abuse aimed at Chelsea’s Wesley Fofana and Burnley’s Hannibal Mejbri on Saturday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Most of us spoke’: crunch talks fired up Arsenal for derby win, reveals Gyökeres
Team meeting led to ‘honest’ exchange, says strikerArsenal now five points clear of City with game in handViktor Gyökeres has revealed that Arsenal’s brutally honest team discussions after the draw at Wolves last Wednesday brought renewed purpose and helped them to Sunday’s restorative win at Tottenham.Gyökeres produced arguably his best performance for Arsenal in the 4-1 derby victory, threatening from start to finish and scoring two goals. It was the perfect way for Arsenal to respond to the Wolves game, when they surrendered a 2-0 lead for a 2-2 stalemate. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
In a world where eating has become solitary and rushed, Ramadan restores something radical: shared time | Muhammad Abdulsater
Fasting while working long hours is physically demanding. But gratitude is less abstract when hunger has been feltMaking sense of it is a column about spirituality and how it can be used to navigate everyday lifeIftar isn’t just eating, it’s synchronisation. Everyone waits. Everyone eats together. It is a rare moment of collective rhythm.In a world where eating has become solitary and rushed, Ramadan restores something quietly radical: shared time. Iftar is not simply the moment hunger ends but the moment waiting becomes collective. People pause together, watch the same light fade over the horizon, hear the same call to prayer and reach for food at the same time. There is no personalised schedule, no eating on the run. This age-old ritual insists that nourishment is not only physical but spiritual and social, that being fed is being seen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine-Russia-US talks could take place this week amid fourth anniversary of war – Europe live
Zelenskyy’s aide says talks are ‘not going smoothly’ but are ‘moving forward’One other thing we will be keeping an eye on today is the latest on the EU-US trade relationship after last Friday’s US supreme court ruling on Trump’s tariffs.The European Parliament is expected to discuss what to do with the EU-US trade deal later today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Crampons, crashes and creativity: Tom Jenkins’ best photos from the Winter Olympics
Our photographer shares his favourite images from the Games in ItalyI’ve been lucky enough to attend six summer Olympic Games, but I’d never before photographed a Winter Olympics. They’ve always been too far away and the UK has never been a major snowsport country, which has limited their news appeal. This time it was different. With Team GB anticipating a record medal haul and the Games staged in northern Italy, I headed off with nervous excitement, lured by the promise of fast action sports occurring amid beautiful snowy vistas. I covered ski jumping, big air, ice hockey, biathlon, curling and much more. A lot of it was alien to me but it was very enjoyable. There were new rules to learn, new challenges to face – I’ve certainly never had to wear sharp crampons at a football match.The Games were full of contrasts. From a sporting perspective, the gentle gracefulness that I observed at the figure skating was offset by the full-on brutality of ice hockey brawls, while the delicate precision of curling was juxtaposed by the frantic chaos of short-track speed skating. From a geographical and cultural perspective, Livigno, which is perched high up in the Alps close to Switzerland, seemed like a giant playground for modern snow sports – geared towards those who like to twist and twirl high in the sky – while Cortina, in the Dolomites, was far more old-fashioned and populated by the traditional skiing establishment. Milan, meanwhile, featured a cluster of modernist, edge-of-town arenas, with international fans happily catching the metro to and from the events. But, in my experience, transportation wasn’t always so convenient. The huge amount of travelling between venues – I went to all but one – was exhausting and getting a late night bus over the mountains between Livigno and Bormio in a blizzard felt a bit hairy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
With N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the foot | Catherine Shoard
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have allowed their successful diversity drive to be overshadowedBBC apologises again for Baftas N-word incident as show removed from iPlayer for re-editWhy the Baftas must get rid of their two-hour delay and broadcast liveBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversyBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling slur, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
UK says 'nothing is off the table' in response to US tariffs
Downing Street says discussions are ongoing following US President Donald Trump's announcement of a 15% global tariff.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK set to be among worst hit by Trump's 15% global tariff, analysis suggests
Downing Street says discussions are ongoing following US President Donald Trump's announcement of a 15% global tariff.

Mail Online
Open 
Jamie Foxx hits out at Bafta N-word controversy - as Tourette's charity says involuntary tics are 'not a reflection of the sufferer's beliefs'
Davidson, whose life story inspired the film I Swear, was heard yelling the N-word while black actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented the first prize.

Techdirt
Open 
Who Knew? Mindless And Corrupt Deregulation Apparently Kills People
You might recall that a central pillar of the Trump administration during the last election season was that a second Trump term would “take aim at big tech,” protect the little guy, rein in corporate power, and even “continue the legacy of antitrust enforcers like Lina Khan.” The press was filled with endless stories credibly parroting these sorts […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Reform promises agency to ensure illegal migrant removals
The party's new home affairs spokesman Zia Yusuf says it would be a "burning" priority for a Reform UK government.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Middleton rewears pink chiffon Gucci gown at the BAFTAs - we've found high street versions that are perfect for spring weddings and events
All eyes were on the Princess of Wales as she arrived at the 2026 BAFTA Film Awards at the Royal Festival Hall alongside her husband, Prince William.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Black shares rare photos of high school sweetheart wife Tanya Haden as they celebrate 20th anniversary
The actor, 56, took to Instagram on Sunday and posted several snaps of the couple and their children Samuel, 19, and Thomas, 17, over the years.

Sky News Home
Open 
Porn company handed record fine by UK regulator for failing to verify ages
A porn company has just been handed the largest fine ever issued under the Online Safety Act.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Robert Mugabe’s son charged with attempted murder over Johannesburg shooting
Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, known for lavish lifestyle, also accused of theft and being illegal immigrant after man was allegedly shot in back A son of the late Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe has been charged with attempted murder after a 23-year-old man was allegedly shot in the back on 19 February in an upmarket area of Johannesburg.Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, 28, appeared in court on Monday for a brief hearing alongside co-accused Tobias Mugabe Matonhodze. Mugabe’s lawyer Sinenhlanhla Mnguni declined to comment when asked by reporters whether the two men were related. Mnguni said he would request bail for his clients at the next hearing on 3 March. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Milan lose more ground on Inter as Loftus-Cheek suffers World Cup blow
Defeat to Carlos Cuesta’s Parma leaves Rossoneri 10 points off top spot as England midfielder suffers broken jawThese were supposed to be the weeks when Milan held the upper hand over their Serie A rivals, granted six days to prepare for a home game against bottom-half opposition while the likes of Inter, Juventus and Atalanta dragged themselves back exhausted from European away trips. Demoralised, too, after losing to Bodø/Glimt, Galatasaray and Borussia Dortmund by a combined 10 goals to three.It was a grim week for Italian football, the sort that provokes another round of sad think-pieces about whether the nation’s teams will ever again be competitive in the continent’s biggest tournament. A discourse which often seems to skim over the fact one of them has gone to the final twice in the past three seasons. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump invites US Olympic hockey heroes to State of the Union in locker-room call
Trump invites Olympic champions to State of the UnionFBI director Kash Patel joins locker-room revelry in MilanDonald Trump made a congratulatory phone call to the United States men’s hockey team after their dramatic win over Canada in the Olympic gold medal game on Sunday afternoon, praising what he called an “unbelievable” performance and inviting the players to Washington DC this week.The US president addressed the team by speakerphone shortly after their 2-1 overtime victory, telling them they had delivered a moment the country would remember for decades. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
Meanwhile, Zelenskyy’s chief of staff says that next round of Ukraine peace talks could take place later this weekOne other thing we will be keeping an eye on today is the latest on the EU-US trade relationship after last Friday’s US supreme court ruling on Trump’s tariffs.The European Parliament is expected to discuss what to do with the EU-US trade deal later today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC apologises again for Baftas N-word incident as show removed from iPlayer for re-edit
Corporation says it is sorry that racial slur spoken involuntarily during ceremony by John Davidson, who has Tourette syndrome, was not edited out before broadcastWith N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the footWhy the Baftas must pivot to broadcasting liveBacklash mounts as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstThe BBC has issued a new apology for its handling of the incident at the Bafta film awards which saw the N-word broadcast during BBC One coverage of the ceremony and remain overnight on BBC iPlayer. The BBC has now taken down the show from the iPlayer platform and says it will re-edit it amid a growing backlash.In a statement the BBC said: “Some viewers may have heard strong and offensive language during the Bafta film awards. This arose from involuntary verbal tics associated with Tourette syndrome, and as explained during the ceremony it was not intentional. We apologise that this was not edited out prior to broadcast and it will now be removed from the version on BBC iPlayer.” Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Sinners producer says BAFTA British Tourette actor also hurled n-word at her after he shouted it at stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo
Hannah Beachler says John Davidson also said the racist term to her at
Sunday's ceremony in London.

Mail Online
Open 
Haunting curse of James Dean's car revealed seven decades after horror crash claimed his life aged just 24
In the aftermath of Dean's death, some believe a curse was born due to a mysterious series of accidents involving parts of the car.

Mail Online
Open 
Ruth Langsford says 'here I am where Eamonn and I worked together' as she makes emotional return to This Morning for first time since divorce - and reveals 'hardest thing' about their split
The 65-year-old returned to the sofa to chat to Cat Deeley , 49, and Ben Shephard , 51, about her new book Feeling Fabulous.

Mail Online
Open 
Armourer converted deadly weapons for criminal gangs across the country from the cover of his Lake District motorcycle repairs business
Mechanic Dudley Brennan, 31, had boasted that engineering skill 'quite literally runs in my blood' when he opened the business in Kendal.

Mail Online
Open 
Great-grandmother, 73, smothered husband, 81, to death with pillow after 'five decades of controlling marriage', review finds
Janet Dunn killed Anthony Dunn at their home in Northumberland following years of suffering caused by her coercive husband.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best Puffer Jacket (2026): Patagonia, Arc’teryx, REI
Our favorite down puffer jackets will keep you warm in the backcountry and around town.

Mail Online
Open 
Two fire engines are spotted entering Sandringham estate where Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is living after responding to 'false alarm'
Fire crews with blue lights on scrambled to an entrance near Wood Farm, where Andrew has been living since he was forced out of his 30-room Royal Lodge mansion.

Mail Online
Open 
Adam Deacon launches an explosive attack on the BAFTAs and claims he was the only former winner cut out of this year's Rising Star montage
The actor, 42, best known for Kidulthood, took to social media on Sunday night following the awards ceremony's montage as he asked 'what did I do wrong?'

Mail Online
Open 
Oxford research nurse is ordered to cut back wisteria on historic home over claims RATS are climbing up it and into neighbouring homes
Katy Gordon-Quayle, 43, was told by her local council to cut the plant which was affixed to her Grade II thatched property.

Mail Online
Open 
Coronation Street star Lucy Fallon reveals she spent five weeks in a psychiatric hospital after hitting 'rock bottom' during mental health crisis
Lucy Fallon has revealed she spent five weeks as an inpatient in a psychiatric hospital after suffering a catastrophic mental health crisis that left her feeling she had hit 'absolute rock bottom'.

Mail Online
Open 
Chef 'kept as a slave by drug dealer' was found dead after being beaten for weeks and made to sleep next to dogs, court hears
Dimitrious Tsavdaris, 55, was found lying in a foetal position on the bedroom floor of a flat in Hackney, east London , on January 29 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
Jamie Foxx hits out at Tourette's sufferer John Davidson for his 'unacceptable' N-word outburst at the BAFTAs
Davidson, whose life story inspired the film I Swear, was heard yelling the N-word while black actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented the first prize.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Killing of Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ triggers wave of violence
Schools close and flights suspended after military raid kills Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes• Who was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?Whole areas of western Mexico have been all but shut down after a surge in cartel violence sparked by a military raid that killed one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, known as “El Mencho”.Schools were closed in several Mexican states, and foreign governments warned their citizens to stay inside after the drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was declared dead on Sunday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People with rare genetic conditions are ‘systematically ignored’ by NHS
Exclusive: One in four wait at least three years for diagnosis and many face treatment ‘access lottery’, report findsMillions of people living with rare genetic conditions across the UK are being “systematically ignored” by the NHS and facing inadequate care, according to a report.Rare genetic conditions, such as Williams syndrome and Duchenne muscular dystrophy, affect more than 3.5 million people across the UK. One in 17 people are affected by a rare condition at some point during their lives. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Tinderbox’ UK may be one shock away from food riots, experts say
Weakened food security could tip into unrest after a cyber-attack, extreme weather or conflict, analysis findsOne shock could spark social unrest and even food riots in the UK, according to dozens of the country’s top food experts, because chronic issues have left the food system a “tinderbox”.The group first identified a series of issues that are making access to food vulnerable in the UK, including the climate crisis, low incomes, poor farming policy and fragile just-in-time supply chains. These have left the UK dangerously exposed, the researchers said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC apologises again for Baftas N-word incident as show removed from iPlayer for re-edit
Corporation says it is sorry that racial slur spoken involuntarily during ceremony by John Davidson, who has Tourette syndrome, was not edited out before broadcast• Catherine Shoard: With N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the foot• Backlash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstThe BBC has issued a new apology for its handling of the incident at the Bafta film awards which saw the N-word broadcast during BBC One coverage of the ceremony and remain overnight on BBC iPlayer. The BBC has now taken down the show from the iPlayer platform and says it will re-edit it amid a growing backlash.In a statement the BBC said: “Some viewers may have heard strong and offensive language during the Bafta film awards. This arose from involuntary verbal tics associated with Tourette syndrome, and as explained during the ceremony it was not intentional. We apologise that this was not edited out prior to broadcast and it will now be removed from the version on BBC iPlayer.” Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
I woke up one day with a constant whooshing sound in my ear. I thought it was just tinnitus... then I discovered it was something much worse. DR SCURR reveals what's really going on and a simple device that could help
Pulsatile tinnitus is where you hear certain sounds much louder than normal, such as your pulse and heartbeat, and is usually caused by an abnormality - effectively, you're hearing your blood flow.

Mail Online
Open 
Jonathan Ross's daughter Honey Kinny, 28, leaves little to the imagination in a VERY racy cut-out dress amid LFW - after her new romance with YouTuber, 40, was revealed
The daughter of TV presenter Jonathan Ross and screenwriter Jane Goldman, 28, left little to the imagination in the look which boasted daring cut-outs.

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC removes BAFTAs from iPlayer and apologises for racial slur
The BBC has apologised for not editing out a racial slur shouted during Sunday's BAFTA Film Awards, and removed the show from iPlayer.

TechRadar News
Open 
Sony has taken more than $1,000 off some top PS5 storage upgrades at PS Direct

TechRadar News
Open 
French government systems hacked - over 1.2 million private financial accounts hit

TechRadar News
Open 
The PDP Riffmaster rekindled my love of rhythm games like Rock Band 4 and right now, it's back to its lowest-ever price at PS Direct

TechRadar News
Open 
RAM crisis shows (slight) signs of easing as DDR5 prices drop — but there's a sting in the tail

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Galaxy Unpacked on February 25 — and what to expect

TechRadar News
Open 
The iPhone’s Emergency SOS feature just saved six skiers caught in the Lake Tahoe avalanche – here’s how

TechRadar News
Open 
I spent a day at an elite hi-fi show to pick out 6 affordable speakers and hi-res players even I'd buy, so maybe you can too

Digital Trends
Open 
The “dumb” TV pivot: why your next screen shouldn’t be smart
Modern smart TVs have a fatal flaw: the software ages significantly faster than the hardware. A beautiful 4K panel can easily last a decade, but the built-in operating system will become a laggy, ad-filled, bloated mess within three years. Add in the privacy concerns of viewing data collection and unskippable interface ads, and it is […]
The post The “dumb” TV pivot: why your next screen shouldn’t be smart appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
The Galaxy S26 Ultra may come in two online-exclusive colorways, and they look very familiar
A fresh leak suggests the Galaxy S26 Ultra could launch in six total colors, including two Samsung.com exclusives in silver and pink gold that look all too familiar.
The post The Galaxy S26 Ultra may come in two online-exclusive colorways, and they look very familiar appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
Kid Rock: God will 'cut down' media reporting his $5,000 tour tickets
Kid Rock, an upper-crust car dealership scion who grew up in a 22-room mansion on 6 acres, has spent his adult life posing as a working-class rough. But you'll need real money to buy the $5,000 "first class" tickets for his shows, a fact he evidently does not want accurately reported. — Read the rest
The post Kid Rock: God will 'cut down' media reporting his $5,000 tour tickets appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The ‘Magnificent Seven’ is now the ‘Lag 7.’ How Big Tech’s slump is dragging down the S&P 500.
A breakdown of the “Magnificent Seven” and AI hyperscalers raises concern for the stock market and the economy

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tariff jitters are pushing gold over $5,100 and powering silver higher
The week has started on a positive footing for precious metals as investors look wary at fresh tariff stress out of the U.S.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Gilead shows belief in its partner’s cancer treatment with $7.8 billion buyout
Arcellx’s stock is heading toward a record after the $7.8 billion deal to be acquired by Gilead.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why Honeywell just shaved about $600 million off the price of a chemicals acquisition
Honeywell International on Monday received a 26% discount on its deal to acquire a business tied to the struggling chemicals industry.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Snowstorm hits airline stocks as total flight cancellations top 5,300
Airline stocks are taking a hit as a major Northeast snowstorm is leading to thousands of flight cancellations.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Congress must enact Trump’s tariffs now to steer the U.S. away from a massive revenue cliff
Tariffs need to become law or the federal budget will take a hit. Lawmakers have less than 150 days to decide.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Fed’s Waller says next jobs report, not Supreme Court ruling, will be key for March interest rate decision
The February jobs report, and not the Supreme Court ruling overturning a large part of President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported goods, will be key to whether the Federal Reserve needs to cut interest rates in March, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said on Monday.

Slashdot
Open 
Is AI Impacting Which Programming Language Projects Use?
"In August 2025, TypeScript surpassed both Python and JavaScript to become the most-used language on GitHub for the first time ever..." writes GitHub's senior developer advocate.

They point to this as proof that "AI isn't just speeding up coding. It's reshaping which languages, frameworks, and tools developers choose in the first place."

Eighty percent of new developers on GitHub use Copilot within their first week. Those early exposures reset the baseline for what "easy" means. When AI handles boilerplate and error-prone syntax, the penalty for choosing powerful but complex languages disappears. Developers stop avoiding tools with high overhead and start picking based on utility instead.

The language adoption data shows this behavioral shift:
- TypeScript grew 66% year-over-year
- JavaScript grew 24%
- Shell scripting usage in AI-generated projects jumped 206%
That last one matters. We didn't suddenly love Bash. AI absorbed the friction that made shell scripting painful. So now we use the right tool for the job without the usual cost.
"When a task or process goes smoothly, your brain remembers," they point out. "Convenience captures attention. Reduced friction becomes a preference - and preferences at scale can shift ecosystems."



"AI performs better with strongly typed languages. Strongly typed languages give AI much clearer constraints..."
"Standardize before you scale. Document patterns. Publish template repositories. Make your architectural decisions explicit. AI tools will mirror whatever structures they see."
"Test AI-generated code harder, not less."






Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
Uber launches robotaxi support project to aid AV partners
Uber is moving aggressively into robotaxis, striking deals with new partners and promising big investments to support future fleets - basically everything it can do except design and build the vehicles itself. (It tried that once, unsuccessfully.) Now, the ridehail giant is launching a new initiative to support its third-party robotaxi partners called Uber Autonomous […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Pure Storage rebrands to Everpure as storage maker’s business expands focus to data management
Everpure rebrand aims to put the focus on managing data throughout its lifecycle for optimum use, storage, security and sovereignty, with new functionality planned this year

The Aviationist
Open 
F-22 Raptor Again Controls MQ-20 Avenger In New Autonomy Test
During the latest mission from Edwards AFB, the pilot aboard the F-22 directed the MQ-20 to perform tactical maneuvers, adjust waypoints, fly Combat Air Patrol profiles, and execute simulated threat engagement tasks. The U.S. Air Force and General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. carried out a new autonomy demonstration involving an F-22 Raptor equipped with the […]

BBC World News
Open 
What's at stake as ICC judges hear charges against ex-Philippine president Duterte?
Duterte is accused of crimes against humanity during a long and bloody war on drugs in which thousands were killed.

BBC World News
Open 
Rob Jetten becomes Netherlands' youngest ever PM
The 38-year-old is sworn in as premier after clinching a narrow victory in October's election.

Department for Education
Open 
Radical expansion in rights for children with SEND
Radical expansion in rights for children with special educational needs and disabilities to transform life chances.

UK Government News
Open 
NDA publishes latest nuclear decommissioning strategy
NDA publishes latest strategy setting out long term roadmap for the safe and secure decommissioning of the UK’s legacy nuclear sites.

Ian Visits
Open 
Camden’s iconic Black Cap gay pub to reopen in March 2026
Camden’s legendary gay pub, The Black Cap, has confirmed its reopening date, a smidge over a decade since it was forced to close.Read more ›

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Alberta And Switzerland To Vote On Immigration Control Amid Growing Backlash
Alberta And Switzerland To Vote On Immigration Control Amid Growing Backlash

As the world watches unchecked immigration fundamentally transform the West, a growing backlash has gained a foothold - and it's made it to the ballot box.



In Alberta, Canada, Premier Danielle Smith announced a referendum this fall to decide whether the province should limit the number of new international, temporary foreign workers and asylum seekers - as Alberta seeks to take charge of the issue amid a surge of proud Canadians who do not embrace change. 

As Reuters notes; 


The move, announced by Premier Danielle Smith in a televised address on Thursday evening, represents an attempt by Alberta to wrest control of a key issue from the federal government. Immigration policy in Canada is primarily the responsibility of Ottawa, not the provinces.

It is also an attempt by Smith to ward off a simmering Alberta separatism movement, which has threatened Canadian unity as Prime Minister Mark Carney makes efforts to improve relations with western, resource-rich provinces in the face of economic challenges posed by U.S. President Donald Trump's trade policy.

Giving citizens a say on immigration policy is the government's way of giving Albertans hope that the Canadian federation can work, Smith told reporters on Friday.


Smith has also blamed Alberta's financial woes on immigrants - noting that a surge of over 600,000 migrants over the past five years, putting Alberta's population over 5 million in 2025 - has put a strain on provincial resources.

"Throwing the doors wide open to anyone and everyone across the globe has flooded our classrooms, emergency rooms and social support systems with far too many people, far too quickly," she said. 

Pissed Swiss Want Population Cap

Meanwhile in Switzerland, a landmark vote is set for June 14 that would cap the nation's population at 10 million from its current 9.1 million. 

The proposal has been put forth by the country's largest political coalition, the Swiss People's Party (SVP), and would require the government to refuse entry to all migrants - including those 'asylum' seekers who go home to party when the weather is nice. 

Hitting 10 million residents would also force Switzerland to end its free-movement agreement with the EU. Of note, the EU and Switzerland are integrated through more than 120 bilateral agreements, which grants it access to the EU single market and the free movement of people and trade in goods, CNN reports.

SVP argues that Switzerland is undergoing a 'population explosion,' that is straining resources and infrastructure, and inflating rents. 

According to a 2025 poll by Swiss-based polling firm Leewas, the proposal has wide support. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 06:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Travel Chaos Erupts In US East As Blizzard Slams Major Cities
Travel Chaos Erupts In US East As Blizzard Slams Major Cities

Blizzard conditions are expected from Delaware into southern New England, and travel will be "extremely treacherous" to "nearly impossible" today, according to the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center.



Expect travel delays along the I-95 corridor, as well as flight cancellations at airports from the Mid-Atlantic to the Northeast.

Nearly 5,600 flights in, out, or within the US were cancelled at the start of the week, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.

Travel nightmare for Republic Airways, JetBlue, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and United early Monday morning, with the bulk of the cancellations affecting these airlines.



Airports in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, such as John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia, Boston, Newark, and Philadelphia, experienced the highest number of cancellations and delays.



Here's a map of the flight misery as of 0630 ET.



The heaviest snowfall, as much as two feet in some locations across the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast areas, fell in the overnight hours and will continue into the morning, NWS warned in the most recent update.

Besides the unfolding travel chaos, nearly a quarter million customers are without power this morning because of the blizzard conditions, with a large percentage of the outages concentrated from Delaware to New Jersey.


Over a quarter million people are waking up this morning without power in the Northeast due to blizzard conditions.
Over 15" of snow has fallen in some locations and 50-60+ MPH gusts have been recorded along the coast.
Snow and strong winds continue today. pic.twitter.com/RKS693uskf
— BAM Weather (@bam_weather) February 23, 2026
Anyone planning to travel into NYC or out of it, well, forget about it, because Mayor Zohran Mamdani declared a state of emergency and closed streets, highways, and bridges to most traffic from late Sunday through Monday afternoon. His collective army of snow shovelers will save the day.

"These are blizzard conditions. New York City has not faced a storm of this scale in the last decade," Mamdani said. "We have activated additional high-water rescue teams should flooding grow dire."

How do the blizzard and winter blast compute in the minds of Mamdani's followers after years of being brainwashed about the global warming crisis?

Meteorologist Ryan Maue looks ahead: 


That monstrous Greenland "polar vortex" cold pool is the "Final Boss" ... goes toward Alaska in a week.
Then it heads Southeast into the Lower 48 to crash into the Great Lakes and Northeast by Day 12 (March 6th) ... from ECMWF HRES 00z
Coldest of winter in March! pic.twitter.com/xJ9vFXrX1i
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) February 23, 2026
Winter isn't over. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 07:20

ZDNet News
Open 
7 AI coding techniques that quietly make you elite
What separates casual vibe coders from elite builders? It's not better prompts. It's systems. Here's the exact framework I use to keep AI projects production-ready.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
FCA Listings data – Financial Conduct Authority

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Airlines Cancel Mexico Flights After ‘El Mencho’ Report
Major U.S. airlines have canceled select Sunday Feb. 22 flights to parts of Mexico following reports that Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” was killed during a Mexican military operation in Jalisco state.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
DHS Suspends TSA PreCheck, Global Entry During Shutdown
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has suspended TSA PreCheck and Global Entry programs as a partial government shutdown continues, a move expected to significantly impact airport security lines nationwide.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
NASA's Artemis II moon rocket back to the hangar
A series of fueling issues has delayed the much-anticipated launch of NASA's Artemis II moon mission, the first to carry astronauts since the Apollo moon landings. The Space Launch System rocket is grounded until April.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People with rare genetic conditions are ‘systematically ignored’ by NHS, report finds
Exclusive: One in four wait at least three years for diagnosis and many face treatment ‘access lottery’, according to reportMillions of people living with rare genetic conditions across the UK are being “systematically ignored” by the NHS and facing inadequate care, according to a report.Rare genetic conditions, such as Williams syndrome and Duchenne muscular dystrophy, affect more than 3.5 million people across the UK. One in 17 people are affected by a rare condition at some point during their lives. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump threatens ‘more powerful and obnoxious’ tariffs, amid confusion in UK and EU – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsThe London stock market has dipped slightly in early trading.The FTSE 100 index is down 19 points, or 0.18%, at 10,668 points. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Five takeaways at the conclusion of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games
The 2026 Winter Olympics captured the attention of millions of Americans this month thanks to several improbable comeback stories, an aggressive promotional campaign by host network NBC and partisan debate over some U.S. athletes who expressed discomfort representing the United States under President Trump. Here are five takeaways from the games in Milan-Cortina: U.S. men and...

The Hill
Open 
Trump must be cautious engaging Georgia's current leadership
For years, the South Caucasus was a zone of exclusive Russian domination. This equation has changed following the recent success of Trump administration diplomacy in Armenia and Azerbaijan. This shift is especially critical now, because both countries border Iran. In the last several days, the U.S. administration has taken steps to reactivate relations with the...

The Hill
Open 
‘Chinese court rules against Xi's tariffs’ and other headlines you won’t see
China is an enemy of democracy, the rule of law, and universal human rights. The sooner Canadians remember this, the better. 

The Hill
Open 
EU won't accept increase in US tariffs: 'A deal is a deal'
European Union (EU) leaders said over the weekend that they will not accept an increase in U.S. tariffs in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling against some of President Trump's most sweeping tariffs. “The Commission will always ensure that the interests of the European Union are fully protected. EU companies and exporters must have...

The Register
Open 
Suspected Anonymous members detained in Spain over post-flood DDoS blitz
Quartet accused of attacking public institutions, claiming the government was responsible for 2024 tragedy Spanish police say four self-proclaimed members of Anonymous are in custody after allegedly carrying out several cyberattacks on public authorities in the wake of the 2024 DANA floods.…

The Register
Open 
Altman: You think AI is inefficient? Try raising 100 billion humans
OpenAI CEO takes really, really long view on energy efficiency AI is being unfairly targeted over its energy use, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman claims, as the naysayers ignore the vast amount of resources humans have consumed over millennia – not least to avoid being eating by predators.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike Review: A ‘Fake Click’ Could Change Gaming Mice Forever
Logitech has crafted an innovative gaming mouse that's more customizable than anything else available right now.

Gizmodo
Open 
Timothée Chalamet Talks Going All Out for ‘Dune: Part Three’
According to Chalamet, 'Dune: Part Three' will take a big swing or two and let him throw some acting curveballs to the audience.

CNET News
Open 
iPhone 17 vs. iPhone 16: Which Should You Buy?
The latest Apple phone brings notable improvements to the camera, display and battery. But is it worth the upgrade?

CNET News
Open 
Don't Buy the iPhone 16E Right Now Because the iPhone 17E Is 'Due Imminently'
Commentary: Apple's $599 iPhone 16E has good value, but the iPhone 17E is expected to launch soon, possibly at a March 4 Apple media event.

CNET News
Open 
Phone-Maker Honor Will Unveil Its First Humanoid Robot Next Week
The Chinese tech company is branching out from phones to robots, via its robot phone -- and it'll show them all off next week at MWC in Barcelona.

CNET News
Open 
Struggling in Pokemon Legends: Z-A? Here's How to Catch Strong Dragon Pokemon Early
Dragon-types are extremely powerful in this Pokemon game. Here’s how to catch them early and strengthen your team.

CNET News
Open 
The Ultimate Guide to Seeing the Total Lunar Eclipse This March
Night owls will be able to check out the lunar eclipse when it appears this March.

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 18 Pro Reportedly Enters Trial Production Stage
Apple's upcoming iPhone 18 Pro has entered production testing ahead of a launch later this year, a Chinese leaker reported today.





In a Weibo post, the leaker account known as "Fixed Focus Digital" said the Pro models had already entered "mass-production testing," likely referring to late-stage manufacturing validation for the devices ahead of a September launch.



February typically aligns with Apple's Design Validation Test (DVT) phase transitioning into early Production Validation Test (PVT). During this period, Apple uses production tooling and activates portions of factory assembly lines to validate manufacturing processes, yields, and quality control, rather than producing units at full scale. Full mass production usually ramps in the summer months ahead of launch.



The leaker also claimed that production testing had begun for the regular iPhone 18 model, but given that we aren't expecting the lower-specced device to be released until early next year, it would likely be in an earlier validation stage at this point, such as mid-to-late Engineering Validation Test (EVT) or early DVT.



Fixed Focus Digital added that, based on their information, there are no major changes to the materials, and that overall, the devices continue to use the existing design specifications for the iPhone 17 lineup. The comment reflects earlier reports that the iPhone 18 Pro models won't be a big update this year, with outward changes potentially only extending to a smaller Dynamic Island.



There will still be several important internal changes, such as a new camera system with a variable aperture, the A20 chip, and the custom C2 modem. However, the new Pro models likely won't be "the star of Apple's ‌iPhone‌ launch this fall," according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, with the company's first foldable set to claim the spotlight instead.Related Roundup: iPhone 18Tag: Fixed Focus DigitalRelated Forum: iPhoneThis article, 'iPhone 18 Pro Reportedly Enters Trial Production Stage' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
‘Feeding the beast’: Debt fears as online gambling explodes in Africa
Business leaders blame the booming betting market for a drop in productivity and a fall in household spending power

Deutsche Welle
Open 
A Ukrainian soldier's story: Fading hope on the front line after four years of fighting
DW correspondent Kostiantyn Honcharov joined the Ukrainian army in 2022. He describes the grim front-line situation after four years of fighting.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Three countries, 25,000 miles - England's daunting summer itinerary
England will take to the skies for their summer fixtures against South Africa, Fiji and Argentina, posing difficult decisions for the team.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess and Junior Andre break silence on mum Katie Price's new husband Lee Andrews - revealing they've still not met him in unflinching This Morning interview
The brother-sister duo took to This Morning on Monday to open up about the second series of their reality show, The Princess Diaries, ahead of its return to ITV .

BBC World News
Open 
Robert Mugabe's son charged with attempted murder in South Africa
Bellarmine Mugabe and one other man have not commented on the charges after a 23-year-old was shot.

BBC World News
Open 
Rob Jetten becomes Netherlands' youngest and first gay PM
The 38-year-old is sworn in as premier after clinching a narrow victory in October's election.

Sky News Home
Open 
How could Andrew be removed from royal line of succession - and which countries have to agree?
The government will consider removing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the royal line of succession - but how?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tell us about a favourite break on a European island
From the sun-kissed isles of the Med to the wild beauty of the Outer Hebrides, we’d love to hear about your memorable island escapes – the best tip wins £200 towards a Coolstays breakFor a true sense of freedom and escape, nothing quite compares with an island getaway. Whether it’s island hopping in Greece, exploring a Scandinavian archipelago by kayak or simply getting on a ferry to the Isle of Wight, we’d love to hear about your favourite European islands.The best tip of the week, chosen by Tom Hall of Lonely Planet wins a £200 voucher to stay at a Coolstays property – the company has more than 3,000 worldwide. The best tips will appear in the Guardian Travel section and website. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Georgina Hayden’s quick and easy recipe for roast butternut squash, halloumi and avocado tacos | Quick and easy
Switch it up, swap it around and dig in: this rainbow veg weeknight supper is ready in about half an hourTaco night has become a weekly occasion in our house – something all ages and palates can get on board with. We like to switch up the protein depending on the season and our cravings, but this is our current vegetarian favourite. It’s not traditional by any means, but a wonderful way to get a rainbow of veg into our diets. The cubes of halloumi are joyful when roasted, as are the pops of toasted spiced pumpkin seeds. You could even drizzle them with a little honey for the last couple of minutes of cooking, leaning into a salty-spicy-sweet finish. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Millions face road travel bans as snow blankets New York and north-east US
Blizzard warnings issued as some areas receive over a foot of snow, creating whiteout conditionsMillions of people in New York City and a large swath of the north-eastern US were stuck at home under road travel bans and blizzard warnings on Monday as heavy snow and strong winds intensified, creating whiteout conditions in the densely populated region.Snow fell at a rate of 2-3in (5-7.6cm) an hour early on Monday from New York through Massachusetts. Some areas have received well over a foot (30cm) of snow since Sunday, along with wind gusts of over 30mph (48km/h) and low visibility. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Suspected gunman identified after being shot dead at Mar-a-Lago – live
Law enforcement confirm man, who was armed with a shotgun and gas canister at Trump’s Florida home, was 21-year-old Austin Tucker MartinMajor institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Falling giants? Werder Bremen, Wolfsburg and Gladbach circle Bundesliga drain
Threat of relegation looms over former league champions who can still be accused of living off past glories“We currently have zero self-confidence,” lamented Marco Friedl, “and it shows.” Werder Bremen had just come to the end of a 13th successive winless game and there was a sense that they didn’t realise that the bottom was quite this low – if indeed they are quite there. “I often have the right words, but today I’m pretty much speechless because I couldn’t have imagined the game ending like this.”It is difficult to predict quite how this season will finish at the bottom of the Bundesliga but it feels like it has a big ending in store, with at least one big name set to tumble. This felt like a big moment for Bremen, the 2004 double winners, in freefall for months and unable to find the decisive moment away to St Pauli as Sunday evening drew in. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexico erupts and World Cup security fears rise after a cartel boss’s killing
The fallout from the operation that took out ‘El Mencho’ has already led to the cancellation of football matches. Could the World Cup be affected too?Violence erupts after Mexican forces kill cartel boss ‘El Mencho’Who was ‘El Mencho’, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel?There is just one road that leads to the Estadio Akron, the stadium home to Mexican club Chivas de Guadalajara, which is scheduled to host four group matches at this year’s World Cup. As the tournament approaches, traffic has been the main concern about the stadium.On Sunday, there was a different issue. A little more than a mile away, near the go-kart track named for Mexican Formula One driver Sergio “Checo” Pérez, a burning bus blocked the road. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump invites US Olympic hockey heroes to State of the Union in locker-room call
Trump invites Olympic champions to State of the UnionFBI director Kash Patel joins locker-room revelry in MilanDonald Trump made a congratulatory call to the United States men’s hockey team after their dramatic win over Canada in the Olympic gold medal game on Sunday afternoon, praising what he called an “unbelievable” performance and inviting the players to Washington this week.The US president addressed the team by FaceTime Audio speakerphone call shortly after their 2-1 overtime victory at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, telling them they had delivered a moment the country would remember for decades. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Killing of Mexican drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ sparks wave of violence
Schools close and flights suspended after military raid killed Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes• Who was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?Whole areas of western Mexico have been all but shut down after a surge in cartel violence sparked by a military raid that killed one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, known as “El Mencho”.Schools were closed in several Mexican states, and foreign governments warned their citizens to stay inside after the drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was declared dead on Sunday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People with rare genetic conditions are ‘systematically ignored’ by NHS, report finds
Exclusive: One in four wait at least three years for diagnosis and many face treatment ‘access lottery’, according to reportMillions of people living with rare genetic conditions across the UK are being “systematically ignored” by the NHS and facing inadequate care, according to a report.Rare genetic conditions, such as Williams syndrome and Duchenne muscular dystrophy, affect more than 3.5m people across the UK. One in 17 people are affected by a rare condition at some point during their lives. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Activists hang photo of Andrew leaving police custody in the Louvre
Everyone Hates Elon campaigners fix photo of ex-prince slouched in backseat of car after arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public officeActivists have hung a photo in the Louvre museum in Paris of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor being driven from a police station after his arrest.The British political campaign group Everyone Hates Elon fixed the photo, which shows the former prince slouched in the backseat of a Range Rover, on a wall of the Paris gallery on Sunday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A rush of blood to the penis – and vaginal tenting: what happens to our bodies when we get turned on
Arousal may be spontaneous, or arise in response to sensory stimulation, memory, fantasy or emotional connection. Here’s how to understand the differencesWhat turns you on? Depending on the person, the answer to that question will vary wildly. But what is really going on under the, ahem, hood when we start to get in the mood?The first scientists to really take the physiology of sex seriously – or at least break the taboos around talking about it – were William Masters and Virginia Johnson, sexologists who began their studies in the 1950s (and got married in 1971). “They came up with what’s known as the four-stage model, which was that the body gets aroused, you hit a plateau, you have an orgasm, you go back down to baseline,” says Dr Angela Wright, a GP and clinical sexologist based in Yorkshire. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
I put my old tandem up for sale - it ended up with Kenya's national team
Dr Carrie Ruxton was surprised when a Kenyan cyclist got in touch asking if the bike could help her country's paracycling team.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
BBC sorry for airing racial slur shouted by Baftas guest with Tourette's
Actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time during the award ceremony in London.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Unlicensed betting firms face ban on sponsoring British sports teams
Gambling firms not licensed in the UK could be banned from sponsoring British sports teams - including Premier League clubs - as part of a government crackdown.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
BBC sorry for airing racial slur shouted by guest with Tourette's during Baftas
Actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time during the award ceremony in London.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mercury fallout: What coal emissions do to people
Coal-fired power plants are a major source of mercury contamination for people and the environment. Here's what you need to know.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
China boosts profitable renewables as Trump clings to coal
While the Trump administration has rolled back environmental protections and blocked green energy development, China is forging ahead.

Mail Online
Open 
Graduate jobs apocalypse: Opportunities tailor-made for university leavers crash to record low as Labour prices the young out of work
In a bleak report that fuelled fears that a 'lost generation', jobs website Adzuna said the number of graduate roles has fallen 45 per cent in the past year.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I saw grown men cry': The 102-year-old kitman's story to be told in film
Charlie O'Leary was the Republic of Ireland kitman, but his influence extends to football across the island.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Relive best moments from the 2026 Winter Olympics
Relive the best moments of this year's Winter Olympics with BBC Sport.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The key changes being made to special educational needs - at a glance
The government has set out broad changes it will make to the SEND system in England in the coming years.

Mail Online
Open 
You think this is bad? Scientists warn Britain is about to get hit with BLOOD RAIN as a Saharan red dust cloud sweeps from Europe across the UK
Britain is about to be hit with showers of 'blood rain', according to experts from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS).

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Suspected gunman identified after being shot dead at Mar-a-Lago – US politics live
Law enforcement confirm man, who was armed with a shotgun and gas canister at Trump’s Florida home, was 21-year-old Austin Tucker MartinMajor institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
The first cars bold enough to drive themselves

Mail Online
Open 
Flights cancelled at major UK airports as Storm Hernando hits the US
Passengers travelling to and from America may find themselves impacted by cancellations as airlines tackle Storm Hernando.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC Breakfast guest fights back tears recounting devastating death of brave teenage daughter that 'no parent should have to go through'
Jon Kay, 56, and Sally Nugent, 54, returned to discuss the latest news. They touched upon the public enquiry into the stabbing of a caretaker and two university students in Nottingham in 2023.

Mail Online
Open 
London to Paris could take less than 30 minutes with futuristic new project
The hyperloop journey, which remains a concept and is currently undergoing testing, could cut travel time to less than 30 minutes from London to key cities, including; Paris, Amsterdam and Berlin.

Mail Online
Open 
No10 refuses to rule out retaliation to Trump's latest tariffs assault on Britain as minister voices 'concern' about impact on trade
Donald Trump has vowed to impose 15 per cent tariff on imports from around the world after the Supreme Court dramatically struck down his 'liberation day' levies.

Mail Online
Open 
Tiny one-room beach hut on stilts on sale for whopping £115,000 - but there's a BIG catch
Fancy buying a tiny beachside hut in Southend-on-Sea, Essex to enjoy throughout the summer months? Well, now you can - except it comes at a price.

Mail Online
Open 
Suspected rapist who was accidentally freed from prison managed to flee the country weeks before his trial - as judge demands the government intervenes to bring him back
Details of the case emerged as a top London judge called on the Government to intervene to help ensure the man returns to stand trial.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Suspected gunman identified after being shot dead at Mar-a-Lago – US politics live
Law enforcement confirm man, who was armed with a shotgun and gas canister at Trump’s Florida home, was 21-year-old Austin Tucker MartinPresident Donald Trump has launched a fresh attack on the US supreme court following its decision to strike down his tariffs.Writing on Truth Social, he crowed that the court had “accidentally and unwittingly” given him “far more powers and strength” as a result of its ruling.The supreme court (will be using lower case letters for a while based on a complete lack of respect!) of the United States accidentally and unwittingly gave me, as President of the United States, far more powers and strength than I had prior to their ridiculous, dumb, and very internationally divisive ruling.For one thing, I can use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries, especially those countries that have been RIPPING US OFF for many decades, but incomprehensibly, according to the ruling, can’t charge them a License fee - BUT ALL LICENSES CHARGE FEES, why can’t the United States do so? You do a license to get a fee! The opinion doesn’t explain that, but I know the answer! The court has also approved all other Tariffs, of which there are many, and they can all be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty, than the Tariffs as initially used. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Our classrooms are empty because the graveyards are full’: Iran’s students on why they are protesting again
As details of the death toll for January’s protests continue to emerge, three students explain why they are resisting a return to normalityMore than 45 days after a brutal January crackdown that left thousands of Iranian protesters dead, students across several universities are protesting again. As Iran’s new academic term began on Saturday, students in Tehran gathered on campus, chanting anti-government slogans, despite a heavy security presence and plainclothes officers stationed outside university gates.The Guardian spoke to protesting students about why they were rallying despite the fact that thousands had been killed and tens of thousands arrested in the January demonstrations. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Best iPad to Buy (and Some to Avoid) in 2026
We break down the current iPad lineup to help you figure out which of Apple’s tablets is best for you.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'It was like buying groceries' - Woman calls for tighter weight-loss jabs checks
Emma Dyer says she collapsed on her bathroom floor and began vomiting blood after buying jabs online.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
BBC sorry for airing racial slur shouted by guest with Tourette's at Baftas
Actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time during the award ceremony in London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Willie Colón was an explosive energy source who took salsa into the stratosphere
With his gangster image, Colón ruffled the feathers of the musical establishment, but thrilled millions of fans as he displayed the raw rhythmic possibility of salsaWillie Colón, who has died in New York at the age of 75, was many things: master blaster of Nuyorican salsa; Puerto Rican superstar; actor in Mexican soap operas; an activist and, later, a reactionary in New York politics. These are just a few of the myriad accomplishments of a musician who always seemed to be in a hurry to move on, make new music and get into a spat with a fellow salsero or political opponent. Colón was an energy source, a musician as loud and vibrant – and sometimes infuriating – as the city he lived and died in.While to Nuyoricans – Puerto Ricans living in New York – Colón was a legend, to many Anglo New Yorkers he barely registered, perhaps noted by a few for playing with David Byrne during the singer’s adventures in Latin American music. He was nominated for 10 Grammys but never troubled the US Top 40, yet across much of Latin America he was arguably the most celebrated brass player of the past six decades, winning the Latin Grammys’ musical excellence award in 2004. Colón was to salsa what Elvis Presley was to rock’n’roll – the fearless teenager whose loose, fast, rough interpretation of the music he heard on the streets helped create a genre that grew into the dominant Latin dance music. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK set to be among worst hit by Trump's 15% global tariff, analysis suggests
US allies will suffer the biggest hit from the president's latest announcement, think tank Global Trade Alert says.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fifa wants injured players to stay off for one minute
Players who receive treatment for an injury could be forced to stay off the field for one minute under proposals from Fifa.

Sky News Home
Open 
Assassinations, drugs and violence: Who was 'El Mencho' and his cartel?
One of Mexico's most notorious drug lords "El Mencho" was killed in a military operation on Sunday in Tapalpa, sparking widespread retaliatory violence.

Mail Online
Open 
Rucksacks, soggy socks and rain-drenched beaches - Wilkie Collins's guide to Cornwall
Take a stroll through 19th century Cornwall with one of the Victorian eras greatest writers.

Mail Online
Open 
David Bowie's daughter Lexi, 25, says she was 'forcibly removed' from family home and sent to 'abusive' teen treatment centre which resulted in her missing her father's final days ahead of his tragic death from cancer
Lexi has revealed the harrowing details of being forcibly removed from her family home, forcing her to be away from her father as he lost his battle with cancer. 

Mail Online
Open 
Inside Epstein's Zorro Ranch 'where paedophile looked to carry out human experiments and create super-race breeding facility' and 'buried girls who were strangled during sex'
The 7,500-acre estate, also referred to as the Playboy Ranch, has come under intense scrutiny after it made thousands of appearances in the disturbing Epstein files, released last month.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mexican Open denies cancellation amid drug cartel violence
Mexican Open organisers say the tournament will go ahead despite violence following the death of the country's most wanted drug baron.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11058 Domain Hosting - shcp23 services down (Update)
We have raised the ongoing issues to our vendor and we are currently awaiting a response, we do not yet have an estimated resolution time for the shcp23 becoming operational as inteded.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 09:30

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 14:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 12:04

Status: Partial

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11047 Managed Hosting - Openstack - Reduced Resiliency (Close)
This service is back operational as expected. Marking resolved.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:01

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 11:00

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 10:30

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 11:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 12:05

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11061 Domain Hosting - Openstack maintenance (New)
Our engineers will be carrying out essential maintenance on our infrastructure platforms.

No service outages are expected, however services should be considered at risk for the duration of the maintenance window.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 12:00

End: Tue, 24th Feb 2026 00:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 12:21

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Cycling UK
Open 
Bike finder: Which audax-style light tourer should I buy?
Scotland-based David Shannon is looking for a lightweight, comfortable touring bike suitable for tackling some long-distance touring, off-road riding and handling southern Scotland’s bumpy tarmac. Our experts provided him with some suggestions

TechRadar News
Open 
I can save you from the RAMpocalypse, but you'll need to act fast and trust AliExpress

TechRadar News
Open 
Save a massive $100 off PSVR 2 at PS Direct right now — yes, that is two zeroes

TechRadar News
Open 
The fantastic Suri 2.0 Sonic Electric Toothbrush has crashed to its lowest price since Black Friday

TechRadar News
Open 
Strava now lets you track 5 much-requested new activities — including the world’s fastest-growing sport

Digital Trends
Open 
The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect
Georgia Tech researchers discovered VillainNet, a dormant AI backdoor that lets hackers hijack self-driving cars with 99% success while remaining invisible to current security tools.
The post The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
Under new ownership, Arcade1Up plans comeback
Arcade1Up, famed for its mini arcade cabinets, went boots up last fall. But it was bought by the company that makes Lite Brites and it has plans to revive the brand. "The dream of home arcades isn't dead," writes Kyle Barr, "and neither is Arcade1Up"

Kredi wasn't shy about detailing the acquired company's former failings.

— Read the rest
The post Under new ownership, Arcade1Up plans comeback appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
There’s another AI-doom post doing the rounds. This time, the S&P 500 dives nearly 40%.
A booming AI economy may be very bad for the broader economy, according to Citrini Research

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Gilead shows its belief in its partner’s cancer treatment with a $7.8 billion buyout
Arcellx’s stock is heading toward a record after the $7.8 billion deal to be acquired by Gilead.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
How Lowe’s stock has trounced Home Depot’s — and what may lie ahead
The hardware and home-furnishings rivals will both report quarterly results this week.

Mail Online
Open 
Hero CATCHES seven-year-old boy who plunged 80ft from apartment window
Videos show the terrifying moment the child, Sasha, falls from the seventh floor of a St Petersburg flatblock window.

Mail Online
Open 
Head teacher who starred on Channel 4 show Educating Cardiff to face misconduct hearing after sudden retirement for 'personal reasons'
Joy Ballard starred in the hit 2015 documentary at Willows High School, during a period where she oversaw a transformation of one of the most challenging schools in Wales.

Computer Weekly
Open 
€126bn in Dutch tech projects blocked by permits and grid limits
Ex-ASML chief Peter Wennink’s deregulation solution triggers warnings from academics and government advisors

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service fatally shoots armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted a white male in his early 20s carrying shotgun and gasoline can early Sunday The US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was the first lady, Melania Trump. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fewer children in England to get EHCPs by 2035 under Send overhaul
New special educational needs regime to result in far fewer children being given education, health and care plansUK politics live – latest updatesHundreds of thousands fewer children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) will be given education, health and care plans (EHCPs) as a result of long-awaited changes announced by the education secretary on Monday.Bridget Phillipson has outlined her plans to overhaul Send provision in England, under which only those children with particularly severe or complex needs will be given EHCPs. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
CIA Admits There Was Political Bias In Obama-Era Intelligence
CIA Admits There Was Political Bias In Obama-Era Intelligence

For years, anyone who questioned whether Washington’s intelligence machinery tilted left was told they were peddling conspiracies. That narrative fell apart on Friday, when CIA Director John Ratcliffe ordered the official retraction or major revision of nineteen intelligence products produced during the Obama years, citing political bias and substandard analytic tradecraft. It’s the first official acknowledgment that America’s most powerful spy agency let politics color its assessments.



"The intelligence products we released to the American people today — produced before my tenure as DCIA — fall short of the high standards of impartiality that CIA must uphold and do not reflect the expertise for which our analysts are renowned," Director Ratcliffe said in a statement. "There is absolutely no room for bias in our work and when we identify instances where analytic rigor has been compromised, we have a responsibility to correct the record. These actions underscore our commitment to transparency, accountability, and objective intelligence analysis. Our recent successes in Operation ABSOLUTE RESOLVE and Operation MIDNIGHT HAMMER exemplify our dedication to analytic excellence.”

The bombshell came after the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board (PIAB) completed an independent review of hundreds of finished CIA reports spanning the past decade. This period includes Barack Obama’s second term and the Russian collusion hoax.

The PIAB identified nineteen intelligence products that “failed to be independent of political consideration.” Deputy Director Michael Ellis led an internal review that confirmed the findings. Ratcliffe’s response was swift and blunt. “The intelligence products we released to the American people today — produced before my tenure as DCIA — fall short of the high standards of impartiality that CIA must uphold and do not reflect the expertise for which our analysts are renowned,” he said. “There is absolutely no room for bias in our work… These actions underscore our commitment to transparency, accountability, and objective intelligence analysis.”

That’s a rather diplomatic way of saying that Barack Obama’s CIA got caught red-handed playing politics. The agency admitted that at least some of its Obama-era intelligence relied on questionable sourcing, including political activist groups. One report even drew on material from Planned Parenthood, something one official described as “clearly not an appropriate use of CIA resources.” For an organization that prides itself on independence and tradecraft, that revelation is a true humiliation.


CANCELLED: 19 @CIA intelligence products officially retracted over “inappropriate insertion of DEI issues" and failure to meet "objectivity" standards, per senior CIA official.@CIADirector Ratcliffe ordered the removal of 17 intelligence products from CIA databases + 2 reports… pic.twitter.com/UdaHp6S8Gh
— Catherine Herridge (@C__Herridge) February 20, 2026
The implications stretch far beyond nineteen flawed reports. The time frame under review encompasses the same period that produced the now infamous 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA) — the document commissioned in the last days of the Obama administration and released just before Donald Trump’s inauguration, alleging Russian interference in the 2016 election. 

That assessment relied heavily on the debunked Steele Dossier and cast a dark cloud over President Trump’s first term, giving Democrats cover to claim Trump was an illegitimate president.

If nearly twenty reports from that same era failed to meet analytic standards due to political bias, the question is no longer whether the intelligence community was politicized; it’s how deep the rot went.

However, Democrats clearly aren’t convinced.

Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), the top Democrat on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, dismissed the retractions, insisting that “the strength of the Intelligence Community has always depended on its ability to deliver objective, apolitical analysis, grounded in rigorous tradecraft and insulated from political pressure.” He emphasized that such judgments “must be made by intelligence professionals and not subject to politics.”

Warner warned that when politically appointed bodies “appear to be dictating what analysis is acceptable, it risks eroding confidence in the objectivity of our intelligence.” He described the CIA’s action as part of a “broader and deeply troubling pattern in this administration: sidelining career experts, undermining inconvenient intelligence assessments, and allowing political considerations to override professional judgment.”

Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), the chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, however, welcomed the retractions. “The Obama and Biden administrations mixed intelligence analysis and politics far too often,” Cotton said in a post on X. “I commend Director Ratcliffe for correcting the record and ensuring that the CIA’s analysis is free of any political bias.”

He added, “I’ve been sending these kind of reports back to the CIA for years and observing that they contain no intelligence. Our intelligence agencies have too often missed critical national-security developments to waste time on, for instance, how ‘pandemic-related contraceptive shortfalls threaten economic development.’ Honestly.”

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 05:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Recognizing Failure, Some Liberals Are Reshaping Their Climate Messaging
Recognizing Failure, Some Liberals Are Reshaping Their Climate Messaging

Authored by Gary Abernathy via The Empowerment Alliance,

Did the far left ever really believe its own rhetoric when it came to climate change? True, when it comes to the positions staked out by any politician on the issues of the day, the age-old question is constantly in the back of everyone’s minds: How much of what they claim to believe is based on heartfelt, core convictions, and how much is due to outside political pressure or geared toward generating contributions?



But nowhere is this question more pertinent than when it comes to politicians and their advocacy for climate change. Why? Because it’s difficult to think of anything that comes close to rivaling the number of government mandates implemented and the amount of taxpayer dollars allocated to reshape society as has happened in the name of climate change. Surely, it wasn’t all based on empty rhetoric and misdirection, was it?

Far-left environmental and climate change groups have significantly increased their political spending over the years. In turn, election after election features liberal politicians hammering away on the alleged damage done by the fossil fuel industry. In 2024 they were at it again, highlighting the latest scary predictions about the worst-case climate change scenarios, and fervently warning of the untold horrors that would happen if Donald Trump and Republicans won in 2024.

Guess what? Once more, it all fell flat with most voters. Trump won the presidency, Republicans kept control of both the House and Senate, and across the nation GOP dominance continued in state government.

There are some Democrats who finally seem to be getting the message that their climate narrative is not resonating. A recent story in Politico noted, “Democrats are increasingly showing they have decided it’s a losing message to tout the ways in which they’d curb fossil fuel production to thwart the most dire effects of climate change.”

Apparently, the realization that Americans are no longer falling for the tired old global warming bogeyman is starting to sink in, at least for some – and a growing number seem ready to modify their rhetoric on the subject.

For instance, the Politico story noted that Sen. Brian Schatz (D) of Hawaii last year removed “climate hawk” from his X biography. And during a fall event connected to New York Climate Week, Schatz, according to Politico, said that “those of us in the climate community who are used to making a more broad argument about where we are in the sweep of history have to get comfortable making a more immediate argument that says the reason prices are going up is a deliberate policy choice of the Republican Party.”

Indeed, changing the subject from doomsday climate scenarios to more economically focused arguments seems to be the path many Democrats have decided to follow, the story noted. Makes you wonder if they ever believed their own rhetoric in the first place. But climate change messaging is not their only problem. Reality is making their argument more difficult all the time.

The harsh winter experienced so far has resulted in Americans clearly witnessing the limits of their preferred energy sources. For example, the last week of January saw social media populated with images of solar panels caked with snow. The real possibility of frozen wind turbines is an annual concern, as described here.

And as the Associated Press reported last winter, “frigid temperatures from Chicago to northern Texas have made life painful for electric-vehicle owners, with reduced driving range and hours of waiting at charging stations.”

Based on apocalyptic warnings about the necessity of changing our ways, billions have been spent to prop up alternatives like wind and solar. But in New England, for instance – where an aggressive push has been made to build large-scale offshore wind projects – the electricity needed to combat the recent frigid air mass was generated mostly by natural gas, oil and nuclear power, as usual.

Left to the tender mercies of wind and solar, New Englanders and most of the U.S. population would have been a cold and stranded lot indeed.

Politicians from the political left tamping down or even forsaking their doomsday climate talk could just be a short-term development while polling shows voters don’t consider climate change a top priority.

Or, it could be a more long-lasting phenomenon. Albert Einstein said, “If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” It can be argued that most leftwing politicians never understood it will enough; they just parroted the talking points. Now that they’re realizing voters aren’t listening anymore, they’re downplaying the issue – raising questions about the level of their sincerity in the first place.

The left has been enslaved to their climate change dogma for decades. As such, they’re not ready to give it up entirely. But they are trying to craft a new message – “affordability” – around a tired old issue. Apparently, you can’t teach an old dog new tricks, but you can simplify the one that he already knows. Will voters think Rover is smarter – or still dutifully obedient?

Gary Abernathy is a longtime newspaper editor, reporter and columnist. He was a contributing columnist for the Washington Post from 2017-2023 and a frequent guest analyst across numerous media platforms. He is a contributing opinion columnist for The Empowerment Alliance, which advocates for realistic approaches to energy consumption and environmental conservation.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 06:30

Department for Education
Open 
Specialist SEND support in every school and community
Generational reforms to transform outcomes for children with SEND and end one size fits all approach.

Department for Education
Open 
Radical expansion in rights for children with SEND
Radical expansion in rights for children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities to transform life chances

UK Government News
Open 
PATHWAYS clinical trial paused following new MHRA advice
MHRA has raised new concerns around the PATHWAYS trial looking into the prescription of puberty blockers among young people with gender incongruence.

UK Government News
Open 
Radical expansion in rights for children with SEND
Radical expansion in rights for children with special educational needs and disabilities to transform life chances.

UK Government News
Open 
Investigation launched into anti-poverty charity after failure to comply with official orders
The Charity Commission has opened a statutory inquiry into Destiny Community Services to investigate the charity’s failure to file statutory financial reports.

UK Government News
Open 
Ganaxolone: ACMD advice
Letter from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) to the Minister for Policing and Crime Prevention, about the consideration of ganaxolone.

UK Government News
Open 
Government response to 3 medicines reports
This response agrees with recommendations from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) in 3 reports about the control and scheduling of 5 medicines.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK set to be among worst hit by Trump's 15% global tariff
US allies will suffer the biggest hit from the president's latest announcement, think tank Global Trade Alert says.

Sky News Home
Open 
Convictions of pro-democracy activists upheld in Hong Kong
A court in Hong Kong has upheld the convictions and sentences of pro-democracy activists in the biggest case brought under a Beijing-imposed national security law.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs accused of deliberately letting Tourette's sufferer say N-word on air in front of Michael B. Jordan
BAFTAs host Alan Cumming was forced to apo9logise after Tourette's activist John Davidson was heard yelling the N-word.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Women’s FA Cup talking points: Kerr shows the way and Liverpool resurgence continues
Sam Kerr is ready for business end of season, Chatham’s goalkeeper made to work and Kim Little continues to shineIt has not been the easiest season for Sam Kerr. After missing 20 months with an anterior cruciate ligament injury, she has had her time limited to just a handful of starts across all competition – mainly the cups. She may not have scored the winner that sent Chelsea through to the Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals but her goal that gave the Blues the lead against Manchester United felt almost inevitable. Within six minutes of entering the pitch, the Australian produced an instinctive finish that will have gone some way to quieten questions about whether she could rediscover her top form. “It’s been a bit tough with many things, like not getting the minutes she wanted,” Sonia Bompastor said. “It was also a bit difficult emotionally with the decisions that have been made. [Today] will have been great for her confidence and I know she will be ready for the business end of the season.” Sophie DowneyMatch report: Chelsea 2-1 Manchester UnitedMatch report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham Town Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Backlash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburst
Foxx calls Tourette syndrome activist John Davidson’s shouts at the film awards ceremony ‘unacceptable’, while Sinners’ production designer criticises Bafta’s ‘throwaway’ apologyWith N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the footThe fallout over Tourette syndrome (TS) activist John Davidson’s outbursts at the Baftas on Sunday continued after Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce expressed their dismay at the incident.Davidson attended the Baftas as I Swear, the film inspired by his life of dealing with hostility triggered by TS, was up for a number of awards. He was heard several times shouting during the ceremony, including using the N-word while actors Delroy Lindo and Michael B Jordan were on stage presenting the evening’s first prize. Continue reading...

Chatham House
Open 
The world of hard power, and the future of the war on Ukraine
The world of hard power, and the future of the war on Ukraine
23
February 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
5 February 2026

Chatham House and Online
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will speak at Chatham House from noon to 1pm GMT on Monday, to mark the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion. The interview and Q&A will be public, and streamed online on the Chatham House website.
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will appear at Chatham House to mark the fifth year of the Russia invasion.














General Valerii Zaluzhnyi will provide a keynote speech, and answer questions from the audience. The ambassador will give his take on the evolution of the war on the battlefield, and what this means for chances of ending the war.He will outline a common strategy for European security, focusing on the role of the UK, and what Ukraine can contribute to strengthening both Ukraine’s and Europe’s defence and deterrence capabilities.

The Hill
Open 
Congress gears up for State of the Union amid DHS shutdown
Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here. In today's issue: ▪ State of the Union lands amid DHS fight ▪ Trump turns to tariff plan B ▪ Armed Mar-a-Lago intruder killed ▪ FBI's Patel on defense over Olympic video Lawmakers are coming back to Washington, D.C., Monday ahead of President Trump’s State of the Union...

The Hill
Open 
What exactly is a 'bomb cyclone'?
Bomb cyclones can happen in any season, but mainly occur during fall and winter.

The Hill
Open 
Media credibility collapse: Readers must now decode and research the news
How did we end up in a situation where we can't trust what we read?

The Register
Open 
AWS says more than 600 FortiGate firewalls hit in AI-augmented campaign
Off-the-shelf tools helped Russian-speaking cybercrime group run riot Cybercriminals armed with off-the-shelf generative AI tools compromised more than 600 internet-exposed FortiGate firewalls across 55 countries in just over a month, according to a new incident report from AWS.…

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Showrunner Wishes the Show Wasn’t So Timely
Events in the United States make for a weird experience watching 'Daredevil: Born Again,' but won't be like that every season.

Gizmodo
Open 
Live Updates From Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2026 🔴
Follow along with the Gizmodo crew as we cover all the new devices Samsung announces at its Galaxy S26 Unpacked event.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Andrew charged taxpayers for massage services when envoy, claim ex-civil servants
Whistleblower former civil servants claim there was too little scrutiny of Andrew's costs as UK trade envoy.

CNET News
Open 
Upgrade Your Morning Smoothie With This $50 Nutribullet
At 31% off, this compact blender is hovering just above its all-time low -- but it won't be for long.

CNET News
Open 
Best Home Security Systems for Renters in 2026: No Screws, No Hassle
Tenants have powerful home security options, too. These kits use peel-and-stick sensors, simple apps and other rent-friendly tricks.

CNET News
Open 
Don't Buy a Refurbished or Used Windows 10 Computer
It's a trap! There are some great deals on used and refurbished desktops and laptops that are still running Windows 10. Don't do it.

CNET News
Open 
Apple TV: 26 of the Best TV Shows You're Probably Not Watching
Apple's streamer is jam-packed with excellent TV shows.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Closest I've felt' - Hodgkinson on breaking longest-standing world record
Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson says she feels "closer than ever" to breaking the women's 800m outdoor record - the longest-standing world record in athletics.

Sky News Home
Open 
Jubilant Team GB return home after record-breaking Winter Olympics
Team GB's athletes have returned home to a rapturous welcome after their most successful Winter Olympics ever.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple's AI Wearables Expected to Lean Heavily on Visual Intelligence
Apple's Visual Intelligence is expected to feature heavily in the company's upcoming set of AI wearable devices, which could include smart glasses, a pendant, and more advanced AirPods, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.





Writing in his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman said that hints dropped by CEO Tim Cook in recent months suggested the Apple Intelligence feature would be central to the devices, with Cook's comments following a pattern similar to how he foreshadowed the importance of health sensors and augmented reality before the launch of Apple Watch and Apple Vision Pro, respectively.



On iPhone 15 Pro and newer models, Visual Intelligence lets you use the camera to learn more about places and objects around you. It can also summarize text, read text out loud, translate text, search Google for items, ask ChatGPT, and more.



Gurman has previously reported that Apple's upcoming smart glasses will have an advanced camera system with a high-resolution camera that's able to capture photos and videos, as well as a second camera that provides visual information to ‌Siri‌ and environmental context.



Meanwhile, the AI pin – should the device make it to launch – is said to have a lower-resolution camera to provide the AI with visual insight, but it won't be able to take photos or videos. The camera is always-on, recording what's around the wearer. Like the AI pin, the more advanced AirPods will have a low-resolution camera that's designed for information, rather than photo capture.



During a discussion about AI and Apple Intelligence on the company's holiday quarter earnings call, Cook touted Visual Intelligence as "one of our most popular features." Cook said it "helps users learn and do more than ever with the content on their iPhone screen, making it faster to search, take action and answer questions across their apps."



On another occasion, during a recent all-hands meeting with employees about AI, the Apple chief reportedly singled out Visual Intelligence as a standout element of Apple Intelligence – even though the feature relies heavily on OpenAI and Google technologies. Gurman argues that Cook "wouldn't be putting it at the forefront of his remarks if things weren't going to accelerate in that area soon."



Apple's smart glasses will compete with the Meta Ray-Bans. Apple is said to have recently provided its hardware engineering team with prototypes, and it is targeting a 2027 launch. Production on the glasses could begin as soon as December 2026.



AirPods with cameras are planned for as early as this year, while Apple's work on the AI pin is apparently in the early stages, and it's possible that it could still be canceled. If work continues, the AI pin could launch as soon as 2027.



Tags: Mark Gurman, Visual IntelligenceThis article, 'Apple's AI Wearables Expected to Lean Heavily on Visual Intelligence' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Teacher who starred on Channel 4 show Educating Cardiff to face misconduct hearing after sudden retirement for 'personal reasons'
Joy Ballard starred in the hit 2015 documentary at Willows High School, during a period where she oversaw a transformation of one of the most challenging schools in Wales.

Mail Online
Open 
POLL OF THE DAY: Should there be a judge-led inquiry over the Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor scandal?
Calls for a judge-led inquiry into the Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor scandal are being considered today as Westminster pushes for greater scrutiny of the Royal Family.

Mail Online
Open 
Wuthering Heights fans go WILD after discovering Cliff Richard giving Jacob Elordi a run for his money with his own questionable Yorkshire accent to play Heathcliff in 90s musical: 'This is what Emily Brontë would have wanted!'
Jacob Elordi may be smouldering on screen in Emerald Fennell's new big screen adaption, but first came Sir Cliff, now 85, with his own strangely wig and questionable Yorkshire accent.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess and Junior Andre break silence on mum Katie Price's new husband Lee Andrews - revealing they've still not met him in unflinching This Morning interview
The brother-sister duo took to This Morning on Monday to open up about the third series of their reality show, The Princess Diaries, ahead of its return to ITV .

Telegraph
Open 
Charlotte Bankes defected to GB from France... now she has just pipped them to gold
Charlotte Bankes defected to GB from France... now she has just pipped them to gold

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Closest I've felt' - Hodgkinson on breaking longest-standing world record
Olympic Champion Keely Hodgkinson says she feels "closer than ever" to breaking the longest-standing world record in athletics.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I put my old tandem up for sale - it ended up with Kenya's national team
Dr Carrie Ruxton was surprised when a Kenyan cyclist got in touch asking if the bike could help her country's paracycling team.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go official, William's 'I'm not calm' comment and other key moments
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Hamnet's Jessie Buckley and I Swear's Robert Aramayo win big
Brit Aramayo beat US stars such Leonardo DiCaprio and Timothée Chalamet, while One Battle After Another picked up six awards.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
BBC apologises after guest with Tourette's shouts racial slur during Baftas
Actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time during the award ceremony in London.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
ICC opens hearing for Philippines ex-president Duterte
Rodrigo Duterte is accused of crimes against humanity for allegedly authorizing dozens of murders during his so-called war on drugs.

Mail Online
Open 
How to turn £2 a day into £10,000: A beginner's guide to 'micro investing' in the stock market and how you can do it without lifting a finger
It's the investing trend that became popular with younger generations and is now intriguing millions online. 'Micro-investing' is helping growing numbers to save substantial sums.

Mail Online
Open 
Bones of St Francis of Assisi go on public display for the first time - capping an 800-YEAR saga over his bodily remains
The Franciscan Church has decided to put the remains on display for a month, to honour the 800th anniversary of St Francis' death in 1226.

Mail Online
Open 
Reform UK's Zia Yusuf says UK is being 'invaded' by illegal migrants and vows to deport 288K every year as he unveiled plans for British version of Trump's ICE unit
Zia Yusuf told an audience in Dover that Britain was being 'invaded' by illegal immigrants and unveiled a series of Trump-style proposals.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Epstein files cast pall among US faculty and students: ‘I just feel a deep disappointment’
Ties to the disgraced financier run deep through the academic world, documents released by the DoJ showMajor institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England T20 series in South Africa scrapped due to franchise schedule clash
England tour to feature three Tests and three ODIsODIs will be at smaller grounds due to SA20 bookingsEngland’s planned Twenty20 series in South Africa next January has been scrapped owing to a clash with the domestic SA20 tournament in the latest indication of the growing primacy of franchise cricket.The Guardian revealed earlier this month that the white-ball leg of England’s tour was under threat as a result of a scheduling clash with SA20, which was due to run from 9 January until 14 February 2027. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Letterboxd’s most eager reviewers are changing cinema etiquette: ‘I was excited to pull out my phone’
The popular film-logging app is spurring cinephiles to linger through the credits and jot down their thoughts right awayI completely turn my phone off when I go to the movies. Not just on silent – all the way off. I say this not because I think that I’m better than you, or that by doing so the ghost of Billy Wilder will come back to shake my hand. I consider it one of life’s little luxuries: for at least an hour and 45 minutes, I am entirely unreachable. I keep my phone off for the duration of the credits, too. It feels decadent to stay put as my fellow moviegoers slowly filter out, illuminated only by rolling text.And, lately, the glow of the Letterboxd app. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Australian government says it would support removing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from royal line of succession
Anthony Albanese writes to British PM as UK prepares to consider laws to strip former prince of his right to inherit the throneGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastThe Australian government has confirmed it would support any proposal to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the royal line of succession after the former prince was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.With the UK government poised to consider laws to strip Mountbatten-Windsor of his right to inherit the throne once any policy investigation was finalised, the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has written to his British counterpart, Keir Starmer, to offer the country’s backing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Weather permitting: skiing in Scotland – a visual essay
With the Winter Olympics dominating screens, Dougie Wallace instead took his camera to Scotland’s ski areas of Glenshee, Cairngorm Mountain, Glencoe and Nevis Range, where a thaw, a band of rain, or a gust can change everythingWhen the snow comes, the car parks fill. Word spreads quickly, a good week, a belter of snow, and by mid-morning the access roads are tight with hatchbacks, hire skis and cautious optimism. In Scotland, the difference between a strong season and a poor one can be a weather front drifting 10 miles too far north. A thaw, a gust, a band of rain, and everything changes.The project was partly inspired by the approach of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics and the idea of what they might look like if staged in Scotland. It was not about shiny podiums, more an exercise in imagining how weather, people and place might shape a very different kind of Games.Cold air, small talk, a few quiet minutes before the ride, Glencoe Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Jubilant Team GB return home after record-equalling Winter Olympics
Team GB's athletes have returned home to a rapturous welcome after one of their most successful Winter Olympics.

Mail Online
Open 
I woke up one day with a constant whooshing sound in my ear. I thought it was just tinnitus... then I discovered it was something much worse. DR SCURR reveals what's really going on, the shock causes and a simple device that could help
Pulsatile tinnitus is where you hear certain sounds much louder than normal, such as your pulse and heartbeat, and is usually caused by an abnormality - effectively, you're hearing your blood flow.

Mail Online
Open 
Graduate jobs crash to record low as Labour prices the young out of work
In a bleak report that fuelled fears that a 'lost generation', jobs website Adzuna said the number of graduate roles has fallen 45 per cent in the past year.

Mail Online
Open 
Charles must abdicate. It's sensational, but William and Kate are the real King and Queen now. Read what my royal insiders are saying... it's the only way: MAUREEN CALLAHAN
Andrew's arrest - the police, unannounced, rousting the disgraced former prince from his bed at 8am - is surely not the end of this scandal. It may only be the beginning.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment Muslim man shouts 'we don't want to worship a Jewish man' at Christian preacher in Whitechapel
The man wearing sunglasses and a black, blue, and white tracksuit top repeatedly bellows the derogatory remark.

Mail Online
Open 
I was so itchy at night it felt like something was in my veins and I scratched until I bled: Terrifying signs that 'crawling' sensation is actually first stage of ORGAN failure
'At one point I got so desperate for relief I'd stand on the concrete driveway outside in the middle of the night just to cool my feet down,' Jayne says.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Women’s FA Cup talking points: Kerr shows the way and Liverpool resurgence continues
Sam Kerr is ready for business end of season, Chatham’s goalkeeper made to work and Kim Little continues to shineIt has not been the easiest season for Sam Kerr. After missing 20 months with an anterior cruciate ligament injury, she has had her time limited to just a handful of starts across all competition (mainly the cups). She may not have scored the winner that sent Chelsea through to the Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals but her goal that gave the Blues the lead against Manchester United felt almost inevitable. Within six minutes of entering the pitch, the Australian produced an instinctive finish that will have gone some way to quieten questions about whether she could rediscover her top form. “It’s been a bit tough with many things, like not getting the minutes she wanted,” Sonia Bompastor said. “It was also a bit difficult emotionally with the decisions that have been made. [Today] will have been great for her confidence and I know she will be ready for the business end of the season.” Sophie DowneyMatch report: Chelsea 2-1 Manchester UnitedMatch report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham Town Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England T20 series in South Africa scrapped due to franchise schedule clash
England tour will feature three Tests and three ODIsODIs played at smaller grounds due to SA20 bookingEngland’s planned Twenty20 series in South Africa next January has been scrapped owing to a clash with the domestic SA20 tournament in the latest indication of the growing primacy of franchise cricket.The Guardian revealed earlier this month that the white-ball leg of England’s tour was under threat as a result of a scheduling clash with SA20, which was due to run from 9 January until 14 February 2027. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Porn company fined £1.35m by Ofcom over age check failings
Ofcom's £1.35m fine on 8579 LLC is the largest it has levied under the Online Safety Act so far.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Australia backs removing Andrew from royal line of succession
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor remains eighth in line to the throne despite being stripped of his titles.

Mail Online
Open 
Australian PM Anthony Albanese tells Keir Starmer he would back any plan to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from line of succession
It comes as British ministers are understood to be considering legislation to remove the eighth in line to the throne from the line of succession.

Mail Online
Open 
For 12 years, my chronic headaches, fatigue and anxiety were written off as 'hormones'. It was my boyfriend - not a doctor - who realised the true diagnosis
When Milly Rose Bannister looks back now, one memory still makes her stomach drop. She was about 15 or 16, sitting in a doctor's office trying to explain the pain that kept flattening her every month.

Mail Online
Open 
Face it, your cat doesn't care about you: Felines are more independent than dogs - and don't need their owners emotionally at ALL, study finds
While dogs look to their owners for reassurance and protection, cats are no more likely to seek comfort from their owner than a stranger, an experiment found.

Mail Online
Open 
Four arrested over alleged £3million benefit fraud that saw hundreds of people have their identities stolen
Money and items valued at an estimated £150,000 were also seized in south London and Berkshire, the DWP revealed in a statement hailed by minister Andrew Western.

Mail Online
Open 
Millionaire Primrose Hill neighbours embroiled in 'absurd' £260,000 legal battle over wonky basement wall
Safina Haleema and Anthony O'Connor are suing award-winning mental health consultant Amy McKeown and her husband Matthew Dalton over the wonky wall in their Primrose Hill home.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor charged massages to taxpayer while trade envoy, say reports
Former senior civil servants say culture of deference meant excessive expenses claims were waved throughAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor charged taxpayers for the cost of massages and excessive travel expenses while he was the UK’s trade envoy, it has been reported.Former senior civil servants said they were shocked to see the claims, and that there was a culture of deference towards the former prince within Whitehall that allowed them to proceed. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
What is fentanyl? The drug Trump is waging war on
The Trump administration has highlighted tackling substance abuse as one of its priorities, promising to "respond to a crisis of this scale with the attention it deserves".

Mail Online
Open 
London Fashion Week's worst-dressed - from Bridgerton star's racy sheer poncho to monobrow model's Halloween catsuit
It's supposed to be a time when style excels - and yet, London Fashion Week left a lot to be desired when it came to celebrities' outfits.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour's 'class war' on SEND: Ministers vow to strip funding from independent special schools... but appease MPs and unions by delaying curbs to spiralling budgets
Ministers are unveiling a major overhaul of support for SEND and disadvantaged pupils with panic mounting over spiralling costs.

Mail Online
Open 
Gracie Abrams and Paul Mescal's bid to become Hollywood's new 'power couple': Couple pack on 'performative' PDA as they hard launch their relationship at the 2026 BAFTAs
The star-studded ceremony became the stage for a defining relationship moment, with the A-list couple putting on a PDA-packed display for the cameras.

Mail Online
Open 
Ruthless wife of slain Mexican drug lord nicknamed 'The Boss' vanishes amid cartel bloodshed as battle rages for control of the empire and nation is rocked by violence
Violence has surged and authorities have tightened security across the region, while attention has turned to Gonzalez, a central figure in the Jalisco New Generation Cartel

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dick Advocaat resigns as Curaçao head coach before first World Cup campaign
Dutchman stepping down for personal reasonsCaribbean island only has population of 150,000Dick Advocaat led Curaçao to their first World Cup but will not be charge of the team at the tournament itself after resigning from the head coach’s post for personal reasons.It is believed Advocaat had stood down because of his daughter’s health. “I’ve always said family is above football. So this is a self-evident decision,” the 78-year-old is reported as saying. “But of course that doesn’t change the fact that I’m going to miss Curaçao, the people there and my colleagues very much.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I put my bike up for sale - it went from Fife to Kenya'
Dr Carrie Ruxton was surprised when a Kenyan cyclist got in touch asking if the bike could help her country's paracycling team.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Say Goodbye to the Undersea Cable That Made the Global Internet Possible
History was unmade last year, as engineers began the massive project of ripping the first-ever transoceanic fiber-optic cable from the ocean floor. Just don’t mention sharks.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Rob Jetten sworn in as youngest-ever Dutch prime minister
The 38-year-old centrist is also the Netherlands' first openly gay prime minister. His minority coalition is set to be put to the test in an already fractured political landscape.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Politics Without Politicians by Hélène Landemore review – could we get rid of Farage, Truss and Trump?
A Yale lecturer’s radical proposal to replace elected leaders with ordinary people, chosen by lotteryNo Donald Trump, Nigel Farage or Liz Truss; no Zack Polanski, Jacinda Ardern or Volodymyr Zelenskyy either. No political parties and no elections, but instead a random bunch of ordinary people chosen by lottery to run the country for two-year spells, like a sort of turbo-charged jury service except with the jurors holding an entire country’s fate in their hands.If you think this idea sounds intriguing and refreshing, you might love Politics Without Politicians, Hélène Landemore’s argument for radically extending citizen power. If you think it sounds like maddening whimsy, ill-suited to the seriousness of the times we are living through – well, we’ll come to that later. But first, to the argument that politics is so broken as to be beyond repair, and that scrapping electoral representation is the best way of fixing it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dick Advocaat resigns as Curaçao head coach before country’s first World Cup campaign
Dutchman steps down for personal reasonsCaribbean island only has population of 150,000Dick Advocaat led Curaçao to their first World Cup but will not be charge of the team at the tournament itself after resigning from the head coach’s post for personal reasons.It is believed Advocaat had stood down because of his daughter’s health. “I’ve always said family is above football. So this is a self-evident decision,” the 78-year-old is reported as saying. “But of course that doesn’t change the fact that I’m going to miss Curaçao, the people there and my colleagues very much.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
With N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the foot | Catherine Shoard
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have allowed their successful diversity drive to be overshadowedBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling slur, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Disinformation was ‘central accelerant’ in Leicester Hindu-Muslim clashes, inquiry finds
Report into ‘unprecedented’ violence between members of two communities in 2022 calls for action on communalismUK politics live – latest updatesViolence between Hindus and Muslims in Leicester in 2022 was fuelled by online disinformation and met with a failure of leadership from the city’s mayor, council and police, an independent inquiry has said.Researchers from the School of Oriental and African Studies and the London School of Economics carried out the study after the unrest between predominantly young Hindu and Muslim men in Leicester between May and September 2022.No single group was solely responsible, with members of Hindu and Muslim communities described as “both victims and perpetrators”.Online disinformation was a “central accelerant of the crisis”, fuelling distrust.Community coexistence in Leicester is “increasingly fragmenting” amid new migration patterns, economic decline and the importation of political ideologies such as communalism, Hindutva and political Islamism.Communalism within south Asian communities in the UK “needs to be urgently recognised and addressed”.The response from local authorities, including the city council, mayor and police was “lacking or inconsistent” with “major gaps” in intelligence and communication. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
'You're both talking over me': Kemi Badenoch 'ambushed' by Ed Balls and Martin Lewis on GMB over Tory plan to cut student loan repayments
The Conservative Party leader was caught in a mansplaining pincer movement by Ed Balls and Martin Lewis as she appeared on Good Morning Britain.

Autosport F1
Open 
How Ferrari's F1 2026 rear wing is reminiscent of 2011 Mercedes
If there was one team that really surprised the Formula 1 paddock with its imaginative designs during pre-season testing, it was Ferrari.In Bahrain, the Scuderia not only brought a new feature to the area behind the exhaust, designed to make the most of the volume allowed by the new-for-2026 regulations, but also a rear wing with an innovative opening mechanism as it flips 180 ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
AdGuard VPN browser extension lands on Firefox for Android — and gets a visual boost

TechRadar News
Open 
Data security is still the most pressing issue for many firms - so what can your business do?

TechRadar News
Open 
I spent a day listening to 'money no object' audio systems at an elite hi-fi show to find 11 products I'd buy, if I won the lottery

TechRadar News
Open 
PayPal confirms data breach — user info may have been exposed for 6 months, here's what we know so far

TechRadar News
Open 
How businesses can stop their AI agents from running amok

Digital Trends
Open 
The “daylight” display: screens that actually work in the sun
When the spring weather finally breaks, the immediate urge is to take your laptop to the patio or the park. But within five minutes, you realize the sun has turned your expensive screen into a dark, highly reflective mirror. For years, we shopped for screens based on resolution (4K) or refresh rates (120Hz). But if […]
The post The “daylight” display: screens that actually work in the sun appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback
Gen Z is hunting down old iPods on eBay and Marketplace. They want music without notifications, algorithms, or distraction. The click wheel is their digital detox.
The post Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Your ChatGPT chats are more personal than you think
New OpenAI data reveals people use ChatGPT for personal expression and venting just as much as work tasks, with younger users leading the shift toward treating AI like a sounding board.
The post Your ChatGPT chats are more personal than you think appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
Xteink's X4: a $69 e-ink reader that magsafes to your wallet
Xteink's X4 is a tiny, rinky dink e-ink gadget that didn't get much attention when it launched, but the street found its uses and it's now a cult hit. It's a tiny, hackable e-reader that magsafes to the back of phones, lasts a week on a charge with daily use, and costs $69 in black or white. — Read the rest
The post Xteink's X4: a $69 e-ink reader that magsafes to your wallet appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here are the five companies that $9 trillion of funds agree on right now
Vertiv has been a top holding among hedge and mutual funds in the first quarter of this year so far, and a lucrative one.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Novo Nordisk pitted a new weight-loss drug against Eli Lilly’s — and lost
Novo Nordisk shares were under pressure on Monday as the struggling Danish pharmaceutical said a head-to-head study found a drug in development didn’t cut as much weight as an Eli Lilly product.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I found out too late’: My stepmother cheated me out of $500K from my father’s estate. What can I do?
“Within a week or two after the deadline to contest the will expired, my stepmother sent me an email stating she would not share anything.”

Sky News Home
Open 
Briton among 19 dead after packed bus drives off mountain road
At least 19 people have been killed, including a British national, after a packed bus drove off a mountain road in Nepal.

Mail Online
Open 
Nurse who was suspended by the NHS after calling a transgender paedophile patient 'Mr' returns to hospital work today
Jennifer Melle, 41, was forced out of St Helier Hospital in Carshalton, Surrey, in May 2024 after a 6ft male sex offender with a beard objected to being called 'Mr'.

Mail Online
Open 
I suffered from painful mouth ulcers for years - then doctors diagnosed tongue cancer. There WERE warning signs, but I dismissed them
Margot Blair, 62, from Dumfries, is raising awareness of the subtle signs of mouth cancer after she missed her own symptoms.

BBC World News
Open 
Cartel henchmen unleash violence after top drug lord killed in Mexico
The death of the most-wanted Jalisco cartel chief sparks retaliatory violence in at least a dozen states in Mexico.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Ofcom fines porn company £1.35m over age check failings
The regulator said it was fining 8579 LLC for failing to introduce proper age verification measures.

The Verge
Open 
Arturia’s FX Collection 6 adds two new effects and a $99 intro version
Arturia launched a new version of its flagship effects suite, FX Collection, which includes two new plug-ins, EFX Ambient and Pitch Shifter-910. FX Collection 6 also marks the introduction of an Intro version with a selection of six effects covering the basics for $99. That pales in comparison to the 39 effects in the full […]

The Verge
Open 
How many AIs does it take to read a PDF?
Last November, the House Oversight Committee had just released 20,000 pages of documents from the estate of Jeffrey Epstein, and Luke Igel and some friends were clicking around, trying to follow the threads of conversation through garbled email threads and a PDF viewer that was, frankly, "gross." In the coming months, the Department of Justice […]

The Verge
Open 
Taara Beam provides 25Gbps connectivity over invisible beams of light
Light-based internet provider Taara, which spun out of Alphabet's "moonshot" incubator last year, just launched Taara Beam to provide 25Gbps connectivity within cities over invisible beams of light - line of sight permitting. Unlike last year's Taara Lightbridge, which connects communities separated by water and mountains at distances up to 20km (over 12 miles), the […]

Joe Saward
Open 
JSBM – 23/02/2026 – Issue 26-07
🔹A deal for Catalonia 🔹Talking Turkey 🔹Financial gymnastics 🔹F1’s final test 🔹New ideas for F1 🔹New ideas for NASCAR 🔹More NASCAR legal action 🔹Red Bull takes a hit 🔹Hypercars at Le Mans 🔹Brain drain at the FIA 🔹Vauxhall’s return 🔹Williams helps out 🔹Arriving and driving 🔹A big new racing show Sign up here

UK Government News
Open 
Specialist SEND support in every school and community
Generational reforms to transform outcomes for children with SEND and end one size fits all approach.

UK Government News
Open 
Firm’s business boost from embracing Workboat Code Edition 3
Safety, simplicity and support for new technology. Those were the goals of the new Workboat Code Edition 3 when it was launched by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency in 2023.

UK Government News
Open 
United message for Workboat Code Edition 3 deadline: ‘Check. Prepare. Book’ 
Maritime and Coastguard Agency and Workboat Association urge operators to get ready for 2026 transition.

UK Government News
Open 
Radical expansion in rights for children with SEND
Radical expansion in rights for children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities to transform life chances

Ian Visits
Open 
Relief for Stansted Airport travellers as contactless train ticketing arrives in March
Travellers heading to Stansted Airport will finally be able to use contactless payments for train journeys from next month, after long-delayed approval was given to extend London’s contactless system.Read more ›

Mail Online
Open 
Labour's 'class war' on SEND: Ministers vow to strip funding from independent special schools as they brace for MP backlash over cutting EHCPs
Ministers are unveiling a major overhaul of support for SEND and disadvantaged pupils with panic mounting over spiralling costs.

Mail Online
Open 
London Fashion Week's worst-dressed - from Bridgerton star's racy sheer poncho to monobrow model's Halloween catsuit
It's supposed to be a time when style excels - and yet, London Fashion Week left a lot to be desired when it came to celebrities' outfits.

Mail Online
Open 
Children left in tears and parents mortified after mistaking 'raunchy' K-pop concert for Netflix Demon Hunters tribute show
Families believed the show was centred around the hit Netflix children's movie K-Pop Demon Hunters, having seen a poster that resembled the film's characters.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Netflix boss says $83bn Warner Bros takeover will benefit industry
Comments by Ted Sarandos follow Donald Trump’s demand for company to remove Democrat from boardTrump warns Netflix of ‘consequences’ unless it pulls top Democrat from boardBusiness live – latest updatesThe boss of Netflix has launched a fresh defence of its $82.7bn (£61bn) takeover of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) assets, as he defended the streaming company’s contribution to the UK film and TV industry.Ted Sarandos claimed Netflix buying WBD would bring “growth” to the entertainment industry, amid attempts by rival Paramount Skydance to launch a counter offer for the studio business which he said would do the opposite. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
With N-word incident, Bafta have shot themselves in the foot
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have allowed their successful diversity drive to be overshadowedBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling slur, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
About 270,000 fewer children in England to get EHCPs under Send overhaul
New special educational needs regime to result in far fewer children being given education, health and care plansUK politics live – latest updatesHundreds of thousands fewer children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) will be given education, health and care plans (EHCPs) as a result of long-awaited changes announced by the education secretary on Monday.Bridget Phillipson has outlined her plans to overhaul Send provision in England, under which only those children with particularly severe or complex needs will be given EHCPs. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11059 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Keighley (MYKEI) (New)
Engineers will be performing maintenance affecting services at the exchange.

Services should be considered at risk for the full duration of this maintenance window.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 4th Mar 2026 01:00

End: Wed, 4th Mar 2026 06:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 10:36

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11060 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - EMPETER-Peterborough Wentworth (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 8 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Fri, 20th Mar 2026 22:00

End: Sat, 21st Mar 2026 10:00

Update: Sat, 21st Mar 2026 10:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 11:22

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

The Hill
Open 
Trump posts about Olympics on closing day of Games
President Trump praised Team USA as the Winter Olympics concluded Sunday. Just over 30 minutes after the U.S. men’s hockey team knocked off Canada in the gold medal game, the president wrote on his Truth Social platform, “LOTS OF WINNING!!!” Later Sunday afternoon, Trump touted the U.S. winning 12 gold medals, the most ever for...

The Hill
Open 
House Democrats announce first group of ‘Red to Blue’ candidates
The House Democrats’ campaign arm on Monday named the first group of candidates for its program dedicated to supporting contenders looking to flip key GOP-held districts as the party looks to retake the House majority in November. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) named 12 candidates to its “Red to Blue” program, which gives additional resources to Democratic candidates running in competitive battleground districts.  The...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans see political gold in Mamdani property tax proposal
Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s (D) “last-resort” proposal to raise property taxes in New York City has political observers questioning whether his gambit to get New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) to back a wealth tax could backfire for Democrats ahead of this year’s midterm elections. While the property tax proposal has drawn resistance from several prominent...

The Hill
Open 
This week on The Hill: Trump to deliver high-stakes State of the Union address
President Trump is gearing up to deliver his first State of the Union address of his second term to members of Congress on Tuesday, where he is expected to outline his administration’s priorities and legislative agenda for the year ahead. Trump’s speech comes as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is shut down amid a...

The Hill
Open 
Democratic leaders scrambling to prevent repeat of last year’s rowdy State of the Union
Democratic leaders are encouraging their troops to protest President Trump’s State of the Union address this week. How it's done, however, remains a sensitive topic. A year ago, during the first congressional address of Trump’s second term, Democrats churned headlines for a series of in-your-face demonstrations from the floor of the House chamber, where many lawmakers held...

The Hill
Open 
Five takeaways at the conclusion of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games
The 2026 Winter Olympics captured the attention of millions of Americans this month thanks to several improbable comeback stories, an aggressive promotional campaign by host network NBC and partisan debate over some U.S. athletes who expressed discomfort representing the United States under President Trump.   Here are five takeaways from the games in Milan-Cortina: U.S. men and...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans eye opening for DHS deal this week as Democrats double down
Lawmakers return to Capitol Hill this week facing an uphill climb to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as Republicans see an opening after President Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday despite few signs that Democrats are willing to compromise on their demands. Discussions between the two sides have yielded little in...

The Register
Open 
Feeling the burn: When open source developers decide to take a break
A week off for vacation? The nerve of some people Opinion  If you want to see the definition of "workaholic," you can't do better than to look at your typical senior open source developer or maintainer. I should know, I'm a workaholic too. I know my kind.…

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Quiz: Name these footballers who have played for Man Utd and Everton
Name all 17 players who have made at least one Premier League appearance for both Everton and Manchester United.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Hundred deals 'not in our hands' amid India tensions - Pakistan's Farhan
Leading batter Sahibzada Farhan says he knows T20 franchises are interested in Pakistan players but admitted whether they are picked in the Hundred auction is "not in our hands".

CNET News
Open 
Upgrade Your Morning Smoothie With This $50 Nutribullet
At 31% off, this compact blender is hovering just above its all-time low, but it won't be here for long.

Sky News Home
Open 
Briton among 19 killed in Nepal bus crash
At least 19 people have been killed, including a British national, after a packed bus drove off a mountain road in Nepal.

Sky News Home
Open 
Suspected rapist accidentally set free and leaves UK before trial
A suspected rapist was accidentally set free from prison and managed to leave the country before he is due to stand trial, it has been revealed.

Mail Online
Open 
Tourist mortified by 'daylight robbery' in London pub after discovering her £18 starter costs just £2.75 in Tesco
Amy Hilton, from Kent, was shocked when she had to cough up £18.50 for a camembert starter at a London pub that costs just £2.75 in Tesco.

Mail Online
Open 
Zoe Ball, 55, shows off her trim figure in a black swimsuit as she unwinds on family trip to Jamaica with children Woody, 25, and Nelly, 16
Ball, 55, and her family appeared to be making the most of a lavish stay on Jamaica's five-star GoldenEye resort - the former estate of the late James Bond creator, Ian Fleming.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm a retired sex worker and saw my peers get murdered - people who say it's a lifestyle choice have no idea how desperate and soul-destroying it is
Two-part series, Chasing a Killer: Gary Allen, sees Amanda Hailes, who worked as a street-based sex worker in Hull in the late 1990s, share her horrifying experiences.

Mail Online
Open 
Innocent grandfather accused of being a thief after AI facial recognition technology wrongly linked his picture to a shoplifter
Ian Clayton, 67, said he was told to leave a Chester Home Bargains shop after the technology claimed he was involved in a theft he said had nothing to do with him.

Mail Online
Open 
Cillian Murphy makes a rare red carpet appearance with artist wife Yvonne McGuinness at the BAFTAs after praising her for providing a 'safe place' away from the spotlight
The Oscar winner, 49, and the visual artist, 53, arrived at the star-studded ceremony hand-in-hand and wearing coordinating all-black outfits.

BBC UK News
Open 
'Unimaginable' grief after crash kills three
Conor Quinn, 31, John Guy, 48, and 23-year-old Laura Hoy-Henry all died at the scene on Saturday evening.

Mail Online
Open 
British supermarket shelves hit with shortages as stormy winter ruins crops of strawberries, peppers and avocados
Strawberry crops have been particularly badly hit with gaps noted in the fresh aisles at Tesco , Lidl , Sainsbury's and Asda in recent days, according to Assosia data.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Else review – pandemic-style horror has bad guys crawling out of the woodwork, literally
Thibault Emin’s thriller sees a new couple forced to barricade themselves in an apartment amid an outbreak in which the infected merge with their physical surroundingsHeavily fermented films born from Covid claustrophobia are still coming out of the woodwork – quite literally in the case of this visually arresting Gallic number, in which two shut-ins find themselves under attack by an entity that has grown out of the wooden slats with which one of them has barricaded the apartment windows. This isn’t your average pandemic thriller; here, the infected meld with inorganic material in their surroundings, until their outward contours and their personhood are gone.Thibault Emin’s film starts with a little whiff of Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro’s Delicatessen. After their one-night stand, hypochondriac Anx (Matthieu Sampeur) and impertinent Cass (Edith Proust) find themselves bunkered up in one corner of a madcap apartment block. They banter with the other residents – gruff Mr Mouaki (Toni d’Antonio) and his family, an enigmatic Japanese tenant (Lika Minamoto) holed up with her dog – down the waste-disposal chutes. Observing the unfolding martial-law response over the internet, they feel safely cocooned, until Cass notices a strange accumulation of pebbles underneath Anx’s furniture. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
If AI makes human labor obsolete, who decides who gets to eat?
Amid talk of artificial intelligence taking our jobs, the big unasked question is: how will we be fed?How will we be fed? That’s the biggest question not seriously being addressed amid all this talk about whether or not artificial intelligence will end up taking over all of our jobs.Formidable though the technology appears, similar fears have popped up repeatedly since the Industrial Revolution, and most working-age adults remain employed. Still, what is sorely missing is a serious debate about what to do if this future in fact materializes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Weather tracker: Early taste of spring to sweep parts of Europe
South-western France could hit 25C, while a powerful Nor’easter is forecast to bring blizzards to BostonEurope live – latest updatesAn early taste of spring is on the way for millions across northern and western Europe this week. Temperatures could climb close to a near record-breaking 20C (68F) in parts of Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, with south-western France approaching 25C on Wednesday.The warmth is being driven by a highly amplified synoptic pattern, featuring a region of low pressure over the Atlantic and strong high pressure over central Europe. The setup will allow exceptionally mild air to spread across much of the continent, with temperatures in some places rising to 10-15C above the seasonal average. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are dating apps giving people the ick? | Dave Schilling
The past year has been turbulent for Tinder and Bumble. Fortunately, it turns out the real world has its charmsValentine’s Day is mercifully behind us for another year, so we can all go back to not loving each other again. How wonderful it is to be freed of the burden of expressing our emotions in public. I didn’t post a flowery declaration of devotion for my girlfriend on social media, and I kept expecting a flood of messages asking me if we’d broken up already. Such is the peer pressure of a holiday designed purely to justify our own self-worth. Well, someone is willing to put up with me, therefore I have value.Needing to rub your love into other people’s faces is a natural outgrowth of how absolutely miserable it is out there for finding romance. The world is not exactly filled with optimism these days, as we all hunker down with our cans of tinned fish, waiting for the next disaster to strike. Couple that (pun intended) with the onslaught of digitized dating solutions like the apps Hinge, Raya and Bumble and you have a rancid stew of solitude to look forward to. Why not mark yourself safe from loneliness by posting a picture of you and your partner snogging in the middle of a Walgreens (contraception aisle, of course)? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Do we really need to replace our underwear every six months? | Emma Beddington
Doctors say that washing doesn’t get rid of the bacteria, virus and fungal pathogens lurking in the material. It’s a horrifying thought given I’ve got pants dating back to 1995 Every few months, the world informs me I am disgusting in a new way (I should replace my pillows every two years; my toothbrush is a petri dish, etc). But surely the revelation in the Financial Times that we should be changing our underwear every six months doesn’t come as a shock only to me?To clarify swiftly, that’s “change” as in throw away and replace. “Doctors generally recommend replacing underwear every six to nine months,” the article explains. “Because, quite simply, washing doesn’t remove everything.” This, it turns out, is not new information: most advice on the internet suggests six to 12 months as the appropriate lifespan for pants. Alternatively, in 2021, a consultant gynaecologist suggested another approach to the Independent: “I would say a maximum of 50 washes for a pair of cotton M&S underwear would be fine.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The pet I’ll never forget: Stevie, the chicken who joined my dog pack
Affectionate, ballsy, she thought she was a dog, and taught me how social and intelligent chickens can beStevie and her siblings were the first batch of chickens I ever owned. I fostered them from a nearby animal shelter in 2021. Stevie was the most vocal of the three so I named her after one of my favourite musicians, Stevie Nicks.I live on a huge plot of land in Malibu which I treat like an animal sanctuary – any animal that I can rescue and help, I will. I’ve been that way since I was a little kid. When my parents gave me a small allowance I would run to the pet store and bring a new animal home. Sometimes, I would find animals on the street and take them in. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
N-word incident at the Baftas overshadows leaps forward for diversity
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have shot themselves in the footBacklash mounts to Bafta N-word controversy as Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce criticise outburstBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling slur, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
About 270,000 fewer children in England to get EHCPs under Send overhaul
New special educational needs regime to result in far fewer children being given legally binding support plansUK politics live – latest updatesHundreds of thousands fewer children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) will be given education, health and care plans (EHCPs) as a result of long-awaited changes announced by the education secretary on Monday.Bridget Phillipson has outlined her plans to overhaul Send provision in England, under which only those children with particularly severe or complex needs will be given EHCPs. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
In pictures: Stars on the red carpet
Stars of Sinners, Hamnet and One Battle After Another were among big names attending the ceremony.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch: How the winners accepted their awards
One Battle After Another took home best film and Hamnet also saw success in the outstanding British film category.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go official, William's 'I'm not calm' comment and other key Bafta moments
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Confront failure and fix it': Families speak ahead of Nottingham attacks inquiry
Hearings are under way at a public inquiry into attacks in Nottingham that killed three people.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Idea Spectrum Realtime Landscaping Pro 2026 review

Mail Online
Open 
Jonathan Ross' daughter Honey Kinny, 28, leaves little to the imagination in a VERY racy cut-out dress amid LFW - after her new romance with YouTuber, 40, was revealed
The daughter of TV presenter Jonathan Ross and screenwriter Jane Goldman , 28, left little to the imagination in the look which boasted daring cut-outs.

Mail Online
Open 
Fuhgeddaboudit! New York City's iconic accent is dying out, study finds
The New York City accent is one of the world's most distinctive, heard in the voices of stars such as Robert De Niro and Rosie O'Donnell. But this classic twang could soon disappear entirely.

Mail Online
Open 
William and Kate are 'concerned' Andrew's arrest will hurt the King's health amid 'frustration' they can't speak out after hinting at turmoil at Baftas
The Prince and Princess of Wales are clearly 'itching' to further publicly distance themselves more from the future king's errant uncle, a royal source has said.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iceland may fast-track vote on joining EU: report
The Arctic country had been set to hold a referendum on resuming membership talks in 2027. But according to media reports, geopolitical developments could see the vote being brought forward to this summer.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-Liverpool and Celtic boss Brendan Rodgers transforms into 'Sheikh Brendan', posing in Saudi traditional dress and with a gun in promotional video so brazen it 'looks like AI'
The former Liverpool manager was appointed as manager of Saudi Pro League side Al Qadsiah in December, after leaving Celtic two months prior.

Mail Online
Open 
Ryanair threatens to cut even more routes to Brits' favourite holiday destination
The Irish airline has warned it could slash routes to the European destination after a proposed increase in fees.

Mail Online
Open 
'You're both talking over me': Kemi Badenoch ambushed by Ed Balls and Martin Lewis on GMB over Tory plan to cut student loan repayments
The Conservative Party leader was caught in a mansplaining pincer movement by Ed Balls and Martin Lewis as she appeared on Good Morning Britain.

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William and Kate are 'concerned' Andrew arrest crisis will hurt the King's health amid 'frustration' they can't speak out
The Prince and Princess of Wales are clearly 'itching' to further publicly distance themselves more from the future king's errant uncle, a royal source has said.

Mail Online
Open 
Afghan knifeman attacks multiple people at Jehovah's Witness stand in German train station before being overpowered by hero civilians
The 35-year-old attacker was then overpowered by heroic civilians who rushed to the victims' aid.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Martin Lewis ambushes Badenoch on Good Morning Britain over student loans plan
Finance campaigner marches on to set and tells Tory leader her policy to cut interest rates will only help top earnersUK politics live – latest updatesKemi Badenoch has faced what could be described as the stuff of nightmares for a UK politician being interviewed about a personal finance policy: being ambushed and contradicted live on air by Martin Lewis.As the Conservative leader was being interviewed on ITV about her party’s plans to cut interest rates for some student loans, Lewis, a campaigner and finance expert, marched on to the set to announce that he completely disagreed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Teaching union claims extra £4bn for Send overhaul just ‘drop in bucket’ compared with what’s needed – UK politics live
Full details of government plans to be published this morning with reforms partly driven by move to contain soaring costsThe NASUWT has criticised the amount of money being allocated by the government to support its Send reforms. (See 9.36am.) But the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) has been more positive. This is from its general secretary, Paul Whiteman.We believe the government’s approach of looking at the whole child, from birth to adulthood, is the right one, with a focus on early intervention, local provision, inclusion of pupils within mainstream settings where appropriate, and collaboration with external services like social care and health.Crucially, the success or failure of these plans relies on there being sufficient funding – and on the availability of support services.[The current Send] system that works for nobody. It forces parents into a grinding, adversarial fight to get “one size fits all” support. It encourages private equity vultures to rip off the taxpayer by charging up to five times more for a precious special school place. Meanwhile, for so many children it simply writes off their potential. Insisting, against all evidence, that they could not thrive in a supported and inclusive mainstream school.We should be crystal clear on this last point: inclusion works. Not for every kid – of course some children need extra support in a specialist institution. That’s why today we are investing in 60,000 extra specialist places. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'Confront failure and fix it': Families speak ahead of attacks inquiry
Hearings are under way at a public inquiry into attacks in Nottingham that killed three people.

Mail Online
Open 
Young people are getting 'trapped in a world of benefits' with a MILLION 'detached' from jobs and training, Labour tsar warns
The stark message was delivered by Alan Milburn, who is leading a government review into surging numbers of so-called NEETs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bruno Fernandes is back in his best position and more effective than ever
In another season of change at Manchester United, the playmaker has been as consistent as everBy WhoScoredTurmoil has been no stranger to Old Trafford in recent years; the club has employed 10 managers since Alex Ferguson left in May 2013. Their 15th-placed finish last season – their lowest since they were relegated in 1974 – was a new low. But there has been one bright spot through all the disappointments: Bruno Fernandes playing world-class football and reminding everyone what United can be at their best. This season, at 32, he continues to stand out.In November, he revealed the club had been open to the idea of him moving to Saudi Arabia. “The club wanted me to leave,” he said. “From the club I felt: ‘If you go it’s not that bad for us.’ It hurts me a bit. I decided not to go, not only for family reasons, but because I genuinely like the club.” Fans will be delighted he stayed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
N-word incident at the Baftas overshadows leaps forward for diversity
In not editing out Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson’s shouted tics, Bafta have shot themselves in the footBafta’s error was big on Sunday night - but it was in the editing, or the lack of. No one could have stopped John Davidson - who has Tourette syndrome - yelling out the N-word while two black actors, Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo, were presenting a prize. But given that they did use the two-hour time delay to judiciously remove Akinola Davies Jr’s shout of “Free Palestine!” and Alan Cumming’s comparison of the themes of Zootropolis 2 (“Lies, corrupt leaders, poisoning and persecution of a race”) to contemporary America, it seems a perverse decision not to remove an appalling slur, yelled involuntarily, from the TV broadcast.Not least because it inevitably overshadows what should have been the big story: #BaftasSoWhite can (probably) be put to bed. As a reminder: the hashtag trended most critically in 2020, when no nominees of colour were up for any acting awards, leading to a massive overhaul of Bafta’s rules, regulations and membership demographic. Few organisations have done such radical work – the Oscars and certainly the Globes stagger way behind – yet few are still so perennially lambasted for choices that their members persist in sticking to. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Progressive membership’: Ukraine’s economic resilience shows future for EU business tie-ups
Joint ventures on defence, green energy and telecoms suggest how country could join bloc in stages rather than wait for full statusWhen the first Ukrainian-designed drone to be made in a German factory rolled off the production line last month, Volodymyr Zelenskyy knew it marked a turning point for the economy.With drone-making joint ventures also well advanced in Finland and Denmark, war-torn Ukraine has shown how its businesses can adapt and break out of their bomb-threatened domestic confines, becoming more integrated into the EU’s industrial network with each passing day. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor charged massages to taxpayers while trade envoy, say reports
Former senior civil servants say culture of deference meant excessive expenses claims were waved throughAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor charged taxpayers for the cost of massages and excessive travel expenses while he was the UK’s trade envoy, it has been reported.Former senior civil servants said they were shocked to see the claims, and that there was a culture of deference towards the former prince within Whitehall that allowed them to proceed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Teaching union claims extra £4bn for Send overhaul just ‘drop in bucket’ compared with what’s needed – UK politics live
Full details of government plans to be published this morning with reforms partly driven by move to contain soaring costsOne of the most memorable moments of the 2010 general election came when David Cameron was confronted by a parent and activist who accused the Tory leader of being opposed to disabled children being included in mainstream schools. Cameron insisted that he was not opposed to inclusion, but that he wanted to stop the closure of special needs.Sixteen years later, Keir Starmer is now actively promoting inclusion. In his Times article, Starmer says:[The current Send] system that works for nobody. It forces parents into a grinding, adversarial fight to get “one size fits all” support. It encourages private equity vultures to rip off the taxpayer by charging up to five times more for a precious special school place. Meanwhile, for so many children it simply writes off their potential. Insisting, against all evidence, that they could not thrive in a supported and inclusive mainstream school.We should be crystal clear on this last point: inclusion works. Not for every kid – of course some children need extra support in a specialist institution. That’s why today we are investing in 60,000 extra specialist places.The government is proposing a major set of reforms, with more funding and support provided upfront through mainstream schools– as already happens in Scotland and Wales. To enable this change, the government will provide about £1bn per year to mainstream schools and local authorities to deliver more support and specialist services. This is a reasonably significant change, considering that extra Send funding for mainstream schools and local authority support services currently totals about £5bn per year. The government will be hoping that more upfront support and early intervention saves them money by reducing the need for expensive support currently provided through education, health and careplans (EHCPs).Reform will be a long and complicated process. If mainstream schools are to play a bigger role, how can we be sure they make decisions in a consistent and fair way? A new funding system will be needed to ensure resources are targeted across schools to where they are needed. There will need to be a plan to upskill and expand the workforce to ensure mainstream schools can play an expanded role. The government will need to manage the transition carefully to ensure minimal disruption to existing support for pupils. More focus on outcomes will also be needed to improve quality. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany and China: Big challenges, new opportunities
Chancellor Friedrich Merz is traveling to China for a belated inaugural visit. A lot is at stake as Germany is in search of global partners after the US has relinquished much of its longstanding role.

Mail Online
Open 
Building plans from Labour to put up 1.5 million new homes hit by scaffolder shortage
At least 6,000 new scaffolders are needed each month to keep to Labour's building targets and to replace retiring workers, according to the National Access and Scaffolding Confederation.

Mail Online
Open 
I was a plus-size influencer who told my followers I loved being 21st, but secretly I was in pain and needed a walking stick before losing 12st
Emily Jones, 36, from London, who tipped the scales at her heaviest at 21st 12lbs, said she'd always been conscious of her weight and was brought up to watch what she ate.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Weather tracker: early taste of spring to sweep parts of Europe
South-western France could hit 25C, while a powerful Nor’easter is forecast to bring blizzards to BostonEurope live – latest updatesAn early taste of spring is on the way for millions across northern and western Europe this week. Temperatures could climb close to a near record-breaking 20C (68F) in parts of Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, with south-western France approaching 25C on Wednesday.The warmth is being driven by a highly amplified synoptic pattern, featuring a region of low pressure over the Atlantic and strong high pressure over central Europe. The setup will allow exceptionally mild air to spread across much of the continent, with temperatures in some places rising to 10-15C above the seasonal average. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Martin Lewis ambushes Badenoch on Good Morning Britain over student loans plan
Finance campaigner marches on to set and tells Tory leader her policy to cut interest rates will only help top earnersKemi Badenoch has faced what could be described as the stuff of nightmares for a UK politician being interviewed about a personal finance policy: being ambushed and contradicted live on air by Martin Lewis.As the Conservative leader was being interviewed on ITV about her party’s plans to cut interest rates for some student loans, Lewis, the campaigner and finance expert, marched on to the set to announce that he completely disagreed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Teaching union claims extra £4bn for Send overhaul just ‘drop in bucket’ compared with what’s needed – UK politics live
Full details of government plans to be published this morning with reforms partly driven by move to contain soaring costsRichard Adams is the Guardian’s education editor.Here is the full quote from Luke Sibieta of the Institute for Fiscal Studies on the Send reform plans as announced overnight. (See 9.50am.)The government is proposing a major set of reforms, with more funding and support provided upfront through mainstream schools– as already happens in Scotland and Wales. To enable this change, the government will provide about £1bn per year to mainstream schools and local authorities to deliver more support and specialist services. This is a reasonably significant change, considering that extra Send funding for mainstream schools and local authority support services currently totals about £5bn per year. The government will be hoping that more upfront support and early intervention saves them money by reducing the need for expensive support currently provided through education, health and careplans (EHCPs).Reform will be a long and complicated process. If mainstream schools are to play a bigger role, how can we be sure they make decisions in a consistent and fair way? A new funding system will be needed to ensure resources are targeted across schools to where they are needed. There will need to be a plan to upskill and expand the workforce to ensure mainstream schools can play an expanded role. The government will need to manage the transition carefully to ensure minimal disruption to existing support for pupils. More focus on outcomes will also be needed to improve quality.My father always used to say: “Nick has achieved just as much as you, Keir.” It was a pointed observation. Like so many working-class children of my generation, I was the first in my family to go to university. And for families like ours, there is deep pride in that. Inevitably, you get put on a pedestal.But my dad was right. I believed him then and I believe him just as strongly now. Because I saw how much Nick had to fight every day just to be seen. To count. To be recognised by an education system that never had any expectations for him because he had difficulties learning.I want this country to see and value the contribution every single person can make.It’s a cause that can only start with an education system grounded in those same values. I should be clear – Britain has come a long way since the Seventies and Eighties. For all our problems, we do have a more inclusive and tolerant society. Our schools have improved markedly, under both Labour and Conservative governments. But not for every child. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Alba's financial difficulties due to fraud, leader claims
Police have been investigating alleged financial 'irregularities' in the pro-independence party since May.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Littler wins in Poland despite Van Veen nine-darter
Luke Littler wins the Poland Darts Open title despite a nine-dart finish in the final from Gian van Veen.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Why Man Utd fans should be glad if Maguire extends stay
Fans should welcome the belief of sources on all sides that Harry Maguire will remain at Manchester United at least for next season, writes Simon Stone.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11058 Domain Hosting - shcp23 services down (New)
Some customers connected on the Shcp23 hosting platform are failing to reconnect. We are investigating and will aim to restore services as soon as possible.

We will provide another update once available.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 09:30

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 11:00

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 09:48

Status: Partial

Maintenance: None

Propublica
Open 
U.S. Forest Service Stops Issuing Firefighter Pants That Contain PFAS, Following ProPublica’s Reporting
The post U.S. Forest Service Stops Issuing Firefighter Pants That Contain PFAS, Following ProPublica’s Reporting appeared first on ProPublica.

TechRadar News
Open 
A Meta smartwatch? Thanks to Meta's dismal record around harvesting wellness data, it's a hard pass from me

TechRadar News
Open 
What is the release date for School Spirits season 3 episode 7 on Paramount+?

TechRadar News
Open 
A lot of UK firms still aren't remotely ready for Making Tax Digital

TechRadar News
Open 
The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra has already been unboxed — and its killer feature has been shown off

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung finally lets you pick your AI assistant on Galaxy phones
Samsung is adding Perplexity as a second system-level AI agent on Galaxy phones with a dedicated "Hey Plex" wake word and side button control.
The post Samsung finally lets you pick your AI assistant on Galaxy phones appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Galaxy S26 Ultra surfaces in early unboxing, highlighting key upgrades
A Dubai-based YouTuber has purchased the Galaxy S26 Ultra ahead of its official unveiling, sharing an early unboxing that confirms key upgrades.
The post Galaxy S26 Ultra surfaces in early unboxing, highlighting key upgrades appeared first on Digital Trends.

Mail Online
Open 
As travel warning issued for Mexico, should I cancel my holiday? Everything you need to know
Following the death of drug cartel leader El Mencho, a wave of violence has broken out across Mexico, affecting those travelling to and from the country.

Mail Online
Open 
Cillian Murphy makes a rare red carpet appearance with wife Yvonne McGuinness at BAFTAs after hailing the artist for giving him a 'safe place' away from the spotlight
The Oscar winner, 49, and the visual artist, 53, arrived at the star-studded ceremony hand-in-hand and wearing coordinating all-black outfits.

Mail Online
Open 
Chinese car giant famous for its viral 'Temu Range Rover' launches new £29,000 SUV with Kate Moss lookalike as the face
Chinese car giant Chery has gone down the copycat campaign route to launch its new Omoda 7 SUV: Kate Moss lookalike Denise Ohnona fronted its London Fashion Week debut.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor 'used taxpayers' money to pay for massages while he was trade envoy', civil servants claim
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor charged taxpayers for massages while working as the UK's trade envoy, a retired civil servant has claimed.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Green deals are being postponed, so Honeywell just shaved $500 million off a chemicals acquisition
Honeywell International on Monday received a 26% discount on its deal to acquire a business tied to the struggling chemicals industry.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
L.A. Olympics chair Casey Wasserman cuts price of $30 million Kubrick-inspired mansion
The home, inspired by Kubrick’s 2001 movie “Space Odyssey” is located in a highly sought-after neighborhood of Hollywood Hills, but has been on the market since September.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Former Canada PM Justin Trudeau buys a $3.1 million home in Montreal—will he live there with Katy Perry?
Justin Trudeau has forked over $3.1 million for an expansive estate in Montreal’s exclusive Outremont neighborhood—and got the seal of approval from girlfriend Katy Perry.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Novo Nordisk pitted a new weight-loss drug against Eli Lilly — and lost
Novo Nordisk shares were under pressure on Monday as the struggling Danish pharmaceutical said a head-to-head study found a drug in development didn’t cut as much weight as an Eli Lilly product.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why JPMorgan says the international stock story still has legs
Decent growth, benign inflation, a dovish Fed and a weaker dollar all favor equities but international and emerging stocks look set to build on the outperformance of the last year

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I spend $7,500 a month’: I’m 47, earn $260K, and have $3 million. Can I retire at 50?
“I own a home worth $520,000 and do not have a mortgage on it.”

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package todayMeanwhile, with all formalities wrapped up over in the Netherlands (10:48), here is the first formal photo of the Dutch government lineup, led by prime minister Jetten.Hungary’s foreign minister Péter Szijjártó is now speaking to reporters, offering the Budapest view on the entire situation. Continue reading...

UK Government News
Open 
Government to crack down on gambling operator sport sponsorship
The move will prevent unlicensed operators from sponsoring sports clubs, as part of wider measures to tackle illegal gambling market

Ian Visits
Open 
TfL warns of widespread rail and Tube disruption throughout March
There will be significant disruption to TfL’s rail and tube services throughout March due to large-scale engineering works, and TfL is advising people to plan ahead.Read more ›

Russia Today News
Open 
US hails Mexico after cartel drug lord killed

Russia Today News
Open 
France summons US envoy over ‘violent radical leftism’ warning

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour MP Naz Shah on her mother’s murder trial: ‘When she was found guilty, I believed I’d witnessed a monumental miscarriage of justice’
An exclusive extract from her memoir• ‘She did kill. There’s no grey area there’: read an interview with Naz ShahOn 11 April 1992, Uncle Azam died of complications from gastroenteritis. He was always kind and generous towards me, and his death was a terrible shock. Although he was married and we knew his family, without ever being told about it, I knew there was “something” going on between Azam and my mum. I hadn’t been raised to ask questions, so there was no way I would have ever challenged Mum on what she was doing. I had no idea of the horrific reality that lay behind that “something”.Everything changed with Azam’s sudden death. Before long, strange rumours began to circulate within the community about Azam, Mum and the relationship between them. I had no idea, and wouldn’t know for years, that Mum was in a coercive, abusive relationship with him. Much more shocking were the terrible rumours swirling that Azam had behaved badly towards me – and Mum had killed him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package todayOne other thing we will be keeping an eye on today is the latest on the EU-US trade relationship after last Friday’s US supreme court ruling on Trump’s tariffs.The European Parliament is expected to discuss what to do with the EU-US trade deal later today. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
I made my home smarter with these 10 cheap gadgets - here's how
After testing hundreds of smart home devices, I rounded up the best options to get started with your smart home without breaking the bank.

ZDNet News
Open 
This 3-in-1 multi-charger erases desktop cord clutter - and looks great while doing it
Lululook's Ultra-Rise Qi2 wireless charger looks just as sleek as the competition.

Chatham House
Open 
The world of hard power, and the future of the war on Ukraine
The world of hard power, and the future of the war on Ukraine
23
February 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
5 February 2026

Chatham House and Online
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will speak at Chatham House from noon to 1pm GMT on Monday, to mark the fifth year of Russia’s full-scale invasion. The interview and Q&A will be public, and streamed online on the Chatham House website.
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will appear at Chatham House to mark the fifth year of the Russia invasion.














General Valerii Zaluzhnyi will provide a keynote speech, and answer questions from the audience. The ambassador will give his take on the evolution of the war on the battlefield, and what this means for chances of ending the war.He will outline a common strategy for European security, focusing on the role of the UK, and what Ukraine can contribute to strengthening both Ukraine’s and Europe’s defence and deterrence capabilities.

UK Legislation
Open 
Correction Slip
This Order prescribes the remuneration payable to solicitors and counsel for providing civil legal services under Part 2 of the Access to Justice (Northern Ireland) Order 2003.

The Register
Open 
Every day in every way, passwords are getting worse and worse
The only good password is no password at all Passwords turn 65 this year. They became a feature of computer users' lives in 1961, with MIT's Compatible Time-Sharing System (CTSS). Before then, sysops were real sysops. All jobs went through them, one at a time, and access by others was forbidden by laws written on blocks of stone.…

The Register
Open 
Hotel's rotary switchboard so retro it predates the concept of crashing
Analog curio nestled between fax and typewriter - this is a very different definition of 'legacy support' Bork!Bork!Bork!  There are occasions when flicking a power switch can send a user into a world of bork-related pain, so it is sometimes worth taking a step back and reconsidering one's life choices.…

Sky News Home
Open 
New Yorkers told to stay at home as blizzard threatens to become 'bomb cyclone'
Non-emergency road travel is banned in New York City due to "dangerous blizzard conditions", as snow blankets the Big Apple.

Mail Online
Open 
Not AGAIN! NASA's Artemis II moon mission is delayed for a second time after several last-minute issues are spotted on the SLS rocket - as furious fans call for SpaceX to step in
NASA's Artemis II moon mission has been delayed for a second time after several last-minute issues were spotted on the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket.

Mail Online
Open 
Sally Nugent 'mesmerizes' BBC Breakfast fans with 'glam' new look - as they exclaim 'it's so different, love it!'
The 54-year-old, who presents the programme Monday to Wednesday, appeared on the red sofa alongside her regular co-star Jon Kay, 56, to share the latest headlines.

Mail Online
Open 
A-list divorce lawyer who acted for Kim Kardashian, Angelina Jolie and Britney Spears reveals 'sexy and empowered' breakup range with middle-class favourite Reformation
It's become a one-stop shop for brides searching for their perfect white dress, but now Reformation has launched a collection for the women in the opposite circumstances.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the £87 million Center Parcs transformation - with two-storey treehouses and an exhilarating new attraction
A £87 million expansion at Center Parcs Longford Forest will bring 83 lodges, including luxury treehouses, and a new zipline to the Ballymahon site, increasing guest capacity to 3,500.

Mail Online
Open 
FTSE steady after fresh Trump tariff chaos weighs on stocks and pushes gold higher
The FTSE 100 opened 0.2% lower before regaining some of its losses after a record run this year, after passing 10,700 points at one point last week.

Mail Online
Open 
David Beckham jumps to the aid of a skier who suffers a head injury after a fall in the exclusive resort of Courchevel
The former footballer helped the woman following her tumble whilst on a family holiday at exclusive resort Courchevel in the French alps.

Mail Online
Open 
Best winter boots: Flattering, comfortable and perfect for all weathers - HANNAH SKELLEY reveals her tried and tested must-haves
I've tried 55 pairs from all sorts of shops, from the supermarket to mid-price investment brands. Read on for my edit of the eight to buy now

Mail Online
Open 
Windsurfer, 55, is mauled to death in shark attack as horrified family watch on from beach on paradise island
The 55-year-old was catching waves on a popular beach on New Caledonia - a French territory in the South Pacific, east of Australia - when he suddenly was seen thrashing around.

BBC World News
Open 
Watch: Winter storm covers parts north-east US in snow
Weather warnings and travel bans are in place, as the storm causes power outages.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A spiritual awakening’: why Con Air is my feelgood movie
The latest in our series of writers on their most important comfort films is a celebration of Nicolas Cage’s finest action momentIt’s easy to poke fun at Nicolas Cage. Between the meltdown memes, dodgy hairdos and his more taxman-friendly choices of roles, he has frequently made himself a target for ridicule among the masses.Fresh off an Oscar win for Leaving Las Vegas, the actor’s decision to follow up with three action films must have seemed baffling at the time. The gambit paid off, though. Consisting of The Rock, Con Air and Face/Off, this unofficial “trilogy” of blockbusters would showcase the fundamental unknowability of Nicolas Cage. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
This election is an appeal for trust, a battle against fear and a straight fight between Greens and Reform | Hannah Spencer
Thursday’s stakes could not be higher. We know Labour has failed and Farage’s Reform is poisonous. I want to win Gorton and Denton as a fresh startHannah Spencer is the Green party candidate in this week’s Gorton and Denton byelectionI didn’t grow up planning to be a politician. I’m a tradesperson from Manchester. I left school at 16 and have been a plumber ever since. Last week, I also qualified as a plasterer, with a distinction. So until now, I’ve spent my working life fixing homes. But after years of watching things fall apart, I’m done waiting for someone else to change things. It’s time to turn my hand to fixing whole communities – and join our Green MPs determined to repair our broken politics.Gorton and Denton deserves an MP rooted in this community – someone who works here, understands this place and genuinely cares. After thousands of doorstep conversations, it’s clear people are done with Labour. This byelection is now a straight fight between the Green party and Reform UK. Labour knows it, and Reform’s candidate, Matthew Goodwin, knows it too. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Influencers, misinformation and aid cuts: the fight to halt polio in Malawi
A huge vaccination drive has been launched after the country’s first outbreak in years of the paralysing disease. But the battle to wipe out the virus is struggling elsewhere, so how can it be eradicated?As a seven-year-old boy is treated for polio at a hospital in Malawi, the country has launched a major vaccination campaign to stem an outbreak of the disease.The effort in Malawi, one of the world’s poorest countries and badly hit by the aid cuts, has seen an astonishing 1.3 million children already vaccinated against the disease in just four days after emergency supplies were airlifted in by the World Health Organization (WHO) just over a week ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We’ve scratched the surface’: mission to digitise UK public art reaches 1m entries
New Art UK chair Ben Terrett appointed as charity marks 10 years of building online databaseFrom a bronze Rodin sculpture of the naked Eve outside a Nando’s in Harlow to more than 6,000 artworks by JMW Turner, to a crumpled-up piece of A4 paper owned by Manchester Art Gallery, the UK’s public art collection is a wonderful and varied thing.It is huge, as demonstrated by the charity Art UK, which has announced it has reached a million artworks on its database and appointed a new chair who said: “We’ve only scratched the surface.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package todayHungary’s foreign minister Péter Szijjártó is now speaking to reporters, offering the Budapest view on the entire situation.He insists Hungary “doesn’t hate Ukraine,” but “the problem is that the Ukrainian state hates Hungary, and the Ukrainian state carries out an anti-Hungarian political approach for the last ten years.”“Ukraine behaves in a very hostile manner towards Hungary. Please ask Ukrainians why they have stopped the oil deliveries to Hungary, why they put the security of energy supply of Hungary [at] risk, why they do not give back the rights to the Hungarian national community? … And, I’m very curious what their answer will be.”“This is it. And no one has the right to put our energy security at risk, because it’s a issue of it’s an issue of national sovereignty.”“So, the ball is in the court of Ukraine as the Ukrainians, when they’re going to restart the oil deliveries of Hungary. As long as it doesn’t happen, there will be no change in the Hungarian position.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A rush of blood to the penis - and vaginal tenting: what happens to our bodies when we get turned on
Arousal may be spontaneous, or arise in response to sensory stimulation, memory, fantasy or emotional connection. Here’s how to understand the differencesWhat turns you on? Depending on the person, the answer to that question will vary wildly. But what is really going on under the, ahem, hood when we start to get in the mood?The first scientists to really take the physiology of sex seriously – or at least break the taboos around talking about it – were William Masters and Virginia Johnson, sexologists who began their studies in the 1950s (and got married in 1971). “They came up with what’s known as the four-stage model, which was that the body gets aroused, you hit a plateau, you have an orgasm, you go back down to baseline,” says Dr Angela Wright, a GP and clinical sexologist based in Yorkshire. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'Appalling weekend' - Arokodare and Mundle latest players to be racially abused
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle are the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Appalling weekend' - Arokodare & Mundle latest players to be racially abused
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle are the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Netflix boss defends bid for Warner Bros as Paramount deadline looms
Ted Sarandos says his company's offer is better for industry growth as it is "buying assets we don't currently have".

Mail Online
Open 
Fantastic florets: Broccoli is the vitamin-packed versatile 'super vegetable' everyone needs more of, explains expert dietitian
Broccoli is one of those vegetables that divides the dinner table. Revered by nutritionists, hated by children and tolerated by adults who know it's 'good for them'.

Mail Online
Open 
I was a plus-size influencer who told my followers I loved being 21st, but secretly I was in pain and needed a walking stick before losing 12st
Emily Jones, 36, from London , who tipped the scales at her heaviest at 21st 12lbs, said she'd always been conscious of her weight and was brought up to watch what she ate.

BBC World News
Open 
Briton among 19 killed in Nepal bus crash
Nepalese police say the British national was a 24-year-old man.

Russia Today News
Open 
China urges US to scrap all tariffs

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner squirms at 'awkward' BAFTA host Alan Cummings' innuendo-packed joke about 'getting her gums around a Jammie Dodger' while dishing out 'very British snacks'
Kylie Jenner was left visibly squirming in the midst of an awkward joke made by Alan Cummings at Sunday night's BAFTAs. 

Mail Online
Open 
Kate's power move at the BAFTAs: Royal's fairytale Gucci gown, princess hair and the late Queen's earrings were a 'strategic' reminder that she is the future of The Firm amid Andrew chaos, stylist says
The Princess of Wales's glamorous BAFTAs look served as a 'quietly strategic reminder of stability' as the Royal Family has been plunged into chaos, a stylist has said.

Mail Online
Open 
Fuming Olympics president Kirsty Coventry threatens her £420,000-a-year PR chief with the sack mid-press conference after being blindsided with questions about Germany's fears over hosting Games on Nazi anniversary
IOC President Kirsty Coventry found herself involved in a bizarre press conference in which she heatedly responded to being blindsided by questions.

Mail Online
Open 
Sophie Habboo is praised as 'unreal' and 'stunning' as she dazzles at BAFTA hosting gig less than three months after giving birth
Sophie Habboo left fans aghast as she hosted the EE BAFTA Film Awards red carpet at The Royal Festival Hall alongside her husband Jamie Laing on Sunday evening.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA Best Actor winner Robert Aramayo speaks out in defence of 'offensive' Tourette's campaigner who left ceremony halfway through after yelling racial slurs
Robert Aramayo has jumped to the defence of Tourette's campaigner John Davidson who left the BAFTAs on Sunday after shouting racial slurs in the audience.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump 'is considering assassinating the son of Iran's supreme leader' - as brave protesters march in Tehran chanting 'death to the Ayatollah'
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's 55-year-old son, Mojtaba Khamenei is his father's most likely successor due to close ties with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp (IRGC).

Mail Online
Open 
Viewers' fury as BBC edits out 'Free Palestine' remark from BAFTA winner's speech but decides to air N-word outburst despite two-hour time delay
BAFTAs host Alan Cumming was forced to apo9logise after Tourette's activist John Davidson was heard yelling the N-word.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics were again unrelatable and ‘useless’ and yet utterly astounding to watch
The Games offer little fame or fortune but the purity of the athletes and their stories made them greatIt was the Olympics of politics and penises, of JD Vance being jeered and of Ukrainian bobsledders being banned from the competition, of a convicted criminal beating the teammate she was guilty of defrauding, of Lindsey Vonn crashing out 12 seconds into the race and of Ilia Malinin making one mistake too many, of the internet became momentarily obsessed with slow‑motion videos of a Canadian stroking a curling stone with the tip of his finger, and it was the Olympics where the Norwegian ski‑jump team refused to dignify questions about whether or not they were injecting acid into their genitals.Like I said right at the beginning, Pierre de Coubertin never wanted a Winter Olympics. If that line sounds a little familiar it might be because you read it here a fortnight or so ago. “The great inferiority of these snow sports is that they are completely useless,” Coubertin wrote, “with no useful application whatsoever.” But it’s true, too, that over time he changed his mind. And by the end of the International Olympic Committee’s very first Olympic “winter sports week” at Chamonix in 1924 he gave a speech in which he told his audience that “winter sports are among the purest”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package today38-year-old Rob Jetten has been sworn in as the Netherland’s new prime minister, the youngest premier in history, leading a three-party minority administration.The three coalition parties have only 66 seats in the 150-seat house, and will have to rely on opposition lawmakers to get enough support to pass virtually any legislation. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Go to university! No, get a trade! How can young people survive when all the paths are landmined? | Jason Okundaye
Is it to be a degree and heavy debt when graduate jobs are shrinking? Or forgoing a degree, knowing society still worships them? Confused, angry: who wouldn’t beSome months ago, I was at my old university, speaking to prospective sixth-form and college students about taking a degree in the arts and what future careers they could expect. It was a cohort of teenagers from underrepresented backgrounds: all of them had that glint of ambition in their eyes, a desire to better their circumstances. After the talk, they showed me their precocious LinkedIn profiles already advertising their talents to future employers. I expected them to ask what would be of more value out of a degree in the arts or Stem, but I was unprepared for something more bracing: whether it was worth them going to university at all.It is a question that keeps on rearing its head, as the graduate recruitment crisis and crippling student debts paint a picture of a pursuit with diminished returns. Those of us in the orbit of young people increasingly wonder whether we can, in good conscience, encourage them to go and get a degree. The options being presented increasingly look like snake oil, so is it any wonder that young people feel disillusioned and deceived?Jason Okundaye is an assistant Opinion editor at the Guardian Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Swearing, Marty Supreme … and Prince William: Bafta’s 12 biggest snubs and surprises
This year’s Baftas were a chaotic mix of wild praise and inadvertent insults as the best actor prize was won by an unknown – and one of the nominees seemingly slurred from a man in the stallsHow the night unfolded Peter Bradshaw’s verdict on the Baftas’ winners and losersNews: One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners as Robert Aramayo takes best actorGoing into Bafta night, everybody’s secret hopes for a little British movies that could were pinned on folkie comedy The Ballad of Wallis Island. In the event though, Ballad wound up with nothing and I Swear, about Tourettes activist John Davidson stormed the show, capped by a jawdropping win for Robert Aramayo in the best actor category. As the man himself said, it was not to be believed that he’d be heading to the podium ahead of the likes of DiCaprio, Chalamet and Ethan Hawke. You probably have to go back to the mid-1980s and Haing S Ngor’s win for The Killing Fields for someone so unheralded to take the prize. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
What is SEND and how many children get support?
The government is due to publish plans to reform the special educational needs system in a new White Paper.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom
As mining companies scour Zambia's Copperbelt for metals used in sustainable energy, locals are dealing with unchecked pollution and contamination.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price, 47, poses with a pregnancy test after claiming she's 'having a child' with new husband Lee Andrews - as couple marry again in 'legal' ceremony
The ex glamour model and mother-of-five, 47, shocked fans when she married the businessman, 43, in Dubai last month following a whirlwind 'one-week' romance.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Winter Olympics were unrelatable, bloated and ‘useless’ and utterly astounding to watch
The Games offer little fame or fortune but the purity of the athletes and their stories made them greatIt was the Olympics of politics and penises, of JD Vance being jeered and of Ukrainian bobsledders being banned from the competition, of a convicted criminal beating the teammate she was guilty of defrauding, of Lindsey Vonn crashing out 12 seconds into the race and of Ilia Malinin making one mistake too many, of the internet became momentarily obsessed with slow‑motion videos of a Canadian stroking a curling stone with the tip of his finger, and it was the Olympics where the Norwegian ski‑jump team refused to dignify questions about whether or not they were injecting acid into their genitals.Like I said right at the beginning, Pierre de Coubertin never wanted a Winter Olympics. If that line sounds a little familiar it might be because you read it here a fortnight or so ago. “The great inferiority of these snow sports is that they are completely useless,” Coubertin wrote, “with no useful application whatsoever.” But it’s true, too, that over time he changed his mind. And by the end of the International Olympic Committee’s very first Olympic “winter sports week” at Chamonix in 1924 he gave a speech in which he told his audience that “winter sports are among the purest”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Weather permitting: skiing in Scotland – a visual essay
With the Winter Olympics dominating screens, Dougie Wallace instead took his camera to Scotland’s ski areas of Glenshee, Cairngorm Mountain, Glencoe and Nevis Range, where a thaw, a band of rain, or a gust can change everythingWhen the snow comes, the car parks fill. Word spreads quickly, a good week, a belter of snow, and by mid-morning the access roads are tight with hatchbacks, hire skis and cautious optimism. In Scotland, the difference between a strong season and a poor one can be a weather front drifting 10 miles too far north. A thaw, a gust, a band of rain, and everything changes.The project was partly inspired by the approach of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics and the idea of what they might look like if staged in Scotland. It was not about shiny podiums, more an exercise in imagining how weather, people and place might shape a very different kind of Games.Cold air, small talk, a few quiet minutes before the ride, Glencoe. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
The disappearance of Tobey Maguire: Actor's sad decline in Leonardo DiCaprio's 'shadow' - and new life chasing decades-younger models and poker games
An elusive presence in Hollywood he may be, but even by Maguire's standards, eight films in close to 20 years screams of a man who has grown disinterested.

Mail Online
Open 
Fuming Olympics president Kirsty Coventry threatens her £420,000-a-year PR chief with the sack mid-press conference after being blindsided with questions about Germany's fears over hosting Games on Nazi anniversary
IOC President Kirsty Coventry found herself involved in a bizarre press conference in which she heatedly responded to being blindsided by questions on recent developments.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain 'faces paying billions of pounds in compensation to Mauritius' if Trump's opposition forces Starmer to abandon Chagos 'surrender' deal
Concerns have been raised that Mauritius could sue if Sir Keir ditches the plan to hand over the British Indian Ocean Territory in the face of US opposition.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour's 'class war' on SEND: Ministers vow to strip funding from independent special schools - as unions demand MORE spending despite alarm at spiralling costs
Ministers are unveiling a major overhaul of support for SEND and disadvantaged pupils with panic mounting over spiralling costs.

Mail Online
Open 
Tourists stranded in Mexico cartel war: Westerners plead for help as violence explodes across the country after drug lord is killed months before World Cup
Following the death of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, also known as El Mencho, gunmen unleashed bloody chaos across several Mexican cities.

Mail Online
Open 
TV star 'the Lip King' dies a year after he was arrested over death of mother-of-five following BBL at his clinic
Jordan James Parke, who underwent cosmetic surgery more than 50 times and shot to fame on reality TV show Botched, passed away on Wednesday February 18, 2026.

Mail Online
Open 
NHS staff are told they can use 'Xey/Xem' pronouns at work in new guidance - and colleagues who get them wrong have to say sorry
The gender-neutral pronouns can be used as alternatives to I/me, She/her, He/him, They/them, Ze/Zir or It/Its depending on the colleague's preference.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
How ruthless Arsenal exposed Tottenham's weaknesses
MOTD pundit Danny Murphy explains why, as well as Arsenal's superior quality in Sunday's north London derby, they exploited Tottenham's tactical weakness too.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
How cartel leader El Mencho became Mexico's most wanted man - and what his killing means
The BBC's Will Grant examines the power wielded by the Jalisco drug cartel chief, who died after a clash with security forces assisted by US intelligence.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package todayIn turn, France’s Jean-Noël Barrot insisted it was a matter of when, not if, the 20th package of sanctions against Russia will be adopted, which he said would further deprive Russia’s Putin of capacity to pursue his “colonial fantasies” in Ukraine.Lithuania’s foreign minister Kęstutis Budrys said he was “very frustrated” with the Hungarian block.“I really expect that we can have the open and honest discussion, looking each other to the eyes and answering these questions: what we are doing here, what we are disrupting; is it only about Ukraine, or is it about us remaining 27 in the European Union?”“We cannot proceed like this. We cannot give away those carrots each time and expect that, oh, there will be one country that will block so what we will [give] to them. It cannot work like this. European Union was designed in different way. …We have one constant [source of] disruption, [and] I have the question whether we should review the decision making process. That’s one option. The other option is to also to invoke the article seven and just stop this exploitation of the principle of unanimity. It is really damaging and dangerous.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Send support for schoolchildren in England to be given £4bn overhaul
‘Generational’ policy changes are a key moment for education secretary Bridget Phillipson and for Keir StarmerChildren with special educational needs have been let down again and again. That ends right nowMinisters will unveil a “generational” overhaul of special educational needs and disabilities (Send) support, pledging £4bn to transform provision in schools in England and warning councils they could lose control of Send services if they fail to meet their legal duties.The changes are expected to be a key policy moment for Keir Starmer and for the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson – who delayed the changes last autumn after a ferocious backlash from MPs and parents. Continue reading...

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057134 - Planned at Risk Network Maintenance in Reading East, TVHC1 SE-4 IP Fabric - Monday 09/03/2026 2000 GMT - 2300 GMT

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057673 Planned Maintenance - Storage Platform SC-1

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057674 Planned Maintenance - Storage Platform NE-1

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057675 Planned Maintenance - Storage Platform LN-1

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Hedge funds offer locked-up private credit investors a way out — at a hefty discount
Two investment funds said they would offer investors in a locked up private credit fund an exit — but at a hefty discount.

Slashdot
Open 
Rule-Breaking Black Hole Growing At 13x the Cosmic 'Speed Limit' Challenges Theories
"A surprisingly ravenous black hole from the dawn of the universe is breaking two big rules," reports Live Science. "It's not only exceeding the 'speed limit' of black hole growth but also generating extreme X-ray and radio wave emissions - two features that are not predicted to coexist..."

"How is this rule-breaking behavior even possible? In a paper published Jan. 21 in The Astrophysical Journal, an international team of researchers observed ID830 in multiple wavelengths to find an answer...."


As they attract gas and dust, this material accumulates in a swirling accretion disk. Gravity pulls the material from the disk into the black hole, but the infalling material generates radiation pressure that pushes outward and prevents more stuff from falling in. As a result, black holes are muzzled by a self-regulating process called the Eddington limit... Its X-ray brightness suggests that ID830 is accreting mass at about 13 times the Eddington limit, due to a sudden burst of inflowing gas that may have occurred as ID830 shredded and engulfed a celestial body that wandered too close. "For a supermassive black hole (SMBH) as massive as ID830, this would require not a normal (main-sequence) star, but a more massive giant star or a huge gas cloud," study co-author Sakiko Obuchi, an observational astronomer at Waseda University in Tokyo, told Live Science via email. Such super-Eddington phases may be incredibly brief, as "this transitional phase is expected to last for roughly 300 years," Obuchi added.

ID830 also simultaneously displays radio and X-ray emissions. These two features are not expected to coexist, especially because super-Eddington accretion is thought to suppress such emissions. "This unexpected combination hints at physical mechanisms not yet fully captured by current models of extreme accretion and jet launching," the researchers said in a statement. So while ID830 is launching massive radio jets, its X-ray emissions appear to originate from a structure called a corona, produced as intense magnetic fields from the accretion disk create a thin but turbulent billion-degree cloud of turbocharged particles. These particles orbit the black hole at nearly the speed of light, in what NASA calls "one of the most extreme physical environments in the universe." Altogether, ID830's rule-breaking behaviors suggest that it is in a rare transitional phase of excessive consumption - and excretion. This incredible feeding burst has energized both its jets and its corona, making ID830 shine brightly across multiple wavelengths as it spews out excess radiation.

Additionally, based on UV-brightness analysis, quasars like ID830 may be unexpectedly common, the researchers said. Models predict that only around 10% of quasars have spectacular radio jets, but these energetic objects could be significantly more abundant in the early universe than previously suggested. Most importantly, ID830 also shows how SMBHs can regulate galaxy growth in the early universe. As a black hole gobbles matter at the super-Eddington limit, the energy from its resultant emissions can heat and disperse matter throughout the interstellar medium - the gas between stars - to suppress star formation. As a result, ancient SMBHs like ID830 may have grown massive at the expense of their host galaxies.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Cornelia Biacsics: Contributions for week 7, 2026
New podcast episode “Why it's fun to hack on Postgres performance“ with Tomas Vondra published on February 20 2026 by Claire Giordano and Aaron Wislang from the series “Talking Postgres”.
Hyderabad PostgreSQL User Group met on February 20, organized by Hari Kiran, Ameen Abbas and Rajesh Madiwale.
Speaker:

Ameen Abbas
Soqra Banu(sughra) Rumi
Ashoka Reddy Tatiparthi
Vikas Gupta

The programme committee for PGConf.dev 2026 finalized a part of the conference schedule for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

Melanie Plageman (Microsoft)
Dilip Kumar (Google)
Jonathan Katz (Databricks)
Paul Ramsey (Snowflake)
Jacob Champion (EDB)
(Tuesday sessions will follow).

PGConf.de 2026 talk selection committee met to finalize the session list:

Christoph Berg
Josef Machytka
Olga Kramer
Polina Bungina
Priyanka Chatterjee

Computer Weekly
Open 
Neoclouds: Meeting demand for AI acceleration
We look at how neoclouds can deliver access to artificial intelligence acceleration faster and cheaper than public cloud providers

Sky News Home
Open 
'I design video games - here's what I think about angry fans'
If you've ever spent your morning commute daydreaming about starting afresh with your career, this feature is for you. Each Monday, we speak to someone from a different profession to discover what it's really like. Today we speak to Alistair McFarlane, chief operating officer of game design company Facepunch Studios and the executive producer of survival game Rust...

Department for Education
Open 
Specialist SEND support in every school and community
Generational reforms to transform outcomes for children with SEND and end one size fits all approach

UK Government News
Open 
Doug Gurr selected as preferred candidate for Chair of CMA
Doug Gurr has been announced as the preferred candidate to remain as chair of the Competition and Markets Authority.

UK Government News
Open 
Specialist SEND support in every school and community
Generational reforms to transform outcomes for children with SEND and end one size fits all approach

UK Government News
Open 
Brensocatib licensed as the first medicine specifically designed to treat non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis in patients 12 years and older
As with any medicine, the MHRA will keep the safety and effectiveness of brensocatib under close review.

Ian Visits
Open 
Royal Docks plans would add floating parkland and residential boat berths
Plans are being shown off to encourage more boats to use the Royal Docks for long-term mooring, as well as an intention to create a new floating park in the dock.Read more ›

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Baltic States Plan To Form Their Own "Military Schengen"
The Baltic States Plan To Form Their Own "Military Schengen"

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

This will one day link with the existing “military Schengen” between the Netherlands, Germany, and Poland, which Belgium and France plan to join, for creating a contiguous zone of free military movement between the Pyrenees and the approach to St. Petersburg.



The Baltic States’ Defense Ministers signed a statement of intent in late January for forming their own “military Schengen”, which refers to the agreement signed two years ago in January 2024 between the Netherlands, Germany, and Poland for expediting the flow of troops and equipment. Belgium and France are also expected to join the original “military Schengen”, whose members aim to slash to 3-5 days the estimated 45 days that it currently takes to send the aforesaid from the Atlantic to the Eastern Flank.

Upon their modernization, both in terms of infrastructure and legal coordination, the two “military Schengens” will form a contiguous zone of free military movement between the Pyrenees and the approach to St. Petersburg. To be sure, this is a work in progress that won’t be completed anytime soon, especially its Baltic portion. Poland only just opened the portion of the “Via Baltica” highway between itself and Lithuania, while the “Rail Baltica” between them and Estonia is even further behind schedule.

Nevertheless, the unmistakable trend is that NATO is optimizing its military logistics, particularly along its Eastern Flank whose members agreed to turbocharge their militarization during mid-December’s inaugural summit. In connection with that, readers also shouldn’t forget that the Baltic States and Poland are building something called the “EU Defense Line”, which combines the first’s “Baltic Defense Line” and the second’s “East Shield” into what’s de facto a new Iron Curtain that’ll include anti-personnel mines.

This Baltic Front of the New Cold War between NATO and Russia relies heavily on Poland, which already has the EU’s largest military and the third-largest in NATO, with plans to expand from 215,000 troops to 300,000 by 2030 then half a million by 2039 (200,000 of whom will be reservists). Both the Via and Rail Baltica megaprojects, which are the regional flagships of the Polish-led “Three Seas Initiative”, will connect Poland to Latvia’s and Estonia’s borders with Russia for rapid force deployment in a crisis.

The involvement of the EU’s largest military in any such NATO-Russian crisis would inevitably drag the rest of those two overlapping blocs in any whatever war might then follow in the worst-case scenario. If the Baltic States hadn’t agreed to form their own “military Schengen”, and if the associated “Baltica” logistical projects weren’t being built, then potential border incidents could be more easily manageable. Instead, they’d likely result in a speedy deployment of Polish troops, thus escalating matters into a crisis.

Moving beyond the military significance of this recent development and into its political significance, Poland is clearly establishing a sphere of influence over the Baltic States, which is actually a return to history.

Casual observers probably aren’t aware, but the Warsaw-led Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth once stretched as far north as southern Estonia and even controlled parts of Latvia for centuries till the Third Partition in 1795. This is part of Poland’s plan to revive its long-lost Great Power status.

The overarching trend is that Poland is preparing to lead Russia’s containment along the Baltic Front, which could also place more pressure upon Kaliningrad (which borders Poland and Lithuania) and Belarus (which borders Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia).

The eventual merger of these two “military Schengens” could embolden Poland to more actively, even aggressively, contain Russia by ensuring that back-up would speedily arrive from the EU hinterland or even the US homeland in the event of a crisis.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 03:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Renewables Now Make Up 1/4 Of US Electricity Generation
Renewables Now Make Up 1/4 Of US Electricity Generation

In 2025, the share of renewables in U.S. electricity generation has surpassed 25 percent.

Over the course of the past 20 years, their share has continuously risen from just 8.6 percent in 2007.

At the same time, as Statista's Kathraina Buchholz details in the infographic below, coal in electricity generation fell from a share of 49 percent to just 16.4 percent last year.



You will find more infographics at Statista

While Trump administration's policies regarding renewable energy and greenhouse gases have yet to show their full effect, experts believe that the sector's strong growth as well as efficiency and cost improvements will cause it to expand further – albeit slower – despite some government funding losses and the end of emission limits.

In 2022, more electricity was generated from renewable sources in the U.S. for the first time over the course of one year than from coal.

That year, renewable energy sources created more than 900 terawatt-hours of electric power in the country compared to a little over 800 that came from coal.

On a global scale, this change happened last year as renewables outweighed coal electricity generation in the second half of 2025.

Up until 2007, coal accounted for more than 2,000 terawatt hours of electricity in the U.S. before the figure started to declined as regulations around fossil fuels - limits on carbon-intensity and the emissions of toxic elements like mercury - tightened. Electricity generation from natural gas gained pace as a result since it produces somewhat less CO2. To reach the emission goals associated with the net zero age, however, the U.S. would have to continue growing carbon-neutral electricity sources like wind and solar, which have been on a steady upwards climb in the new millennium and are now the second biggest source of electric power in the country.

Looking not only at electricity but energy use as a whole, renewables have a longer way to go in the U.S. and globally.

Here, renewable energy made up only 9 percent in 2023 as energy sources outside of electricity - most notably petroleum in the form of gasoline - are added to the mix.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 04:15

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Weather permitting: skiing in Scotland – a visual essay
With the Games dominating screens, Dougie Wallace instead took his camera to Scotland’s ski areas of Glenshee, Cairngorm Mountain, Glencoe and Nevis Range, where a thaw, a band of rain, or a gust can change everythingWhen the snow comes, the car parks fill. Word spreads quickly, a good week, a belter of snow, and by mid-morning the access roads are tight with hatchbacks, hire skis and cautious optimism. In Scotland, the difference between a strong season and a poor one can be a weather front drifting 10 miles too far north. A thaw, a gust, a band of rain, and everything changes.The project was partly inspired by the approach of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics and the idea of what they might look like if staged in Scotland. It was not about shiny podiums, more an exercise in imagining how weather, people and place might shape a very different kind of Games.Cold air, small talk, a few quiet minutes before the ride, Glencoe. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Send support for schoolchildren in England to be given £4bn overhaul
‘Generational’ changes are a key moment for education secretary Bridget Phillipson and for Keir StarmerChildren with special educational needs have been let down again and again. That ends right nowMinisters will unveil a “generational” overhaul of special educational needs and disabilities (Send) support, pledging £4bn to transform provision in schools in England and warning councils they could lose control of Send services if they fail to meet their legal duties.The reforms are expected to be a key policy moment for Keir Starmer and for the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson – who delayed the changes last autumn after a ferocious backlash from MPs and parents. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Andrew charged taxpayers for massage services when UK trade envoy, claim ex-civil servants
Whistleblower former civil servants claim there was too little scrutiny of Andrew's costs as UK trade envoy.

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC apologises after 'strong and offensive language' heard at BAFTAs
The BBC has apologised after a racial slur was shouted during the BAFTAs while two black actors were on stage.

Sky News Home
Open 
Greenland PM responds to Trump's US hospital boat offer
Donald Trump has said he is sending a "great hospital boat" to Greenland, the semi-autonomous Danish territory he wants to acquire.

Mail Online
Open 
Leonardo DiCaprio shows off a new look with reading glasses as he leaves BAFTAs after leading actor award loss
The actor, 51, was nominated for his leading role in One Battle After Another and the action-drama flick received a total of 14 nods, but he left without a bronze mask trophy.

Mail Online
Open 
The Lady viewers fume 'this is the worst-timed TV launch EVER!' as they sink claws into 'tasteless' Sarah Ferguson drama
The four-part series launched on Sunday, following the story of Sarah Ferguson's royal dresser, Jane Andrews, whose fall from grace was well-documented after her life in the palace.

Mail Online
Open 
The Secret Genius question 'very few people can solve' - but can YOU defy the odds and get it right?
Fronted by Alan Carr and Susie Dent, the programme features four regional heats spanning different areas of the UK. T

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian-obsessed 'Lip King' dies a year after he was arrested over death of mother-of-five who passed away following BBL at his clinic
Jordan James Parke, who underwent cosmetic surgery more than 50 times and shot to fame on reality TV show Botched, passed away on Wednesday February 18, 2026.

Mail Online
Open 
Christian street preacher was arrested for 'inciting racial hatred' after delivering sermon 'on Islam and transgender ideology
Dia Moodley's legal counsel, ADF UK, said the 58-year-old pastor was detained for eight hours in November last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Aimee Lou Wood lets her hair down with a cocktail as Mia McKenna-Bruce gets her groove on as they take a break from Beatles biopics at the star-studded post-BAFTA Netflix party
Aimee Lou Wood and Mia McKenna-Bruce were among the celebrity guests as exclusive London venue The Twenty Two hosted a star-studded BAFTA after-party on Sunday evening.

Mail Online
Open 
Made In Chelsea star makes surprise cameo in Netflix's Bridgerton - as stunned co-stars exclaim 'I screamed when I saw you!'
The fourth season of the popular drama, which is based on Julia Quinn's An Offer from a Gentleman, hit the streaming service in January.

Mail Online
Open 
Emotional Jessie Buckley fights back tears as she dedicates Best Actress BAFTA to her baby daughter and makes history as first Irish performer to win coveted prize
The Irish actress, 36, scooped the gong for Best Actress for her role in Chloe Zhao's Hamnet during this year's star-studded ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price, 47, poses with a pregnancy test after claiming she's 'having a child' with new husband Lee Andrews - as couple marry again in 'legal' ceremony
The ex glamour model and mother-of-five, 47,  shocked fans when she married the businessman, 43, in Dubai last month following a whirlwind 'one-week' romance.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'They were attacking from every angle' - why Spurs couldn't keep Arsenal out
MOTD pundit Danny Murphy explains why, as well as Arsenal's superior quality in Sunday's north London derby, they exploited Tottenham's tactical weakness too.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
As If by Isabel Waidner review – surreal doppelganger story
Two uncannily similar men switch places in an existential farce that playfully explores the precarity of working lifeIn Isabel Waidner’s previous novel, 2023’s Corey Fah Does Social Mobility, a working-class writer wins a literary prize. As the trophy takes the form of an elusive UFO, Corey Fah – an outsider unfamiliar with the baffling inner workings of the system – is unable to collect or even confirm the award. Waidner has said that the novel was partly inspired by the experience of winning the Goldsmiths prize for their previous work Sterling Karat Gold, and by the ephemeral nature of success, with its “unfamiliar contexts of social power and opportunity”.In Waidner-world the surreal is always lurking, gleefully waiting to trip the reader up. As If uses the acting profession and its inherent themes of performance and doubleness to explore the precarity of work. A Waiting for Godot transported to the housing estates and grotty sublets of Clerkenwell, London, the book opens with a gnomic Vladimir/Estragon-type exchange between two startlingly similar strangers in a flat. They are both in their late 40s, very tall, dark-haired, a mirror image of each other – “my unremarkable eyes, they were looking back at me”, Aubrey Lewis, who is subletting the flat, notices with some alarm. “Were we ever to be seen together, I thought, we would reflect badly on each other.” The other man, dressed in “a novelty T-shirt, the less said of it the better, and pyjama bottoms”, had “walked in through the door as if he owned the place”. He introduces himself as Lindsey Korine and announces he is cold. Rifling, with Pinteresque fuss and deliberation, among the “historic arrangement” of heavy coats left by the previous subtenant, he assumes a new guise for his next role in the narrative. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
All You Need is Kill review – time loop anime offers giant alien flower for Groundhog Day with mechs
New version of the sci-fi day-on-repeat sees a perplexed duo repeatedly battle monstrous plants but leaves you feeling as bored as the protagonist appearsThe second film adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s 2004 eponymous novel, this new one is considerably inferior to Edge of Tomorrow from 2014, Tom Cruise’s own Groundhog D1ay with mechs. It’s not a question of budget or aesthetics – simply a gaping hole of engaging characterisation and inner spark that makes this time loop a grinding chore, rather than a thrilling jailbreak from eternal recurrence.Directors Ken’ichirô Akimoto and Yukinori Nakamura do, to be fair, switch things up. Instead of the original story’s extraterrestrial “Mimics”, they concoct an entirely new big bad: a dormant alien flower, nattily named Darol, that one day begins spitting out what look like killer nasturtiums. The protagonists have been swapped: the point of view in this version is Rita (voiced by Ai Mikami), the female badass working for the United Defense Force that surveys the colossal plant. Exposure to its quartz spores are what forces her to live her imperfect day over and over. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US to stop collecting Trump tariffs ruled illegal by supreme court
Dollar slumps and gold rises as authorities say they will halt levies linked to emergency powers but give no word on refundsBusiness live – latest updatesDonald Trump’s administration has said it will stop collecting tariffs the supreme court ruled were illegal as they were imposed using emergency powers, as investors attempted to digest the US president’s latest volley of replacement levies.The US dollar slumped 0.4% against a basket of other currencies on Monday after the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency said it would deactivate all tariff codes associated with International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) related orders as of Tuesday at midnight (5am UK time). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Russia sanctions on hold as Hungary blocks EU package ahead of fourth anniversary of Ukraine war – Europe live
European foreign policy chief says ‘there is not going to be progress’ on sanctions package todayGermany’s foreign minister Johann Wadephul also said he was “astonished” by the Hungarian position on sanctions, and hoped to discuss this during today’s meeting of EU foreign ministers.But Estonia’s foreign minister Margus Tsahkna was more blunt saying that the failure to adopt the new sanctions would only benefit Russia. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Ethan Hawke fights back tears as surprise BAFTA Best Actor winner Robert Aramayo tells of the 'great impact' the film star had on him at drama school
The actor, 33, beat out a host of huge names to win the coveted gong for his acclaimed performance in biopic, I Swear, based on campaigner John Davidson's life with severe Tourette's syndrome.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics offer little fame or fortune but athletes and stories make them great | Andy Bull
There is often not much elite competition but purity elevates what were once derided as ‘useless’ sports It was the Olympics of politics and penises, of JD Vance being jeered and of Ukrainian bobsledders being banned from the competition, of a convicted criminal beating the teammate she was guilty of defrauding, of Lindsey Vonn crashing out 12 seconds into the race and of Ilia Malinin making one mistake too many, of the internet became momentarily obsessed with slow‑motion videos of a Canadian stroking a curling stone with the tip of his finger, and it was the Olympics where the Norwegian ski‑jump team refused to dignify questions about whether or not they were injecting acid into their genitals.Like I said right at the beginning, Pierre de Coubertin never wanted a Winter Olympics. If that line sounds a little familiar it might be because you read it here a fortnight or so ago. “The great inferiority of these snow sports is that they are completely useless,” Coubertin wrote, “with no useful application whatsoever.” But it’s true, too, that over time he changed his mind. And by the end of the International Olympic Committee’s very first Olympic “winter sports week” at Chamonix in 1924 he gave a speech in which he told his audience that “winter sports are among the purest”. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: CDU faces opposition over sick notes proposal
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's party wants to end the option of employees getting a sick note by phone. Its coalition partner, however, opposes the proposal. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
PETER HITCHENS: Say what you like about Russia, but why are we so hostile towards them and so compliant towards China?
Say what you like about Russia. But it does seem to me that we seem to be extremely hostile to Russia and extremely compliant towards China.

Mail Online
Open 
Mexico burns, with nationwide cartel violence and tourists ordered to take shelter after country's most notorious drug lord is killed in military raid - four months before country hosts World Cup
Images from Puerto Vallarta showed buses exploding into flames and homes being torched after the killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russia hits Odesa ahead of war anniversary
Russia has attacked several regions of Ukraine ahead of the fourth anniversary of the invasion. Meanwhile, Hungary is blocking a 20th EU sanctions package on Russia. DW has more.

BBC UK News
Open 
'Unimaginable' grief after crash kills three
Conor Quinn, 31, John Guy, 48, and 23- year-old Laura Hoy all died at the scene on Saturday evening.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russia hits Odesa ahead of war anniversary
Russia has attacked several regions of Ukraine ahead of the fourth anniversary of the invasion. DW has more.

Mail Online
Open 
Kirsten Dunst suffers an unfortunate wardrobe malfunction as her skirt SPLITS while attending the Universal BAFTA afterparty
Kirsten Dunst suffered an awkward wardrobe malfunction as she arrived at Universal's BAFTA afterparty at Private Members' club Oswald's in London on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Finally warmer temperatures and sunshine will replace dreary skies with UK set for 18C highs this week
The Met Office said highs will build through this week as parts of southern England reach 13C (55F) today, 14C (57F) tomorrow and even 18C (64F) by Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Brit among 19 killed when bus plunges 650ft into ravine in Nepal
Only nine of the dead have been identified so far, they said, adding that the bus was carrying 44 people in all.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ghana takes transatlantic slavery case to UN
Ghana's President John Mahama has received the African Union's backing in pushing the United Nations to recognize transatlantic slavery as the 'gravest crime against humanity.' But will the motion pass?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The AfD is flirting with Nazi history – but moral outrage alone won’t stop the far right | Katja Hoyer
Coincidence or not, the party has timed its congress for the centenary of an infamous Nazi rally. But condemnation didn’t stop Hitler, and it’s not enough nowGermany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) is different from its sister movements across the west.In a country deeply conscious of its own history, the party, now riding high in the polls, has to decide whether it rejects or embraces Hitler as an ideological antecedent. Rather than answering definitively, the party is deliberately opaque. It flirts with the Nazi legacy without explicitly committing to it. Far from putting voters off, this strategic ambiguity cultivates a surprisingly powerful mix of outrage and plausible deniability.Katja Hoyer is a German-British historian and journalist. She is the author of Beyond the Wall: East Germany, 1949-1990. Her latest book Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe comes out in May.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Drives me crazy: Mumbai residents plead for respite from ‘musical road’
Motorway stretch plays music as a safety feature but those close to it say ‘intrusive’ noise is constant and distressingResidents of one of India’s most upmarket neighbourhoods say the country’s first “musical road” has turned their daily lives into a nightmare soundtrack.A stretch of Mumbai’s recently opened Coastal Road seafront expressway has been engineered to play the pulsating Oscar-winning tune Jai Ho from the movie Slumdog Millionaire when vehicles drive on it at lower speeds. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Declares War On Euro Censorship
Trump Declares War On Euro Censorship

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

As European governments ramp up their assault on online freedom, the Trump administration is striking back hard with Freedom.Gov—a portal designed to equip European and British citizens with tools to shatter digital barriers imposed by overreaching bureaucrats.



The move exposes the hypocrisy of so called “safety” laws that geofence truth, forcing websites to block users or demand ID, all while claiming to protect the public from their own thoughts.

A growing number of websites have chosen to simply block users rather than comply with arduous censorship demands in response to Europe’s Digital Services Act and the UK’s Online Safety Act, with many more hidden behind government-mandated age-verification making linking a real-life identity to internet use a prerequisite for access.


Exclusive: The US State Department is developing an online portal to enable people in Europe and elsewhere to see content banned by their governments including alleged hate speech and terrorist propaganda, sources told Reuters https://t.co/IPFDgr54bz
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 18, 2026
The U.S. government is launching a ‘Freedom.Gov’ website that will give British and European visitors the tools to access censorship-free parts of the internet they have been geofenced out of by their own governments in the name of public safety.

The new initiative is the work of the U.S. State Department and led by Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers, who has been a key figure in bringing President Trump’s message of freedom to Europeans in recent months.

Government insiders say the Freedom.Gov portal may feature a Virtual Private Network (VPN) tool to allow European users to bypass domestic controls and claims its use won’t be tracked.

A State Department spokesman is quoted as saying: “Digital freedom is a priority for the State Department, however, and that includes the proliferation of privacy and censorship-circumvention technologies like VPNs.”

A placeholder website for the planned anti-censorship service is already active. The Freedom.Gov site first became active in January and was blank apart from the text “fly, eagle, fly”. Today, an updated landing page proclaims “Freedom is coming. Information is power. Reclaim your human right to free expression. Get ready.”


Le département d'État américain vient de développer un portail en ligne qui permettra aux citoyens de l'Union Européenne de consulter des contenus censurés par leur gouvernement ! https://t.co/fQR6DcSL2F
Le site sera hébergé sur https://t.co/nS7pRHk4Hx
Ils envisagent… pic.twitter.com/7iXrx4fdt2
— Luc Côté (@lucquebec) February 19, 2026
In a crystal-clear message to the censorious British authorities cracking down on internet freedoms, the page also features an animated logo of Paul Revere on his famous 1775 midnight ride, warning the Minutemen of the approaching British troops.

The decision to launch the service will inevitably bring the U.S. into some sort of conflict with European capitals, given the pro-freedom move would force those governments to either defacto accept that their censorship laws will either be openly bypassed by their own citizens with the assistance of Washington, or to block Freedom.Gov, and clarify their opposition to the free dissemination of information.

This puts Washington in the unfamiliar position of appearing to encourage citizens to flout local laws, without stopping to note this is, of course, not actually unfamiliar at all. The United States through the CIA and other agencies maintained a large network of censorship-busting initiatives through the Cold War using the latest technology of the time.

Among those efforts was Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Liberty, sending unfiltered news and other programming through high-powered broadcasts into the Soviet nations behind the Iron Curtain. 

This effort was something of a game of cat-and-mouse between the free West and the Communist East, with Soviet authorities attempting to block out the broadcasts with radio interference equipment of their own.

In those Soviet countries, when the Western radio broadcasts did get through, those who tuned into them faced arrest “or worse” at the hands of the authorities. 

Today, the British government has already started to react to the use of VPNs to circumvent its new internet controls—imposed, it says, for the sake of public “safety”—and is moving to defacto outlaw them.

Pro-Freedom and anti-surveillance campaign group Big Brother Watch responded to the government’s plan to crack down on VPNs, saying: “The Prime Minister’s announcement that the government intends to restrict access to VPNs for under-16s represents a draconian crackdown on the civil liberties of children and adults alike. The only way such restrictions could be enforced effectively would be for VPN providers to require all users to undergo age-assurance measures.”


How will this be policed? That’s right, by making everyone prove their age to use the internet with a digital ID. How about letting parents decide what their kids have access to? https://t.co/AqnyPnGAxS
— m o d e r n i t y (@ModernityNews) February 16, 2026
The group continues, “Having to provide ID or a biometric face scan to access a VPN utterly defeats the point of a technology designed to enhance privacy online. The ability to receive and share information absent state snooping is a vital part of living in a free democracy.”

“There is a reason authoritarian governments in countries such as China, North Korea, Iran, and Belarus ban or restrict VPNs. Anonymity and enhanced privacy allow journalists, whistleblowers, campaigners, and dissidents to communicate securely,” they further urge.

This latest escalation builds directly on the Trump administration’s earlier vows to counter British PM Kier Starmer’s censorship frenzy, where Under-Secretary Sarah B. Rogers warned that America would unleash its full arsenal against threats to X and free speech, treating the UK like Iran if needed. 



Rogers stated: “With respect to a potential ban of X, Keir Starmer has said that nothing is off the table. I would say from America’s perspective, nothing is off the table when it comes to free speech.”

It also extends Trump’s pattern of offering lifelines to UK and European dissidents, including asylum for “thought criminals” prosecuted for silent prayers or online posts challenging mass migration and gender ideology. 

Sources previously confirmed the White House was scouting cases, tying free speech erosion to Britain’s immigration failures.



The far left Spanish government has also openly announced its intention to outright ban X in recent weeks



French PM Emmanuel Macron also referred to free speech as “pure bullshit” this week.


Macron: “Free speech is complete bullshit”
The mask has come off. Anyone surprised?pic.twitter.com/kmF18k0juS
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) February 18, 2026

These countries are in lockstep with the EU which is waging a censorship war against the free internet, particularly X.



Trump is using other means of fighting EU censorship simultaneously.



The Eurocrats have vowed to push back.



Freedom.Gov revives Cold War tactics against modern tyrants, reminding Starmer and EU elites that globalists can’t firewall the truth.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 02:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Saudis Lead Arab Fury After Huckabee Floats 'Greater Israel' Vision
Saudis Lead Arab Fury After Huckabee Floats 'Greater Israel' Vision

Blowback was swift across the Arab world after US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee declared it would be "fine" if Israel took over the entire Middle East, words featured in a Tucker Carlson interview from Jerusalem published days ago.

Governments from Palestine, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Oman issued statements condemning the comments, joined by both the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the Arab League - a rare moment of quick unity for these countries.
Tehran Times

In a joint statement they "express[ed] their strong condemnation and profound concern regarding the statements made by the United States Ambassador to Israel, in which he indicated that it would be acceptable for Israel to exercise control over territories belonging to Arab states, including the occupied West Bank."

Most notably close American ally Saudi Arabia was among the first to blast Huckabee's provocative statement and perspective. Saudi Arabia called it "reckless" and "irresponsible".

Jordan too in a rare moment lashed out at Washington:


“The official spokesperson for the ministry, Ambassador Fuad Al-Majali, rejected these absurd and provocative statements, which constitute a violation of diplomatic norms, an assault on the sovereignty of the countries of the region, and a flagrant breach of international law and the Charter of the United Nations,” the ministry said in a sharply worded response.


Asked whether a passage from the Book of Genesis could be read as granting Israel the right to claim all the land between Egypt's Nile River and Syria's Euphrates, Huckabee didn't hedge. He bluntly and without apology said it would be "fine" if Israel and its military took over the whole Middle East. 

"It would be fine if they took it all," Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist Minister and previously the governor of Arkansas made clear. This led to a wide ranging conversation and back and forth over whether the modern nation-state of Israel, officially founded as a sovereign government on May 14, 1948, is synonymous with the Israel written about in the Old Testament, stretching back thousands of years.

Here's how that contentious segment of the interview unfolded, according to a transcript and commentary: 


Huckabee was asked in an interview with US conservative commentator Tucker Carlson about his understanding of a biblical verse suggesting that land including parts of Egypt, Syria and Iraq had been divinely promised to the Jewish people.

Carlson said that according to the Old Testament, the boundaries would be “basically the entire Middle East.”

He continued: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“Not sure we’d go that far,” Huckabee said in reply. “It would be a big piece of land.”

Carlson then pressed him: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“It would be fine if they took it all,” Huckabee responded, before adding, “I don’t think that’s what we’re talking about here today.”

Carlson asked: “You think it would be fine if the state of Israel took over all of Jordan?”



BREAKING: US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee tells Tucker Carlson that Israel has the Biblical right to take over all of the Middle East.
“It would be fine if they took it all.” pic.twitter.com/BN4fXh03ga
— Tucker Carlson Network (@TCNetwork) February 20, 2026
That's when Amb. Huckabee must have realized he was entering some hot diplomatic water, which would be sure to outrage Washington's Arab allies in the region. And indeed condemnation from Middle East leaders has been swift, but it will probably just stop there - though some could pull their support for anti-Iran operations.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/23/2026 - 02:45

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Steve Rosenberg: Four years into its full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia is feeling the effects
Steve Rosenberg reports on the economic consequences of Russia's war, and how people are coping.

ZDNet News
Open 
VPN tricks and tips you didn't know you needed (but definitely do)
Enhancing your online privacy and security isn't all your VPN can do for you. Discover additional settings, configuration options, and more cool tricks.

The Register
Open 
Work experience kids messed with manager's PC to send him to Ctrl-Alt-Del hell
Rogue user showed them an excellent prank, which they put into production Who, Me?  Welcome to another installment of Who, Me? It's The Register's Monday column in which you confess to crises you caused, and the course corrections that cured the chaos.…

Mail Online
Open 
Brit among 19 killed when bus plunges 650ft into ravine on way to Nepal tourist hotspot
Only nine of the dead have been identified so far, they said, adding that the bus was carrying 44 people in all.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mainstream schools to receive extra funding for SEND pupils
Mainstream schools will receive direct funding to support children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) as part of a £4bn package to make the system more inclusive.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mercury pollution and human health
Coal-fired power plants are a major source of mercury contamination for people and the environment. Here's what you need to know.

Mail Online
Open 
Bombshell report says Epstein stashed photos and hard drives in a half dozen storage units around US
Jeffrey Epstein leased units in Florida and New York. Reports suggested he hired individuals to move documents between them.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I am a 15-year-old girl. Let me show you the vile misogyny that confronts me on social media every day | Anonymous
Objectification, hate, rape threats: the politicians debating online abuse mean well, but to truly understand, they need to see what I seeIf you’re anything like my parents, you probably wouldn’t even understand most of the content that floods my social media, no matter how hard I try to avoid it.Here’s a recent example from Instagram: “Do y’all females ever tell ur homegirls ‘Sis chill you letting too many dudes hit?’” Essentially, that means: “Women – do you ever tell your girlfriends that they’re whores and need to stop letting so many guys fuck them?” The reel, posted by a 19-year-old man, appeared on my Instagram feed without me wanting to see it, or ever interacting with any other similar content. The comments that followed were pure misogyny. “Women see body count as a leaderboard and they try to outdo each other,” was one of them. Translation: all women are competitively promiscuous.The writer is an anonymous teenage web userIn the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.orgIn the UK, Rape Crisis offers support for rape and sexual abuse on 0808 802 9999 in England and Wales, 0808 801 0302 in Scotland, or 0800 0246 991 in Northern Ireland. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Is it true that … men need to consume more calories than women?
Men tend to burn more energy at rest, but other factors also carry weight‘Generally speaking, yes,” says Bethan Crouse, a performance nutritionist from Loughborough University, but it’s not a one-size-fits-all rule. Humans burn calories to fuel everything from movement to sleeping. For the general adult population aged from about 19 to 64, guidance puts daily energy needs at about 2,000 calories for women and 2,500 for men (the requirements are very different in children and adolescents, and tend to fall with age: they decline between 65 and 74, and drop again after 75). But averages hide a lot of variation.One of the main reasons men typically need more calories is that they usually have a higher resting (or basal) metabolic rate, meaning they burn more energy at rest. This is largely explained by differences in body composition – on average, men have more lean muscle mass, while women tend to have a higher proportion of body fat – and muscle burns more calories than fat. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England’s zombies have rapidly descended into collective brain fog in Six Nations | Robert Kitson
After their poorest pair of tournament performances in years, Steve Borthwick’s project is inevitably under scrutinyThe band on the stadium concourse were playing a familiar tune in the immediate aftermath of England’s latest debacle on Saturday. “Zombie! Zombie!” the vocalist sang, ostensibly in tribute to Ireland’s record 42-21 victory at Twickenham. Alternatively he might just have been riffing on the horribly listless, blank-eyed performance that ended England’s Six Nations title hopes for another year.“In your he-ad, in your he-ad…” The old Cranberries anthem, synonymous with Ireland’s 2023 World Cup campaign in France, will be heard a few more times over the next month if Andy Farrell’s team maintain their revitalised excellence and no-nonsense physical intent. For England’s players, though, the past two weekends have been truly grim, a return to the bad old days they had dared to hope were over. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal win battle of derby narratives but tell us little we didn’t already know | Jonathan Wilson
It was a close run thing for a time, but Tottenham’s haplessness prevailed over the idea that the league leaders might be inveterate bottlersIt was a derby but it was also a clash of emerging narratives, which is always a confusing, if thrilling, moment for the great soap opera of the Premier League. In the end, Tottenham’s haplessness prevailed over the idea that Arsenal might be inveterate bottlers, fated to let another title race get away from them. But there was a time in the first half when it seemed like it might be a close-run thing.It shouldn’t have been. Arsenal are better than Spurs. They outplayed Tottenham for long periods. They had 20 chances to Spurs’ six. They won 4-1 and could easily have won by more. But bottling takes no account of that; indeed, the better the side play the more certain it is that they are bottling if they somehow fail to win. And frankly, the fact that Arsenal were level at half‑time was hard to explain as, for the third league game in a row, and fourth in the past six, they conceded within 10 minutes of scoring. Only the vague sense that this is the sort of thing Arsenal do made it seem like they might drop points, but football is rooted in such anxieties. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action
Rio Ngumoha lifts Liverpool, the tussle to be Harry Kane’s England deputy and Chelsea self-destructTottenham weren’t quite as dreadful as they were in losing 4-1 to Arsenal in November, but they were still extremely so, devoid of wit, energy, solidity, creativity, quality, and everything else one would hope to see in a football team. Make no mistake, they are in serious danger of going down and, assessing their fixtures, it is not easy to see where they might win enough points to stay up – all the more so given the form of West Ham and Nottingham Forest who are both playing well. Spurs, on the other hand, haven’t won a league game in 2026 and look like they’ve forgotten how –­ partly, it must be said, because of an awful injury list. So, where does Igor Tudor go from here? It may well be that his only option is to pick both Dominic Solanke and Randal Kolo Muani, get balls into the box, and hope they can make enough of them to save him – which might not be The Tottenham WayTM, but is a lot better than relegation. Daniel Harris Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics briefing: the tooth fairy brings gold as USA end 46-year wait
Jack Hughes lost his front teeth in men’s ice hockey final against Canada before scoring overtime winnerIf the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opening ceremony was a love letter to Italian heritage, the final day was a thunderous operatic finale, a crescendo of clashing sticks, soaring amplitude and the bittersweet tears of legends taking their final bows. As the sun dipped behind the peaks of the Dolomites for the last time this fortnight, the Olympic flame did not just flicker out – it was passed from the high-fashion streets of Milan to the ancient stones of Verona.The final day’s headline act was the men’s ice hockey final which the weight of a 46-year ghost. Pitting the United States against Canada, the contest fell exactly on the anniversary of the 1980 Miracle on Ice. There was no need for a miracle this time, just the surgical precision of Jack Hughes. After Matt Boldy opened the scoring in the first period, the game transformed into a goaltending masterclass by Connor Hellebuyck, who turned aside 40 Canadian shots in normal time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics offers little fame or fortune but athletes and stories make them great | Andy Bull
There is often not much elite competition but purity elevates what were once derided as ‘useless’ sports It was the Olympics of politics and penises, of JD Vance being jeered and of Ukrainian bobsledders being banned from the competition, of a convicted criminal beating the teammate she was guilty of defrauding, of Lindsey Vonn crashing out 12 seconds into the race and of Ilia Malinin making one mistake too many, of the internet became momentarily obsessed with slow‑motion videos of a Canadian stroking a curling stone with the tip of his finger, and it was the Olympics where the Norwegian ski‑jump team refused to dignify questions about whether or not they were injecting acid into their genitals.Like I said right at the beginning, Pierre de Coubertin never wanted a Winter Olympics. If that line sounds a little familiar it might be because you read it here a fortnight or so ago. “The great inferiority of these snow sports is that they are completely useless,” Coubertin wrote, “with no useful application whatsoever.” But it’s true, too, that over time he changed his mind. And by the end of the International Olympic Committee’s very first Olympic “winter sports week” at Chamonix in 1924 he gave a speech in which he told his audience that “winter sports are among the purest”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I am a 15-year-old girl. Let me show you the vile misogyny that confronts me on social media every day | Anonymous
Objectification, hate, rape threats: the politicians debating online abuse mean well, but to truly understand, they need to see what I seeIf you’re anything like my parents, you probably wouldn’t even understand most of the content that floods my social media, no matter how hard I try to avoid it.Here’s a recent example from Instagram: “Do y’all females ever tell ur homegirls ‘Sis chill you letting too many dudes hit?’” Essentially, that means: “Women – do you ever tell your girlfriends that they’re whores and need to stop letting so many guys fuck them?” The reel, posted by a 19-year-old man, appeared on my Instagram feed without me wanting to see it, or ever interacting with any other similar content. The comments that followed were pure misogyny. “Women see body count as a leaderboard and they try to outdo each other,” was one of them. Translation: all women are competitively promiscuous.The writer is an anonymous teenage web userIn the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.orgIn the UK, Rape Crisis offers support for rape and sexual abuse on 0808 802 9999 in England and Wales, 0808 801 0302 in Scotland, or 0800 0246 991 in Northern Ireland. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.htmlDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I paid people with pints and chips’: Georgina Duncan on the prize-winning play she tapped out on her phone
Revisiting the Troubles in 1990s Belfast, Sapling is the result of intensive research in the city. And winning the Women’s prize, says Duncan, ‘is the maddest thing that’s ever happened to me’It took Georgina Duncan a few seconds to realise that Indhu Rubasingham, when announcing the winner of the Women’s prize for playwriting last week, was talking about her drama, Sapling. The 30-year-old recalls the moment: “The first sentence I heard her say, I was like, ‘That could be any of the plays.’ Then I was like, ‘Holy shit! This is the maddest thing that’s ever happened to me.’”The news still hasn’t fully sunk in, but anyone who has read Sapling will not be surprised by Duncan’s victory. Set in Belfast in the 1990s, the play follows 16-year-old Gerry, whose older brother Connor was murdered 10 years earlier by another child. “Someone described it as being about the scar tissue behind grief, which I thought was so eloquent,” Duncan says. The play was born out of her own fear of loss: “Grief is something we all experience in our lives. And it frightens me.” Continue reading...

Guardian F1
Open 
Mercedes magic and Ferrari’s rapid starts: what we learned from F1 testing
George Russell has been purring in a balanced car in pre-season while Aston Martin are still hunting for powerThe big four – Mercedes, Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren – have been at pains throughout testing to claim they are not the top dog, in something of an inverse Mexican standoff, each decrying their own strengths. Undeniably, however, Mercedes emerge from the three pre-season tests looking strong. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
France summons US envoy after ‘violent left’ accusation

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Country diary: Wood pigeon courtship rituals are straight out of Bridgerton | Kate Blincoe
Caistor St Edmund, Norfolk: I can’t tell which birds are male and which are female and, it turns out, neither can they. There is a system, thoughThe flock of 50 or so pigeons lifts from the barn roof as one. The loud clapping of wings makes the horses jump, even though this happens several times a day. I scan the sky for a peregrine but can’t see signs of danger. They swirl once, then settle back on to the corrugated metal roof.These farmyard pigeons are a mix of feral and wood pigeons that hang out happily together. The group will reduce soon. Some of the wood pigeons are probably continental winter migrants who will depart. The remaining males will then leave the communal roost and set up territory ready for the breeding season. Each will defend its area diligently, with that resonant, repetitive cooing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The tragedy of Punch the monkey: why do mother animals abandon their offspring?
Footage of Punch, a seven-month-old Japanese macaque, has gone viral around the world after he was rejected by his mother and formed a bond with a soft toyA baby monkey in Japan has captured hearts around the world after videos of him being bullied by other monkeys and rejected by his mother went viral last week.Punch, a Japanese macaque, was born last July at Ichikawa zoo. He has drawn international attention after zookeepers gave him a stuffed orangutan toy after he was abandoned by his mother. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go red carpet official, William's 'I'm not calm' comment and other key Bafta moments
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Armed man killed after entering secure perimeter of Trump's residence, Secret Service says
The suspect was carrying a shotgun and fuel can when he was killed, officers say, while Trump was in Washington DC at the time.

Sky News Home
Open 
A BAFTA surprise, Ukrainian defiance, GB's record medal haul at Winter Olympics: Your Morning Rundown
Welcome to your Morning Rundown from Sky News - the key stories shaping the day ahead. Tap any headline to read the full story.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump curious why Iran has not 'capitulated', US envoy Witkoff says
Steve Witkoff says the president is puzzled why Iran has not yet compromised in the face of a major US military build-up nearby.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Heat on Ford and will Scotland stop France? - Six Nations talking points
Finn Russell, Antoine Dupont and Robert Baloucoune all impress in round three but George Ford struggles and Tomos Williams' mistake proves costly for Wales.

Sky News Home
Open 
Ukraine War has 'changed fundamentally', commander says, as trench fighting fuses with 21st century
The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.

Mail Online
Open 
All the ways workplaces are unfairly built for men - and women pay the price
Modern offices are still largely built around male defaults - in temperature, furniture, expectations and culture - and women are quietly paying the price. 

Mail Online
Open 
I'm making money from selling old clothes online, do I need to declare this to HMRC?
How would the taxman find out if I made a bit more money than I should do without paying tax?

Mail Online
Open 
I'm struggling on state pension - will taking a part-time job on £12.40 an hour make me better off? STEVE WEBB replies
I am collecting my state pension now, the new one. I can't live on it easily, even after getting help with my rent, so I have been offered a part time job.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman, 25, who was too overweight to have IVF on the NHS lost six stone on fat jabs before welcoming 'Mounjaro baby'
Chloe Rose, a 25-year-old beautician from Stanwell, Surrey, began trying for a baby with her husband Jack in 2019.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer's classroom class war: Fury at plan to means test funding based on parental income
Today Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson will publish a schools white paper that will aim to overhaul special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) provision.

BBC World News
Open 
Kim Jong Un re-appointed leader of North Korea's ruling party
The announcement by the rubber-stamp party congress comes as little surprise given the Kim family's grip since the 1940s.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We’re hungry, there are no jobs’: a South African township’s desperate gold rush
A rumour on social media brought dozens of fortune seekers to a field on the outskirts of mining town SpringsIn a township 30 miles east of Johannesburg, a mechanical digger filled in holes in the dark brown earth, bringing to an end a brief but intense gold rush that saw dozens of fortune seekers descend on what was once a cattle field.Less than two weeks ago, a rumour spread like wildfire on social media: someone had found gold while digging a hole for a fence post in a field on the edge of Gugulethu, an informal settlement of dirt roads and metal shacks on the outskirts of mining town Springs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Send support for schoolchildren in England to be given £4bn overhaul
‘Generational’ reforms are a key moment for Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, and for Keir StarmerChildren with special educational needs have been let down again and again. That ends right nowMinisters will unveil a “generational” overhaul of special educational needs and disabilities (Send) support, pledging £4bn to transform provision in schools in England and warning councils they could lose control of Send services if they fail to meet their legal duties.The reforms are expected to be a key policy moment for Keir Starmer and for the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson – who delayed the changes last autumn after a ferocious backlash from MPs and parents. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
The 102-year-old kitman who left his mark on the World Cup
Charlie O'Leary was the Republic of Ireland kitman, but his influence extends to football across the island.

BBC UK News
Open 
Billions in SEND funding will make schools more inclusive, ministers say
The government is setting out big changes to how children with special educational needs get support.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Scots the biggest challengers and heat on Ford - Six Nations talking points
Finn Russell, Antoine Dupont and Robert Baloucoune all impress in round three but George Ford struggles and Tomos Williams' mistake proves costly for Wales.

UK Government News
Open 
UK deepens major new partnerships at Mining Indaba 2026
New UK initiatives at Mining Indaba deepen critical‑minerals partnerships and back South African SMEs, aiming to drive investment, jobs and inclusive growth.

Ian Visits
Open 
London’s Alleys: Ship Tavern Passage, City of London, EC3
This central London alley, next to Leadenhall Market, is named after a ship but dominated by a swan.Read more ›

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#10960 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NEGHD-Gateshead Tynegate (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 00:05

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:00

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:00

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:38

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:38

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#10962 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NEGHD-Gateshead Tynegate (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 00:05

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:00

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:00

Clear: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:38

Edited: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 06:38

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Russia Today News
Open 
US hails Mexico after cartel kingpin killed

Mail Online
Open 
Jessie Buckley arrives clutching her Best Actress BAFTA after changing into black mini dress following her win as she joins fellow nominees Kate Hudson and Emma Stone at the Universal afterparty
She continued her award season winning streak on Sunday night as she won the BAFTA for Lead Actress at the prestigious ceremony. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Children with special educational needs have been let down again and again. That ends right now | Bridget Phillipson
Too many young people go out into the world ill equipped. We’ll change that: we’ll give more rights and support to them and their familiesSend support for schoolchildren in England to get £4bn overhaulThe advent of fully comprehensive education. Raising the school leaving age to 16. The introduction of a national curriculum. Each of these reforms reflected the growing value we placed on education as a society, and the growing sense that it was critical – not just for individuals, but for the country – that each and every young person was given the best possible chance to succeed.Opportunities to define the future of education don’t come around very often. That is the opportunity we have this week.Bridget Phillipson is secretary of state for education Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Appalling weekend' - Arokodare and Mundle latest players to be racially abused
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle have become the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

Mail Online
Open 
Meet Robert Aramayo: From humble beginnings in Hull to his big break at New York's Julliard School as the I Swear star ends Timothee Chalamet's winning streak and bags two BAFTAs
Robert Aramayo couldn't have appeared more shocked or overwhelmed as he accepted the award for Lead Actor at the BAFTAs on Sunday night. 

BBC World News
Open 
What the killing of drug lord 'El Mencho' means for Mexico
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho", was killed during a security operation to arrest him, Mexico's defence ministry has said.

Sky News Home
Open 
Head of notorious Jalisco New Generation Cartel gunned down in the street as Britons warned to stay indoors
One of Mexico's most notorious drug lords, "El Mencho", has been killed in a military operation carried out by Mexican special forces ‌with "intelligence" support from the US.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hiking on the roof of North Africa: a trek to Morocco’s tallest peak
A fabled boutique hotel in the Atlas mountains makes a stunning base for hikes to spectacular viewpointsComing up the footpath from Imlil, Hussein and I step aside to let a laden mule go past and I look back. On the wooded lower slopes of the valley are clusters of tall houses, some plumed with wood smoke. There appears to be a lot of building work going on, some of it to repair the damage caused by the 2023 earthquake. The sound of a concrete mixer comes cutting through the cool mountain air mixed with birdsong and human voices. Turning back to face south, I can see the Atlas mountains, austere and aloof, a few snow patches on the upper slopes. That’s where we are going, to the top of Toubkal at 4,167 metres, the highest peak in North Africa.Hussein has been a guide in this beautiful Moroccan valley all his adult life. “Most people here work in tourism now,” he says, waving a greeting to a muleteer who is passing us. The man is clutching the tail of his animal to steady himself up the steep track. “Twenty years ago everyone grew walnuts and subsistence food,” Hussein says. “Now we’ve still got walnuts, but we’ve also planted apple trees as a cash crop. It leaves time for the tourist work.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The occult-tinged murder that rocked a quiet Welsh village: best podcasts of the week
BBC’s Crime Next Door examines how a 17-year-old vampire-obsessed student took the life of 90-year-old, Mabel Leyshon. Plus, people who have found a better way to approach lifeThe 2001 murder of 90-year-old Mabel Leyshon at her home on the Welsh island of Ynys Môn (Anglesey) by an assailant who drank her blood made once-friendly neighbours suddenly fearful of one another. Behind the slightly sensationalist title, this podcast from the BBC’s Crime Next Door strand sensitively retells the story, with host Meic Parry contextualising what a case like this meant in a close-knit Welsh community. Hannah J DaviesWidely available, episodes weekly Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ways to Traverse a Territory review – documenting an ancient and disappearing way of life
Gabriela Domínguez Ruvalcaba’s meditative documentary follows the traditional daily rituals of Mexico’s Tzotzil women and their deep connection with natureA poetic calm subsumes Gabriela Domínguez Ruvalcaba’s languid documentary, shot among the mossy hills of Chiapas in Mexico. Here dwells the indigenous Tzotzil community which has kept a pastoral way of life against the march of time. Apart from the odd forest ranger and passerby, Ruvalcaba’s film focuses almost entirely on the Tzotzil women. Together, they tend herds of sheep which they still shear by hand, and use traditional tools for spinning yarns and natural dye for fabrics. Stunning to behold, these traditional practices not only keep cultural heritage alive but also introduce an element of artistry into every day rituals.The women are often pictured in wide shots that take in the majestic landscape that surrounds them, furthering the deep relationship between the Tsotsil community and their environment in which natural resources are treated with care and respect. At the same time, Chiapas is far from an idyll. One woman says that, although they are now treated by nonindigenous people with more respect, discrimination still exists. Another speaks of gender inequality within her community and how her father prevented her from accessing education. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Children with special educational needs have been let down again and again. That ends right now | Bridget Phillipson
Too many young people go out into the world ill equipped. We’ll change that: we’ll give more rights and support to them and their families The advent of fully comprehensive education. Raising the school leaving age to 16. The introduction of a national curriculum. Each of these reforms reflected the growing value we placed on education as a society, and the growing sense that it was critical – not just for individuals, but for the country – that each and every young person was given the best possible chance to succeed.Opportunities to define the future of education don’t come around very often. That is the opportunity we have this week.Bridget Phillipson is secretary of state for education Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wickes kitchen fitting was a recipe for disaster
I’ve been without a hob in my new kitchen for three months after an emergency engineer was forced to disconnect itWhen Wickes installed my new kitchen, I noticed an odd, worsening smell that I put down to the ongoing works.It was nearly two months later that I realised it was gas. My supplier dispatched an emergency engineer, who discovered a leak in the newly fitted hob and categorised it as an immediate danger. The gas supply to the hob was disconnected and Wickes sent a replacement, but no one came to install it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Politics Without Politicians by Hélène Landemore review – power to the people
Can a radical proposal to get rid of career politicians really be implemented?No Donald Trump, Nigel Farage or Liz Truss; no Zack Polanski, Jacinda Ardern or Volodymyr Zelenskyy either. No political parties and no elections, but instead a random bunch of ordinary people chosen by lottery to run the country for two-year spells, like a sort of turbo-charged jury service except with the jurors holding an entire country’s fate in their hands.If you think this idea sounds intriguing and refreshing, you might love Politics Without Politicians, Hélène Landemore’s argument for radically extending citizen power. If you think it sounds like maddening whimsy, ill-suited to the seriousness of the times we are living through – well, we’ll come to that later. But first, to the argument that politics is so broken as to be beyond repair, and that scrapping electoral representation is the best way of fixing it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A new start after 60: I baked a pie every day for a year – and it changed my life
Vickie Hardin Woods was worried she would lose her identity when she retired. Instead, she came up with a plan that made her feel more creative, connected and valued than everWhen Vickie Hardin Woods retired, she knew she needed a plan. “I was worried about losing my carefully crafted identity as a professional. I was looking for something to carry me through that time … What else can I be?”She decided to do – rather than be – something new. Hardin Woods would bake a pie every day for a year, using fresh ingredients local to her home in Salem, Oregon – and she would give each pie away. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Swearing, Marty Supreme … and Prince William: Bafta’s 12 biggest snubs and surprises
This year’s Baftas were a chaotic mix of wild praise and inadvertent insults as the best actor prize was won by an unknown – and one of the nominees seemingly slurred from a man in the stallsHow the night unfolded Peter Bradshaw’s verdict on the Baftas’ winners and losersNews: One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners as Robert Aramayo takes best actorGoing into Bafta night, everybody’s secret hopes for a little British movies that could were centred on folkie comedy The Ballad of Wallis Island. In the event though, Ballad wound up with nothing and I Swear, about Tourettes activist John Davidson stormed the show, capped by a jawdropping win for Robert Aramayo in the best actor category. As the man himself said, it was not to be believed that he’d be heading to the podium ahead of the likes of DiCaprio, Chalamet and Ethan Hawke. You probably have to go back to the mid-1980s and Haing S Ngor’s win for The Killing Fields for someone so unheralded to take the prize. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wunmi Mosaku shows 'ancestral power' with best supporting actress win
Growing up in Manchester, she is the first black British winner of the supporting actress award.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
On the red carpet: Wunmi Mosaku, Paul Mescal and Teyana Taylor among stars at film awards
Stars of Sinners, Hamnet and One Battle After Another were among big names attending the ceremony.

Sky News Home
Open 
Ukraine war has 'changed fundamentally', commander says, as trench fighting fuses with 21st century
The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Powerful winter storm slams US northeast as New York City issues travel ban
The nor'easter storm already has left tens of thousands without power and led to thousands of cancelled flights.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Andrew charged taxpayers for massage when UK trade envoy, claim ex-civil servants
Whistleblower former civil servants claim there was too little scrutiny of Andrew's costs as UK trade envoy.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Do not inhale! How wildfire smoke 'affects the whole body'
Wildfires destroy lives and livelihoods. But survivors and firefighters also suffer long-term harm to their health. A growing body of research suggests particulate matter (PM2.5) in wildfire smoke is a major culprit.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Powerful winter storm slams US north-east as NYC issues travel ban
The nor'easter storm already has left tens of thousands without power and led to thousands of cancelled flights.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Russian embassy in Seoul raises ‘victory will be ours’ banner, drawing complaints
Message seen as reference to Ukraine war could create unnecessary tensions, says Seoul; Russian strikes kill three on eve of war’s fourth anniversary. What we know on day 1,461 Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Violence erupts in Mexico after killing of country's most wanted drug lord El Mencho
The death of the most-wanted Jalisco cartel chief sparks retaliatory violence in at least a dozen states in Mexico.

BBC UK News
Open 
River diesel spill 'clearing' but tap water still not safe to drink
Volunteers have handed out about 40,000 bottles of water since the spillage, which a local petrol station blamed on an attempted fuel theft.

Sky News Home
Open 
Tributes paid to two young 'best friends' found dead in Welsh mountain range
Tributes have been paid to two young hikers found dead in the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia).

Russia Today News
Open 
UK govt response to Israeli football fan ban ‘inflamed tensions’ – report

Deutsche Welle
Open 
A Ukrainian soldier's story: Fading hope on the front line after four years of fighting
Former DW correspondent Kostiantyn Honcharov joined the Ukrainian army in 2022. He describes the grim front-line situation after four years of fighting.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: a furious drama about water companies dumping raw sewage
David Thewlis and Jason Watkins star in Channel 4’s alarming Dirty Business. Plus: Prof Hannah Fry gets to grips with AI. Here’s what to watch this evening9pm, Channel 4In 1999, eight-year-old Heather Preen died after contracting E coli while playing on a beach. Twenty years later, two men in Oxfordshire contacted their water company asking about dead fish in the local river. This striking three-part drama is based on a decade-long investigation into England’s water companies dumping raw sewage. It will have the nation furiously demanding answers. Jason Watkins, David Thewlis, Asim Chaudhry and Posy Sterling star. Hollie Richardson Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The tragedy of Punch the monkey: why do mother animals abandon their offspring?
Footage of Punch, a seven-month-old Japanese macaque, has gone viral around the world after he was rejected by his mother and formed a bond with a soft toyA baby monkey in Japan has captured hearts around the world after videos of him being bullied by other monkeys and rejected by his mother went viral last week.Punch, a Japanese macaque, was born last July at Ichikawa zoo. He has drawninternational attention after zookeepers gave him a stuffed orangutan toy after he was abandoned by his mother. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Should Job-Seekers Stop Using AI to Write Their Resumes?
When one company asked job applicants to submit a video where they answer a question, most of the 300 responses were "eerily similar," reports the Washington Post (with a company executive saying it was "abundantly clear" they'd used AI.)

Job seekers are turning to AI to help them land jobs more quickly in a tough labor market.... Employers say that's having an unintended consequence: Many applications are looking and sounding the same...
It's easy to spot when candidates over-rely on AI, some employers said. Oftentimes, executive summaries will look eerily similar to each other, odd phrases that people wouldn't normally use in conversation creep into descriptions, fancy vocabulary appears, and someone with entry-level experience uses language that indicates they are much more senior, they added. It's worse when they use auto-apply AI tools, which will find jobs, fill out applications and submit résumés on the candidate's behalf, some employers said. Those tend to misinterpret some of the application questions and fill in the wrong information in inappropriate spots. If these applications were evaluated alone, employers say they'd have a harder time identifying AI usage. But when hundreds of applications all have the same issue, they said, AI's role in it becomes obvious.

The article acknowledges that some employers could be using AI tools to screen resumes too. One job-seeker in Texas even says he'll stop submitting an AI-written résumé when the recruiter stops using AI to evaluate them. "You're saying, 'You shouldn't be doing this' when I know a good chunk of them do this!"

Obligatory XKCD.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Sky News Home
Open 
Morning Rundown: The main headlines, best video and what will shape today's news
Welcome to your Morning Rundown from Sky News - the key stories shaping the day ahead. Tap any headline to read the full story.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Five talking points from round three of Six Nations
Finn Russell, Antoine Dupont and Robert Baloucoune all impress in round three but George Ford struggles and Tomos Williams' mistake proves costly for Wales.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump 2.0's Grand Strategy Against China Is Slowly But Surely Coming Together
Trump 2.0's Grand Strategy Against China Is Slowly But Surely Coming Together

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

Casual observers are convinced that Trump is a madman with no method behind his madness, but the reality is that he and his team – collectively known as Trump 2.0 – are slowly but surely implementing their grand strategy against China.

Every one of their moves abroad should be seen as a means to this end.

They want to comprehensively contain China and then coerce it into a lopsided trade deal that “rebalance[s] China’s economy toward household consumption” per the National Security Strategy.



Trump 2.0 doesn’t want to go to war over this, however, which is why they’re careful to avoid replicating the Imperial Japanese precedent.

Piling too much economic-structural pressure on China at once could spook it into lashing out in desperation before the window of opportunity closes. They therefore decided to gradually deprive China of access to markets and resources, ideally through a series of trade deals, in order to imbue the US with the indirect leverage required to peacefully derail China’s superpower rise.

The US’ trade deals with the EU and India could ultimately result in them curtailing China’s access to their markets under pain of punitive tariffs if they refuse. In parallel, the US’ special operation in Venezuela, pressure against Iran, and simultaneous attempts to subordinate Nigeria and other leading energy producers could curtail China’s access to the resources required for fueling its superpower rise. The combined effect thus far is already placing immense pressure upon China to cut a deal with the US.

This is the grand strategic context within which Russia’s talks with the US and Ukraine are taking place.

It too is coming under immense pressure after Trump 2.0 unexpectedly (from their view) perpetuated the proxy war in Ukraine, pioneered a breakthrough to Central Asia through last August’s “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity” across the South Caucasus, and got India to curtail its oil imports.

Russia must now decide whether to cut its own deal with the US or become more dependent on China.


The first scenario could include a resource-centric strategic partnership with the US in exchange for compromising on its maximalist goals in Ukraine, which could deprive China of access to the deposits that the US invests in as explained here.


As for the second scenario, Russia could continue its special operation indefinitely with growing Chinese support in exchange for China receiving unrestricted access to its resources at bargain-basement prices, thus greatly helping China prepare for war with the US.

Framed in this way, reaching a deal with Russia could facilitate China’s strategic surrender to the US without spiking the risk of war, while failing to do so could spike the risk of war if Russia turns itself into China’s raw materials reserve for the aforesaid reason and with the same outcome vis-à-vis the US.

This imbues Putin with leverage vis-à-vis Trump 2.0, but they’re also not desperate to reach a deal with Putin at any cost, ergo why they haven’t coerced Zelensky into his demanded concessions and might never.

If Trump 2.0 can’t cut a deal with Putin, then they’ll prepare for war with China, which their National Defense Strategy envisages given its explicitly declared World War-like military build-up.

Be that as it may, replicating the Imperial Japanese precedent in that case dangerously risks a 21st-century Pearl Harbor, thus imperiling their planned restoration of unipolarity.

It’s therefore better for Trump 2.0 to coerce Zelensky into giving Putin what he wants in order to continue peacefully containing China instead.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 23:35

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
eBay Partners with TrueLayer to Launch Pay by Bank Payments in the UK
In a move set to reshape online checkout experiences, eBay has teamed up with TrueLayer, a European provider of pay-by-bank solutions, to introduce direct bank payments for its UK customers. Announced on 19 February 2026, the collaboration makes pay-by-bank functionality available at eBay’s checkout, allowing... Read More

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nadiya Hussain’s recipes for chicken half-moons and rice paper tteokbokki
Aromatic snacks stuffed full of flavourful chicken mince, and a comforting Korean stewI use a lot of rice paper and always have plenty at home, because it can be used in a wide variety of ways. It’s delicious fried, as are most things! These half-moons are filled with an aromatic chicken mince, while tteokbokki is a Korean dish of chewy rice tubes that are often cooked in a stew. They are not always easy to find, but I love them, so I make my own. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Go to university! No, get a trade! How can young people survive when all the paths are landmined? | Jason Okundaye
Is it to be a degree and heavy debt when graduate jobs are shrinking? Or foregoing a degree, knowing society still worships them? Confused, angry: who wouldn’t beSome months ago, I was at my old university, speaking to prospective sixth-form and college students about taking a degree in the arts and what future careers they could expect. It was a cohort of teenagers from underrepresented backgrounds: all of them had that glint of ambition in their eyes, a desire to better their circumstances. After the talk, they showed me their precocious LinkedIn profiles already advertising their talents to future employers. I expected them to ask what would be of more value out of a degree in the arts or Stem, but I was unprepared for something more bracing: whether it was worth them going to university at all.It is a question that keeps on rearing its head, as the graduate recruitment crisis and crippling student debts paint a picture of a pursuit with diminished returns. Those of us in the orbit of young people increasingly wonder whether we can, in good conscience, encourage them to go and get a degree. The options being presented increasingly look like snake oil, so is it any wonder that young people feel disillusioned and deceived?Jason Okundaye is an assistant Opinion editor at the Guardian Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Saint Joan review – urgency and drive in Stewart Laing’s modernist adaptation of George Bernard Shaw
Citizens, GlasgowNewcomer Mandipa Kabanda plays the Maid of Orleans from obscure teenager to army-commanding conqueror, tearing through dialogue with rare paceWhen George Bernard Shaw’s play was about to open at what is now the Noël Coward theatre, the critic of the Times worried that the playwright would use the story of Saint Joan as an excuse for politicking. Shaw, they wrote, “occasionally delights to criticise the present through the past”. For this unnamed critic, the appeal of Shaw’s Fabian Society moralising had worn thin.When the same writer attended the first night in 1924, with Sybil Thorndike in the lead role, they were relieved to find GBS had played it straight: six scenes describing the progress of the Maid of Orleans from obscure teenager to army-commanding conqueror. Only in an epilogue did the playwright “let himself go” with a modern-day commentary: “It is a nuisance that he is so obsessed with the present moment as to drag it into every period.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC presenting duties to be shared for World Cup – but who will host the final?
Corporation says there are ‘no favourites’ among MOTD trio Kelly Cates, Mark Chapman and Gabby LoganWhen the BBC split the task of presenting Match of the Day between three prominent broadcasters, executives were clear – there were to be “no favourites” among the new hosts Kelly Cates, Gabby Logan and Mark Chapman.That mantra is now being underlined as the corporation prepares its coverage for this summer’s World Cup. It is understood producers are ensuring that the trio have an equal number of programmes to present once the tournament kicks off in Mexico City. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
NASA repurposes Mars Helicopter’s ancient Snapdragon SoC to help Perseverance rover navigate
Upgrade allows robot to travel ‘potentially unlimited distances’ without phoning home for help NASA has revealed it repurposed the processor the Perseverance rover used to communicate with the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter, to help the rolling robot navigate the Red Planet autonomously “for potentially unlimited distances.”…

Russia Today News
Open 
Afghanistan threatens retaliation over Pakistani airstrikes

BBC UK News
Open 
Violence against teachers still 'widespread and harmful'
Teachers of primary and secondary children in Aberdeen said they have been "kicked, bitten and spat at" while in class.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Israel moves towards controversial death penalty revival
Israel's parliament is debating a highly controversial draft death penalty bill. Experts at the UN Human Rights Council say the bill violates the right to life and discriminates against Palestinians.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Four years into its full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia is feeling the effects
Steve Rosenberg reports on the economic consequences of Russia's war, and how people are coping.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Blizzard warnings mount as fierce snowstorm hits US
A powerful winter storm is pressing on in the northeastern United States. Driving bans are in place across large parts of the region as residents brace for blizzard conditions.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germans approve of democracy but say it doesn't work well
Democracy is indispensable, according to most respondents to the new "Germany Monitor 2025" survey. However, many say it is functioning less well than in the past, and rapid change is causing great uncertainty.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Streeting says he takes Leeds maternity care inquiry concerns 'extremely seriously'
The health secretary will meet bereaved families on Monday, as delay into maternity care probe drags on.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Violence erupts in Mexico after drug lord El Mencho killed
The death of the most-wanted Jalisco cartel chief sparks retaliatory violence in at least a dozen states in Mexico.

Russia Today News
Open 
Cartel violence sweeps Mexico after killing of drug lord (VIDEOS)

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Paradise season 2 online from anywhere

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The AfD is flirting with Nazi history – but moral outrage alone won’t stop the far right | Katja Hoyer
Coincidence or not, the party has timed its congress for the centenary of an infamous Nazi rally. But condemnation didn’t stop Hitler, and it’s not enough nowGermany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) is different from its sister movements across the west.In a country deeply conscious of its own history, the party, now riding high in the polls, has to decide whether it rejects or embraces Hitler as an ideological antecedent. Rather than answering definitively, the party is deliberately opaque. It flirts with the Nazi legacy without explicitly committing to it. Far from putting voters off, this strategic ambiguity cultivates a surprisingly powerful mix of outrage and plausible deniability.Katja Hoyer is a German-British historian and journalist. She is the author of Beyond the Wall: East Germany, 1949-1990. Her latest book Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe comes out in May. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
North Korea: world’s most secretive nation lands in spotlight at Women’s Asian Cup | Samantha Lewis
The world’s No 9-ranked team, who have been largely absent from international competitions for over a decade, is reaping the benefits of state-sponsored investmentIn 1986, when Norwegian delegate Ellen Wille stood on stage at Fifa’s annual congress in Mexico and demanded the creation of a World Cup for women, it sparked support from one of the room’s unlikeliest allies. Delegates from North Korea, so the story goes, were inspired by Wille’s speech and returned to Pyongyang with a plan: to use women’s football as a tool to reassert their collapsing power on the world stage.The plan was simple: starting in the late 1980s, the government would invest heavily in the women’s game, inserting football programs into school curriculums, establishing women’s teams in the military where players trained full-time, creating youth talent identification pathways, and constructing brand-new facilities across the country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How an annual ‘wedding flight’ of 1,000 virgin queens is ensuring the revival of Europe’s dark bee
The Belgian ceremony attracts beekeepers from the Netherlands, France and Germany keen to boost dark bee numbers and stop the spread of the hybrid honeybeeEvery summer, 1,000 virgin queens descend on the Belgian town of Chimay. During the “wedding flight”, a male attaches to the female. His endophallus (penis equivalent) is torn off and he falls to the ground and dies. Mission accomplished.Beekeepers come and pick up their fertilised queens in small colourful hives, driving them back home, sometimes more than 300km away. They will use the genetic material gathered in south Belgium to build new colonies in the Netherlands, France and Germany. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We watched 9/11 from the rooftop, blasting the music out’: how The Disintegration Loops became a requiem for the attacks
It is an epic piece of music that literally falls apart – and it perfectly captured the end-of-days chaos after the tragedy. Composer William Basinski and musician Anohni recall its febrile birth in New York’s avant-garde scene‘Do you remember me phoning and saying, ‘Get over here! You won’t believe what’s happened!’” William Basinski is reminiscing with his old friend Anohni about the summer of 2001, when he made a startling discovery. Out of work and at a loose end, the experimental composer had decided to digitise some recordings he’d made in the early 1980s – snippets of orchestral music and muzak he found on shortwave radio stations. He was planning to add his own instrumentation, but as the tapes started playing on a loop he noticed something else was happening: the music was gradually degrading. The recordings were so old that the iron oxide particles were falling off the tape as they played. Soon, there would be nothing left but crackles and then silence.It was every musician’s worst nightmare. But for Basinski it was like striking gold. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Swearing, Marty Supreme … and Prince William: Bafta’s 12 biggest snubs and surprises
This year’s Baftas were a chaotic mix of wild praise and inadvertent insults as the best actor prize was won by an unknown – and one of the nominees seemingly slurred from a man in the stallsHow the night went down Peter Bradshaw’s verdict on the Baftas’ winners and losersNews: One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners as Robert Aramayo takes best actorGoing into Bafta night, everybody’s secret hopes for a little British movies that could were centred on folkie comedy The Ballad of Wallis Island. In the event though, Ballad wound up with nothing and I Swear, about Tourettes activist John Davidson stormed the show, capped by a jawdropping win for Robert Aramayo in the best actor category. As the man himself said, it was not to be believed that he’d be heading to the podium ahead of the likes of DiCaprio, Chalamet and Ethan Hawke. You probably have to go back to the mid-1980s and Haing S Ngor’s win for The Killing Fields for someone so unheralded to take the prize. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Why are homegrown apples in the UK more expensive than imported bananas?
From flooding in Peru to the fight for fair wages, a lot more goes into the price of fruit than what supermarkets charge consumers forWhy have apples increased so much in price in the UK? They seem much more expensive than bananas, even though many are homegrown, and so don’t have to travel halfway around the world.It seems bananas (sorry) that fruit grown in the country where it is being sold costs more than produce which has been shipped thousands of miles. But, unlike other goods, such as petrol, the price we pay at the supermarket for fresh food has become detached from the cost of getting it there. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Arab world condemns Huckabee comments about Israel having claim to Middle East
Multiple Muslim-majority nations criticized U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee for suggesting that Israel could claim the entire Middle East during an interview with conservative commentator Tucker Carlson. In a joint statement, the foreign affairs ministries of Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bahrain, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Kuwait, Lebanon and...

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Monday, Feb. 23
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 23.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 23, #518
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 23, No. 518.

Sky News Home
Open 
Tributes paid to two young 'best friends' found dead in Eryri mountain range
Tributes have been paid to two young hikers found dead in the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia).

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Andrew charged taxpayers for massage when envoy, claim ex-civil servants
Whistleblower former civil servants claim there was too little scrutiny of Andrew's costs as UK trade envoy.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Australian prosecutors consider reopening British girl's cold case disappearance
Cheryl Grimmer's family have been petitioning police to consider the new evidence they say they've found.

Sky News Home
Open 
Police searches continue amid call for 'treason' probe into Andrew's Epstein links
Searches of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's former home are expected to continue on Monday - as a Conservative former security minister called for a "treason" probe into Andrew's links to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Sky News Home
Open 
'The Kalashnikov is the most effective tool': Fighting the enemy in the sky with Ukraine's 'drone hunter' unit
The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.

Sky News Home
Open 
How have four years of war in Ukraine changed its two central figures?
Throughout 1,460 days of the Ukraine war, two figures have remained central.

Mail Online
Open 
Bookshops warn of business rates struggle
More than 400 bookshops will see average annual increases of £4,563 in rates from April as a result of Chancellor Rachel Reeves' Budget decisions.

Mail Online
Open 
Sweet puppy named Jet Blue after cruel owner abandoned her at airport check in finds forever home
An adorable two-year-old goldendoodle named Jet Blue was left behind by his heartless owner at a Nevada airport. Now, he found a forever home with the police officer who came to his rescue.

Mail Online
Open 
FEBRUARY 23: As Neptune's long pilgrimage through Pisces has dissolved certainties, one sign should be kind to themselves, says JEMIMA CAINER, while another should be courageous
Last week we experienced a once-in-a-lifetime celestial event. Today, not much may appear to be different.

Mail Online
Open 
Selena Gomez makes rare swimsuit appearance in pink one-piece on yacht during girls' trip to Mexico
The 33-year-old pop star - who's a third-generation Mexican-American - enjoyed the five-star Rosewood luxury resort, Las Ventanas al Paraíso, in San José del Cabo on Saturday

Mail Online
Open 
Family fishing day ruined by vegan activist as she snatches dad's rods in front of child: 'Destroy this torture equipment'
A controversial vegan activist has sparked a tense confrontation at Bondi Beach after removing a father and son's fishing rods, prompting the man to grab back his gear as his young child watched in shock.

Mail Online
Open 
Gordon Ramsay surprises daughter Tilly during her kitchen shift in his Michelin-star restaurant after insisting 'I'm not a big fan of that nepo-baby stuff'
Gordon Ramsay surprised his daughter Tilly during her kitchen shift at his restaurant days after revealing his stance on the nepo-baby tag.

Mail Online
Open 
Coronation Street star Vicky Myers reveals her 'real age' as gobsmacked fans beg her to 'share the secret' to her youthful appearance
Fans of Coronation Street were left in shock after learning the real age of a beloved actress, begging her to 'drop the secret' to her youthful appearance.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Turnbull performs a DJ set as she joins glamorous Kelly Osbourne at the Royal Ascot Millinery Collective party during London Fashion Week
The girlfriend of Romeo Beckham, 24, looked effortlessly chic in an all-black ensemble featuring capri leggings and a matching zipped top.

Mail Online
Open 
Wiz Khalifa gives son Sebastian 13 punches to stomach to celebrate his birthday ahead of festive bash
Khalifa advised his son, who he shares with ex-wife Amber Rose, 42, to tense up and breathe out when he took the hits.

Mail Online
Open 
Sara Cox is being eyed up by Strictly Come Dancing's bosses as a 'good fit' to replace Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly
The Radio 2 DJ, could take over as the BBC's show host after Claudia and Tess left the BBC show last year, according to The Sun.

Mail Online
Open 
Pub owner who was dropping merry punters home in his taxi for donations and raising money for charity is banned from offering lifts by 'jobsworth' council
Paul Hartfield, who owns the Flying Horse in Smarden in Ashford, Kent, has raised hundreds of pounds for charity by asking customers to make small donations to the MND Association.

Mail Online
Open 
Firefighters battling large blaze at £10.7million specialist school which has been burning for hours
Around 15 fire engines and specialist appliances rushed to The Promise School in Okehampton, Devon, after emergency services were alerted to the inferno at about 3.30pm.

Mail Online
Open 
Jessie Buckley beams from ear to ear as she changes into black mini dress following her Lead Actress win as she joins fellow nominees Kate Hudson and Emma Stone at the Universal BAFTA afterparty
She continued her award season winning streak on Sunday night as she won the BAFTA for Lead Actress at the prestigious ceremony. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Duterte refuses to attend ICC pre-trial hearing, as former Philippine leader’s ‘drug war’ case begins
Duterte, 80, is accused of crimes against humanity over an anti-drugs crackdown in which thousands of people were killed in south-east Asian countryThe pre-trial hearing for former Philippine leader Rodrigo Duterte for his alleged role in a deadly “drug war” is set to begin at the international criminal court on Monday, despite his refusal to attend the proceedings.Duterte, 80, who was arrested in Manila and flown to The Hague last year, is accused of crimes against humanity over an anti-drugs crackdown in which thousands of people were killed. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Watch: Bafta for Buckley, a rare sort of bear and other highlights
One Battle After Another took home best film and Hamnet also saw success in the outstanding British film category.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go red carpet official, a 'strong language' apology and other key Bafta moments
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

TechRadar News
Open 
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms season 1 ending explained: what happens to Dunk and Egg, will there be a season 2, and more

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AWS Engineers Allowed An AI Tool to Act...Then The Cloud Unit Went Down
AWS Engineers Allowed An AI Tool to Act...Then The Cloud Unit Went Down

Amazon’s cloud arm has experienced two recent service disruptions tied to the use of its own AI-powered coding systems, stirring debate inside the company over how quickly such tools should be rolled out, according to FT.

One incident in mid-December led to a 13-hour interruption affecting a tool customers use to analyse AWS spending. Engineers had permitted the Kiro coding assistant to implement changes, and the system determined the fix was to “delete and recreate the environment.” An internal review later characterized the episode as an “outage.”

Staff familiar with the events said it marked the second time in a matter of months that an AI tool played a central role in a production issue. “We’ve already seen at least two production outages [in the past few months],” said one senior AWS employee. “The engineers let the AI [agent] resolve an issue without intervention. The outages were small but entirely foreseeable.”



AWS, which accounts for the majority of Amazon’s operating income, is investing heavily in AI systems that can act independently on human instructions and hopes to market them to customers. The episodes have highlighted the potential downsides of granting such tools significant autonomy.

FT writes that Amazon pushed back on suggestions that the technology was to blame, describing it as a “coincidence that AI tools were involved” and arguing that “the same issue could occur with any developer tool or manual action.” The company added: “In both instances, this was user error, not AI error,” and said it had found no indication that AI increases the likelihood of mistakes.

According to Amazon, the December event was an “extremely limited event” affecting a single service in parts of mainland China, while the other disruption did not touch any “customer facing AWS service.” Both were far smaller than a separate 15-hour AWS outage in October 2025 that disrupted customers including OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

Kiro, introduced in July, was promoted as moving beyond “vibe coding” to generate software from structured specifications. After the December incident, Amazon said it added tighter controls, such as required peer reviews and additional training, while maintaining that customer uptake of its AI coding products remains strong.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 23:00

The Hill
Open 
Trump posts about Olympics on closing day of games
President Trump praised Team USA as the Winter Olympics concluded Sunday. Just over 30 minutes after the U.S. men’s hockey team knocked off Canada in the gold medal game, the president wrote on his Truth Social platform, “LOTS OF WINNING!!!” Later Sunday afternoon, Trump touted the U.S. winning 12 gold medals, the most ever for...

The Hill
Open 
C-SPAN puts speculation on identity of caller to rest: 'It was not the president'
C-SPAN said Sunday that the man who called in to the network on Friday was not, in fact, President Trump.  “Because so many of you are talking about Friday’s C-SPAN caller who identified himself as ‘John Barron,’ we want to put this to rest: it was not the president,” the network wrote on the social...

The Register
Open 
Infosys chair says AI will clean up legacy systems – then make more of them
PLUS: China’s sword-wielding humanoid robots; Australian court swamped by AI filings; Vietnam’s 25km overwater drone delivery; And more! Asia In Brief  Infosys chairman Nandan Nilekani has said the advent of AI means organizations no longer have any excuse to retain their legacy systems.…

Sky News Home
Open 
Fighting the enemy in the sky with Ukraine's 'drone hunter' unit
The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.

Sky News Home
Open 
Fighting death in the sky with Ukraine's drone hunter unit
The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.

BBC World News
Open 
Who was El Mencho, Mexico's most wanted man?
The BBC's Will Grant examines the power wielded by the Jalisco drug cartel chief, who died after a clash with security forces assisted by US intelligence.

Russia Today News
Open 
EU demands ‘full clarity’ from Trump on tariffs

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Violence erupts after Mexican security forces kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Death of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, one of world’s most wanted drug traffickers, sets off wave of disorder across several Mexican statesWho was El Mencho, the former police officer who co-founded an ultraviolent cartel in Mexico?One of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed. The operation set off a wave of violence, with torched cars and gunmen blocking highways in more than half a dozen states.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Raspberry Pi Stock Rises Over Its Possible Use With OpenClaw's AI Agents
This week Raspberry Pi saw its stock price surge more than 60% above its early-February low (before giving up some gains at the end of the week). Reuters notes the rise started when CEO Eben Upton bought 13,224 pounds worth of shares - but there could be another reason. "The rally in the roughly $800 million company has materialised alongside social-media buzz that demand for its single-board computers could pick up as people buy them to run AI agents such as OpenClaw."


The Register explains:

The catalyst appears to have been the sudden realization by one X user, "aleabitoreddit," that the agentic AI hand grenade known as OpenClaw could drive demand for Raspberry Pis the way it had for Apple Mac Minis. The viral AI personal assistant, formerly known as Clawdbot and Moltbot, has dominated the feeds of AI boosters over the past few weeks for its ability to perform everyday tasks like sending emails, managing calendars, booking appointments, and complaining about their meatbag masters on the purportedly all-agent forum known as MoltBook... In case it needs to be said, no one should be running this thing on their personal devices lest the agent accidentally leak your most personal and sensitive secrets to the web... In this context, a cheap low-power device like a Raspberry Pi makes a certain kind of sense as a safer, saner way to poke the robo-lobster...
The Register argues Raspberry Pis aren't as cheap as they used to be "thanks in part to the global memory crunch. Today, a top-specced Raspberry Pi 5 with 16GB of memory will set you back more than $200, up from $120 a year ago."

"You know what's cheaper, easier, and more secure than letting OpenClaw loose on your local area network? A virtual private cloud..."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Admin Proposal Could Bring Drastic Changes To Asylum Process
Trump Admin Proposal Could Bring Drastic Changes To Asylum Process

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times,

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is proposing an “overhaul” of the asylum process, according to a Friday announcement.



The proposed 220-page rule, which is likely to face legal challenges, aims to reduce the number of immigrants filing fraudulent asylum claims for work authorizations in order to better focus on security checks.

It also intends to cut back processing times and the massive backlog of pending claims, according to a statement.

If finalized, the rule would be among the most sweeping changes to the asylum system and work authorization process in decades.

“We are proposing an overhaul of the asylum system to enforce the rules and reduce the backlog we inherited from the prior administration,” a DHS spokesperson said.

“Aliens are not entitled to work while we process their asylum applications.”

Employment authorizations would be paused until processing times for asylum applications reach 180 days or lower, according to the proposal.

DHS said based on current wait times, it could take between 14 and 173 years to reach that 180 day or lower level to resume issuing work permits.

The proposal also would create more restrictive criteria for asylum-based work permits and bar illegal immigrants from receiving new permits or renewing existing ones.

“For too long, a fraudulent asylum claim has been an easy path to working in the United States, overwhelming our immigration system with meritless applications,” a DHS spokesperson said.

More than 17 million individuals applied for asylum in the United States between 2021 and 2024.

According to the proposal, an exception would exist for individuals who entered the United States illegally out of fear of persecution, torture, or another urgent reason but notified American authorities within 48 hours of crossing the border.

Long wait times on asylum applications have resulted in historic highs for employment authorization applications.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services reports more than 1.4 million pending asylum claims, which is equal to the population of New Hampshire, the news release said.

DHS’s proposed rule falls in line with President Donald Trump’s executive order, Protecting the American People Against Invasion, signed on his first day back in office a year ago.

“Over the last 4 years, the prior administration invited, administered, and oversaw an unprecedented flood of illegal immigration into the United States,” his order read.

Several Biden-era executive orders on immigration were revoked by Trump’s directive, becoming the first of his actions of his second term to make good on his 2024 presidential campaign promise of launching the largest deportation operation in American history.

Finalizing DHS’s new proposal on the asylum system could take months or years. Public comment will be accepted on the rule for 60 days after the agency formally publishes it in the Federal Register on Monday.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 21:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China Is Cracking Down On "Stock Market Influencers" As AI Surge Overheats Market
China Is Cracking Down On "Stock Market Influencers" As AI Surge Overheats Market

Chinese regulators are tightening oversight of aggressive influencer promotions for investment products, worried that an AI-driven tech surge — encouraged by state policy — is overheating the market, according to Nikkei.

In late January, media reports said the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) penalized a fund firm, identified as Fund D, for paying unqualified online influencers to market its products. According to a CSRC document cited in reports, the firm "induced investors with incompatible risk tolerance" to buy high-risk offerings and "neglected professional compliance in pursuit of short-term growth." The regulator did not comment.

The move reflects broader unease over market volatility. Nearly 4.91 million new mainland stock accounts were opened in January — the biggest monthly jump since October 2024 — as money poured into smaller tech names linked to AI, chips and aerospace themes.

While the blue-chip CSI 300 is up just 0.7% this year, smaller-stock gauges have surged. The CSI 500 has climbed 11.2%, and Shanghai’s tech-focused STAR board index has gained 10.5%. Some individual shares have skyrocketed: industrial equipment supplier Wuxi Autowell Technology is up over 120% year to date, while Puya Semiconductor and Focuslight Technologies have more than doubled. Supcon Technology has risen 65%.

One international brokerage analyst said the rally reflects limited alternatives — with low bond yields and weak property prices — rather than company fundamentals.



Speculation has also shaken commodity-linked products. Units of a Shenzhen-listed silver futures fund doubled in January, trading well above their underlying value as online guides touted quick arbitrage profits. UBS SDIC Fund Management halted new subscriptions on Jan. 28 "to protect the interests of fund unitholders," and the exchange suspended accounts engaged in "abnormal trading behavior." As silver futures fell, the fund’s units hit their 10% daily down limit for five consecutive sessions.

Beijing has promoted equity markets to advance technological self-reliance, easing listing rules and accelerating approvals for strategic sectors. Chip startup Moore Threads, for example, saw its shares jump fivefold on debut in December.

Nikkei writes that at the same time, officials are trying to contain excess speculation. At a January work conference led by CSRC chairman Wu Qing, regulators pledged to curb "excessive speculation and market manipulation" and "resolutely prevent drastic market fluctuations." Managing retail sentiment is critical, as individual investors account for more than 80% of daily turnover.

Jason Lui of BNP Paribas said stability is key to attracting long-term capital. High volatility, he noted, risks drawing investors in at the wrong moments and reinforcing perceptions of boom-bust cycles.

Earlier, the CSRC fined influencer Jin Yongrong and barred him from the securities market for three years, accusing him of earning over 41 million yuan by promoting stocks to inflate prices before selling. Finance app Snowball Finance banned Jin and more than 20 other accounts.

Exchanges have also raised the margin trading deposit ratio from 80% to 100% to cool leverage. Meanwhile, ETFs associated with state-backed investors saw notable outflows, prompting speculation about official strategy.

Local governments continue pledging support for emerging sectors such as commercial aerospace, new materials and the so-called "low-altitude economy," referring to drone services. A new national five-year plan is expected in March.

Regulators may face fresh tests after trading resumes on Feb. 24 following the Lunar New Year break, with robotics demonstrations set for the Spring Festival Gala and reports that DeepSeek and other AI developers plan new model releases during the holiday.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 21:50

Mail Online
Open 
I've had a UTI every three months for 40 years - including one that nearly killed me. I was gaslit by doctors, it affected my sex life and left me distraught. Now, aged 45, I've finally found a solution...
Standing in the middle of a Brussels sprout feild in Norfolk, I felt a familiar twinge of pain. Immediately realising what was happening, I cursed quietly. I knew there was nothing I could do.

Mail Online
Open 
Nothing hurts quite like being let down by a female friend. These are the eight types you should NEVER be friends with (including the one to drop at 50)
There was a moment in the new season of regency romance Bridgerton which made my blood boil (and not in a sexy way). Lady Danbury asks the Queen if she can retire as one of her ladies-in-waiting.

Mail Online
Open 
How to stop 'retired husband syndrome' from ruining your marriage: Here's the expert guide to dealing with it - before your partner drives you completely mad
Your husband has just retired, and without the stress of work, plus the well-earned freedom after years of toil, you imagine this will be a fresh, exciting time for the both of you. How wrong you are.

Mail Online
Open 
Step off the weight loss rollercoaster with these simple psychological tricks to silence your inner demons: DR MAX PEMBERTON'S new book reveals his 3-step guide to healthier eating - everyday
Losing weight should ­herald the beginning of a new life of better health and fitness. But coming off weight-loss jabs or an extreme diet needs to be approached carefully.

Mail Online
Open 
Why a viral AI-generated fight scene between Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt could be the death knell for Hollywood as we know it
Set to a dramatic score with taut sound effects, professional stuntwork, deftly shot and edited camerawork, it has all the hallmarks of a big-budget Hollywood studio production.

Mail Online
Open 
STEPHEN GLOVER: Kemi is right about student loans. They're a conspiracy against the young - and Reeves is now twisting the knife
Kemi Badenoch asserts that student loans 'increasingly feel like a scam', She's right. The Tory leader was referring to one type of loan but what she said applies to all of them.

Mail Online
Open 
SHANE WATSON: This exact £95 shirt from With Nothing Underneath is so flattering Kate Middleton broke her biggest fashion rule to wear it (and here's the £19.99 alternative too!)
This particular shirt, or one very like it, is the one all discerning women in fashion are wearing right now. It's a perfectly plain, mannish cut, but it just happens to have hit the spot in early 2026.

Mail Online
Open 
I thought I'd died in a car crash - but I was brought back to life by angels. Here's what they told me about the afterlife...
They say that time stands still when you experience shock or trauma and that's how it was for me when I crashed my car, causing it to overturn and start rolling at 70mph along the A14.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to clear your MacBook cache (and why it makes such a big difference)
If your Mac or MacBook is feeling sluggish, clearing the cache can boost speed and free up space. Here's how to do it.

ZDNet News
Open 
10 tiny gadgets I never leave home without (and how they work)
If you're a fan of portable, practical, and affordable tools, my favorite options deliver fantastic value.

ZDNet News
Open 
This new Linux desktop runs like an app on your existing desktop - and I highly recommend it
Orbitiny is a modular desktop environment that feels like it's running natively - but it's not.

ZDNet News
Open 
I compared the best soundbars from Samsung and Sonos, and here's my preference
Upgrading your home theater with one of the best soundbars isn't a decision you make on the fly. Here's what to consider first.

ZDNet News
Open 
Goodbye, VirtualBox - I found a better, more reliable VM manager for Linux
Virt-Manager is a free and easy-to-install virtual machine manager. Here's how it compares to the popular VirtualBox.

ZDNet News
Open 
My new favorite Anker charger has a useful smart display (and won't break the bank)
The Anker Nano 45W can even activate charging modes designed to help extend battery lifespan.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why most touchscreen gloves will fail you during the cold winter - but these won't
These Cross Point Gear Sports gloves are the best outdoor gloves with touchscreen support that I've used.

ZDNet News
Open 
I replaced my pricey Apple Thunderbolt 5 cables with cheaper alternatives - and don't regret it
The Satechi Thunderbolt 5 Pro cable is a fantastic cable at a palatable price. Here's how they stack up to Apple's.

ZDNet News
Open 
Finally, a technical advancement to my favorite old-school measuring tool - and it's on sale
The Mileseey Xtape1 is a full-on laser-enabled measuring computer. Here's how I use it.

ZDNet News
Open 
How much longer EV batteries last compared to phone batteries - and why I'm not worried
Electric car batteries are surprisingly robust, and mileage is not a good indicator of battery wear, according to a recent study.

ZDNet News
Open 
The right way to run an internet speed test (and how I use the results for better Wi-Fi)
After a decade of testing PCs, routers, and home networks, I know what causes slow speeds and can help you optimize your internet connection.

ZDNet News
Open 
We battery-tested 17 popular phones in the lab - this model beat Apple and Samsung
For ZDNET's latest Lab Award, we tested the top mainstream phones to find out which one had the best battery life.

ZDNet News
Open 
Your iPhone's USB-C port is surprisingly versatile - 14 features beyond charging
USB-C turns your iPhone into a hub for work, media, and storage. Here's how it can do more than just power up your device.

UK Legislation
Open 
The A85 Trunk Road (Oban) (Temporary Prohibition of Specified Turns) Order 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Rates (Regional Rates) Order (Northern Ireland) 2026
This Order fixes the amount of the regional rates for the year ending 31st March 2027. It fixes 30.79 pence in the pound as the amount of the regional rate to be levied on the rateable net annual values of hereditaments (“non-domestic regional rate”) and 0.5559 pence in the pound as the amount of the regional rate to be levied on the rateable capital values of hereditaments (“domestic regional rate”).

UK Legislation
Open 
The Optical Charges and Payments (Amendment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2026
These Regulations further amend the Health and Personal Social Services (Optical Charges and Payments) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1997 (“the principal Regulations”) which provide for payment to be made, by means of a voucher system, in respect of costs incurred by certain categories of persons in connection with the supply, replacement and repair of optical appliances.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Rates (Temporary Rebate) (Amendment) Order (Northern Ireland) 2026
Article 31D of the Rates (Northern Ireland) Order 1977 provides for a rebate on occupied rates for certain retail properties.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Rates (Exemption for Automatic Telling Machines in Rural Areas) Order (Northern Ireland) 2026
Article 42(1F) and (1G) of the Rates (Northern Ireland) Order 1977 (“the 1977 Order”) provide that there shall be distinguished in the NAV list as wholly exempt from rates any automatic telling machine which is situated in a rural area during a relevant year ending before such date as is specified by an Order made by the Department of Finance. 1st April 2027 is specified by this Order.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Energy Bill Relief Scheme and Energy Bills Discount Scheme (Amendment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2026
These Regulations amend the Energy Bill Relief Scheme (Northern Ireland) Regulations 2022 (S.I. 2022/1106 NI) (the “EBRS NI Regulations”) and the Energy Bills Discount Scheme (Northern Ireland) Regulations 2023 (S.I. 2023/454 NI) (the “EBDS NI Regulations”).  The amendments achieve the same effects in relation to both Regulations.

The Hill
Open 
Patel responds to Olympics backlash, says he was invited to locker room after hockey game
FBI Director Kash Patel dismissed critics of his presence in the locker room during the U.S. men’s hockey team’s celebration of their gold medal game victory over Canada on Sunday. Patel, who was in attendance in Milan, Italy, was captured on camera in Team USA’s locker room on the final day of the Winter Olympics....

Mail Online
Open 
MPs will threaten to escalate their scrutiny of the Royal Family amid Andrew saga
MPs will return to Parliament today following a week-long recess with a clamour for answers over the Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor scandal.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Pakistan claims 70 militants killed in strikes along Afghan border
Islamabad blames Afghan-based militants for a surge in deadly suicide bombings in the country and said 7 camps belonging to the Pakistani Taliban were targeted.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Russian embassy in Seoul raises ‘victory will be ours’ banner, drawing complaints
Message seen as reference to Ukraine war could create unnecessary tensions, says Seoul; Hungary to block new EU sanctions against Russia amid oil feud. What we know on day 1,461 Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Kim Jong Un re-appointed leader of North Korea's ruling party
The announcement by the rubber-stamp party congress comes as little surprise.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Italy: Remains of St. Francis displayed in Assisi
Nearly 400,000 people pre-registered to see the bones of St. Francis of Assisi in the hilltop town in Italy's Umbria. The remains of Italy's patron saint date back to the 13th century.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs host Alan Cumming thanks audience for understanding as Tourette's sufferer yells racial slurs during ceremony before leaving halfway through
I Swear details the life of campaigner John, now 54, who was diagnosed with Tourette syndrome at a time when little was known about the condition.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Russian embassy raises ‘victory will be ours’ banner over Seoul embassy, drawing complaints
Message seen as reference to Ukraine war could create unnecessary tensions, says Seoul; Hungary to block new EU sanctions against Russia amid oil feud. What we know on day 1,461 Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Infamous photo of shamed Andrew being driven from police station after 11 hours in custody is framed and 'put on display at the Louvre'
The infamous photo of shamed Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor being driven from a Norfolk police station has been hung in the Louvre Museum by activists. 

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tariff costs and refunds take the spotlight as Home Depot, TJX and other retailers report earnings this week
The Supreme Court struck down most of the Trump administration’s tariffs, but uncertainty remains for store chains.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. stock futures, dollar and bitcoin drop as investors await clarity on Trump’s latest tariff plans
U.S. stock-index futures declined Sunday, as investors grappled with the implications of Friday’s Supreme Court ruling that overturned most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Jeremy Schneider: Openclaw is Spam, Like Any Other Automated Email
Open Source communities are trying to quickly adapt to the present rapid advances in technology. I would like to propose some clarity around something that should be common sense.



Automated emails are spam. They always have been. Openclaw (and whatever new thing surfaces this summer) is no different.



Policies saying automated emails/messages are banned – including anything AI generated – are not only common-sense policies, they aren’t even a change from how we’ve always worked. This includes automated comments on github issues, automated PRs, automated patch submissions, and even any kind of automated review. Copilot automated reviews, snyk, etc – are ok if and only if it’s configured by the owners of the repo/project. Common sense.



Enforcement of these policies – more than ever – depends on trust and relationships. I do think, for example, that non-native-english-speakers should be allowed to use AI to help them check their english. Used responsibly, AI tools can help a lot with language learning! Your grammar checker is probably using some kind of LLM anyway. But I’m saying that a human always presses the “send” button on the message, and this human is responsible for the words they sent. If moderators suspect automated messages, every open source project should have a policy they can cite for blocking/banning the account.



Tomas Vondra’s article “the AI inversion” is the latest of many good and thought-provoking pieces I’ve read – it’s well worth the read – although he’s getting at deeper problems than what I’m writing about here – and he has very good reasons to have a much deeper level of concern for the impact of AI tooling on open source communities. These are interesting times and we don’t have all the answers yet.



A few more things I’ve recently read, which I think are good:




CloudNativePG AI policy – https://github.com/cloudnative-pg/governance/blob/main/AI_POLICY.md



Linux Foundation AI Policy – https://www.linuxfoundation.org/legal/generative-ai



Oxide RFD – https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/rfd/0576



Russ Cox on GoLang and AI – https://groups.google.com/g/golang-dev/c/4Li4Ovd_ehE/m/8L9s_jq4BAAJ?pli=1



Jordan Tigani about AI @ MotherDuck – [long painful URL for LinkedIn post]




.



I’ve also been writing bits and pieces of partial thoughts over the past week or two – my short blog post about the Scott Shambaugh situation (And thank you to Kim Bruning for the thoughtful email exchanges about this blog! Please continue to keep this old guy on his toes, reasoning through things, and challenging his thinking!)



There have been a bunch of LinkedIn messages too; capturing them here:












Mischa van den Burg wrote a LinkedIn post about whether ChatGPT in interviews is a red flag

Brad Nicholson said “As someone that knows how to find that sort of info command line and has done so many, many times – I’d go to chat first, google second and the man pages last because the first two get me what I need faster than reading a man page.”.



Replying to Brad: “I do the same thing, but we also understand this is in descending order of hallucination likelihoodone of my favorite ways to use agents is to write me a script that demonstrates a behavior they claim… by the time the script is working, the claim is often significantly revised – and at present i still usually have to prevent them from making the test script work by moving the goalposts”.





Replying to Phil Eaton’s post about Russ Cox’s perspective on golang project approach (policy?) for AI:

Russ Cox’s message is here



i said “yes – the section here is a good excerpt” (referring to Phil’s excellent choice of what to screenshot).





Replying to Kelsey Hightower’s post “Generative AI is a slop generation machine by default. You have to put in a lot of work to get something of quality from it.”

It’s the same work I did before, just shifted left. I’m iterating on low-level detailed design spec and autogenerating code, rather than iterating on the code and trying to keep design docs in sync. I think of it as writing more of my code in detailed prose, flowcharts, sequence diagrams, and pseudocode – rather than writing it directly in the programming language and manually keeping the design docs in sync. But it’s the same work, minus time spent on syntax (which was never where the value was)..



Replying to Adam Jacob’s comment: I think it remains true that “you get out what you put in”.





Replying to Jordan Tigani’s post about MotherDuck AI policy:

Tricky topic. I built a deeply detailed design for overhauling how auth works on a core platform…* 291 prompts across 15 sessions over 3 days, comprising ~1,226 lines of prompt text* final design document is 1,904 lines of markdown — a ratio of roughly 2 lines of human-written prompt for every 3 lines of design document outputa review of the full transcript showed a number of interesting characteristics of my prompts, including:* Persistent effort to simplify the tool’s initial proposals* Directly contributing critical domain knowledge* Frequent insistence on precise terminologyOverall I’m satisfied and I think it’s a good doc that would have taken me 10x longer otherwise (especially research portions) – but I acknowledge mixed feelings.one thing that’s clear: i obviously got the AI game backwards. i thought it was scored like golf, where a lower ratio of input-to-output is a better score.





My own LinkedIn post: “We need to re-think OSS contribution attribution in light of AI. More than ever, it’s important for committers to give credit on where the ideas are coming from. A committer can copy/paste someone else’s ideas into their own prompts, and they need to give appropriate credit.”.



Mentioning the Oxide RFD in my reply to Daniel Gustafsson:

my thought is around crediting someone who participates meaningfully in the discussion, even if they didn’t author the final patch. a wall of text email that nobody entirely reads is not a meaningful contribution – but there are lots of ways AI can be part of a well-written email. it’s hard to find the objective line though about what this means.email moderation is going to get harder. trust and relationships were always important, and now even more so. i think using AI for research or to assist with writing is a net positive – as long as the final written product is concise and well-communicated and understood by the author. AI is the tool, but it’s finally still a human relationship. oxide’s RFD is good https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/rfd/0576 – responsibility, rigor and empathy remain fundamental. old-school email lists might have a small advantage here. and i hope we can stay open to new people who seem interested to join and contribute.





Replying to Adam Jacob’s post: “If you’re thinking to yourself “this 10x increase in capability to create software doesn’t matter, because writing software was never the bottleneck”, you’re drawing the wrong conclusions from a true statement. … [skipping middle section, but go read the whole thing bc its good] … We will rebuild everything around this capability. Everything.”

what people miss: it doesn’t need to be 10x more code, it can be same code 10x faster (which often is very little code — but it would have taken much longer to get it right)but Adam why are you telling everyone? i’m having so much fun right now, and once everyone figures it out then we’ll be back to the usual drill….





I wrote a LinkedIn post about how I think moderation will get harder, then clarified a bit in reply to Andreas Scherbaum by pointing to Tomas Vondra’s blog because that’s much better than what I said.




.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Waste Of The Day: The Story Of Robosquirrel
Waste Of The Day: The Story Of Robosquirrel

Authored by Jeremy Portnoy via RealClearInvestigations,

Topline: Dr. Frankenstein was able to bring his monster back to life using just rusty tools and a cramped workshop. Researchers in California needed taxpayer funding from the National Science Foundation for their own reanimation experiment, with results that were not quite as impressive.



In 2012, San Diego State University and the University of California, Davis used part of a $325,000 grant to create “Robosquirrel,” a taxidermied squirrel with a robotic tail. The money would be worth $459,000 today. 

That’s according to the “Wastebook” reporting published by the late U.S. Senator Dr. Tom Coburn. For years, these reports shined a white-hot spotlight on federal frauds and taxpayer abuses. 



Coburn, the legendary U.S. Senator from Oklahoma, earned the nickname "Dr. No" by stopping thousands of pork-barrel projects using the Senate rules. Projects that he couldn't stop, Coburn included in his oversight reports.   

Coburn's Wastebook 2012 included 100 examples of outrageous spending worth more than $18 billion, including the origin story of Robosquirrel.

Key facts: Robosquirrel was built to study the predator and prey relationship between squirrels and rattlesnakes.

The researchers placed Robosquirrel in a cage with live squirrels so that it would smell like the real thing. Then, they placed the robot in a field with snakes and moved it along a track to make it appear alive.

The snakes were fooled. One even bit the robot’s head. But when researchers heated up Robosquirrel’s mechanical tail or made it wag, the rattlesnakes got scared and slithered away.



The project was still in its early stages in 2012. The researchers promised that more animals — including RoboKangarooRat and Robosquirrel 2.0, which could throw rocks at rattlesnakes — would soon arrive, though it’s unclear if they ever materialized. 

Robosquirrel made national headlines in Forbes, CNN and more after Coburn included it in his Wastebook. San Diego State University told ABC News that only part of the $325,000 grant was spent on taxidermy. The rest went to undergraduate research training.

Search all federal, state and local salaries and vendor spending with the world’s largest government spending database at OpenTheBooks.com. 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 20:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Floats Joint Oil Investment, Sanctions Rollback Wish-List Ahead Of Next US Talks
Iran Floats Joint Oil Investment, Sanctions Rollback Wish-List Ahead Of Next US Talks

The Trump administration may have finally blinked, also knowing that yet another US-led war in the Middle East remains deeply unpopular among the American people. No attacks have come this weekend, as some were predicting last week, as President Trump appears to be exercising some level of patience and restraint, for now at least.

"Iran has indicated it is prepared to make concessions on its nuclear program in talks with the U.S. in return for the lifting of sanctions and recognition of its right to enrich uranium, as it seeks to avert a U.S. attack," Reuters is freshly reporting.



Tehran has said from the start of Trump's military pressure campaign that it's willing for serious negotiations centered on its nuclear program, but that it cannot ever abandon or limit its formidable ballistic missile arsenal: 


However, Reuters is reporting for the first time that Iran is offering fresh concessions since their talks ended last week, when the sides appeared far apart and heading closer to military conflict. Analysts say the move suggests Tehran is trying to keep diplomacy alive and stave off a major U.S. strike.

The official said Tehran would seriously consider a combination of sending half of its most highly enriched uranium abroad, diluting the rest and taking part in creating a regional enrichment consortium - an idea periodically raised in years of Iran-linked diplomacy.

Iran would do this in return for U.S. recognition of Iran's right to "peaceful nuclear enrichment" under a deal that would also include lifting economic sanctions, the official said.


Russia has already offered to do just this, and China too could potentially play a role in receiving Iran's enriched uranium.

It looks like a US attack is unlikely even in this coming week as well given that "U.S. and Iranian negotiators are expected to meet in Geneva on Thursday to discuss a detailed Iranian proposal for a nuclear deal. A senior U.S. official told Axios on Sunday morning the Trump administration expects to receive the proposal by Tuesday" - ahead of the next round of planned talks.

Also, Tehran is now floating the prospect of joint US-Iran oil and gas investment as part of the nuclear deal currently under negotiation. Hamid Ghanbari, deputy director for economic diplomacy at Iran’s foreign ministry, said Sunday that shared energy development could anchor a more durable agreement.


Oman Confirms New Talks Between US and Iran
Oman's Foreign Minister, Badr Albusaidi, confirmed that the US and Iran will meet in Geneva on Thursday to continue negotiations to reach an agreement on the tension between them. pic.twitter.com/ROVHBgRTQq
— loolan podcast (@Loolanpodcast) February 22, 2026
“For the sake of an agreement's durability, it is essential that the U.S. also benefits in areas with high and quick economic returns,” Ghanbari said, according to Fars news agency - effectively pitching hydrocarbons as the glue to hold any deal together.

He added that “the country must be prepared for all scenarios,” while “at the same time seriously pursuing the negotiations.” Beyond oil and gas, Ghanbari floated mining, urban development, and even aircraft purchases as potential areas of cooperation - a shopping list that in reality reads like a sanctions rollback wish list. Many Western analysts are calling it totally unrealistic.

Meanwhile, Washington appears to be hedging its bets. Even as talks continue, the Pentagon is reinforcing its posture in the Persian Gulf, with a second aircraft carrier reportedly en route. Iran in turn has warned its "finger is on the trigger" and that US bases in the region would come under retaliatory attack.


Lol even the Jerusalem Post is calling out Witkoff for his absolute bs here https://t.co/h5sdB9Wh5I pic.twitter.com/TDGf5S7Qth
— Dave DeCamp (@DecampDave) February 22, 2026
The message from both sides is clear: prepare for a deal, or prepare for escalation - and Washington is keeping the carriers fueled and nearby just in case.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 20:40

ZDNet News
Open 
We lab-tested TCL's flagship Mini LED TV with pricier OLEDs - and the results impressed
We tested the TCL QM9K in the ZDNET lab and found it to shine best after some out-of-the-box adjustments.

ZDNet News
Open 
I changed 13 settings on my TV to dramatically improve its performance - here's how
Smart TVs are basically computers now, with their own hidden hacks, tips, and tricks. Here are a few I frequently rely on.

ZDNet News
Open 
Samsung unveils Galaxy S26 Ultra deal for $900 off ahead of Unpacked 2026 - how it works
Samsung's newest products will be unveiled next week, but you can already save with this reservation offer.

ZDNet News
Open 
Samsung Unpacked 2026: 5 biggest rumors we found on Galaxy S26 Ultra, Buds 4 Pro, more
From the Galaxy S26 Ultra to new earbuds (and maybe even smart glasses), here's what we expect Samsung to showcase at Unpacked next week.

ZDNet News
Open 
Own a TCL TV? Changing these 12+ settings made a big difference for mine
Your TCL TV's settings out of the box aren't that great. A few quick changes can make a surprising difference at home.

ZDNet News
Open 
You're cleaning your desktop PC wrong: 5 cheap and easy ways to maintain it
Cleaning your PC will keep your hardware running smoothly for years. Here's how I recommend doing so.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why my favorite Windows laptop for business users isn't a Lenovo ThinkPad or Dell XPS
Asus' ExpertBook Ultra is a joy to use, with Intel's flagship Panther Lake chip and a vibrant OLED display. It's the one to beat in 2026.

ZDNet News
Open 
5 surprise products we could see at Samsung Unpacked 2026 - and are worth getting excited about
Unpacked 2026 this week could feature a few curveballs, like a new type of foldable.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to clear your TV cache (and why it makes such a big difference)
Clearing your TV's cache greatly reduces stuttering and improves performance. Here's how to do it across the most popular brand TVs.

ZDNet News
Open 
I replaced my Bose QC Ultra with Sony XM6 earbuds for a month - and I'm nearly sold
Sony returns with the WF-1000XM6 flagship earbuds, and they compete with their predecessor as much as they do with Bose and Apple.

ZDNet News
Open 
Verizon will give you Google's newest Pixel 10 model for free right now - how to qualify
Google's new Pixel 10a is a solid midrange phone with flagship features. Through Verizon, you can walk away with a 'free' mobile device.

ZDNet News
Open 
Google's new Pixel 10a may be the affordable iPhone alternative I've been waiting for
The Pixel 10a arrives with a flatter design, new camera tricks, and satellite emergency support.

ZDNet News
Open 
I reclaimed 10GB of storage space on my Pixel by disabling this one background app
If your Google Pixel is running out of storage space, turning off the AI Core is one way to reclaim GBs. Know this before you do.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why mini PCs are suddenly a smarter buy than expensive laptops - this model is proof
Lenovo's IdeaCentre Mini X is a compact PC with efficient everyday performance, making it a worthwhile alternative to today's desktops and laptops.

ZDNet News
Open 
Oura Ring vs. Apple Watch: I wear both wearables on a daily basis, and here's my advice
Still deciding between Oura's smart ring and an Apple Watch? I've tested them both - here's which you should buy.

ZDNet News
Open 
Waking up to a $250 alarm clock was more effective than I expected - but it's far from perfect
Dreamie is the smart alarm clock newcomer that wants to get you off your phone and to sleep. Here's my buying advice after a week of testing.

ZDNet News
Open 
This is the most important laptop accessory no one talks about - and I'm not changing my mind
The HyperDrive Next USB4 M.2 PCIe enclosure lets NVMe SSDs perform at their best, ensuring fast transfer speeds for large files.

ZDNet News
Open 
I did not expect this Samsung laptop to be my new favorite MacBook Pro alternative - but it is
Samsung's Galaxy Book6 Ultra pairs strong multi-core performance with nearly a full day's worth of battery life. It looks great, too.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Regtech HYPR Introduces Context-Based Attestation, Enhancing Identity Verification Beyond Traditional Checks
Regtech HYPR has recently indicated that in an environment being impacted by sophisticated cyber threats, organizations face mounting challenges in verifying identities during critical processes like hiring, onboarding, and account recovery. Fraudsters exploit stolen credentials, forged documents, synthetic identities, and advanced deepfakes to impersonate candidates... Read More

Gizmodo
Open 
A Recent 3D Printing Breakthrough Brings Us One Step Closer to You Downloading a Car
Researchers at MIT successfully printed a working motor in a just few hours.

Russia Today News
Open 
Pro-Palestinian activists call for protest at former Nazi concentration camp

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 26.3.1 Update for iPhones Coming Soon as 'Apple Experience' Nears
Apple's software engineers are testing iOS 26.3.1, according to the MacRumors visitor logs, which have been a reliable indicator of upcoming iOS versions.





iOS 26.3.1 should be a minor update that fixes bugs and/or security vulnerabilities, and it will likely be released within the next two weeks.



Last month, Apple released iOS 26.2.1 with bug fixes and support for the second-generation AirTag. Likewise, it is possible that iOS 26.3.1 will include support for some of the new products that Apple is expected to announce in the first week of March, such as the iPhone 17e, but this is merely speculation at this point.



Apple is reportedly planning a three-day stretch of product announcements from Monday, March 2 through Wednesday, March 4. Selected journalists and content creators are expected to receive hands-on time with the products at an "Apple Experience" in New York, London, and Shanghai on Wednesday, March 4 at 9 a.m. Eastern Time.



We have not confirmed if there will be any corresponding updates, such as macOS 26.3.1.



iOS 26.3.1 will be a stopgap update between iOS 26.3, released earlier this month, and iOS 26.4, which will likely arrive in late March or early April. While it lacks the personalized version of Siri, iOS 26.4 is shaping up to be a relatively significant update that adds many new features across Apple Music, Apple Podcasts, CarPlay, and more.Related Roundups: iOS 26, iPadOS 26Related Forum: iOS 26This article, 'iOS 26.3.1 Update for iPhones Coming Soon as 'Apple Experience' Nears' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Kim Jong Un re-elected leader of North Korea's ruling party in rare meeting
Kim's re-election was the "unanimous desire of all the delegates", state media reported.

Mail Online
Open 
ZIA YUSUF: I'll protect Christian heritage and secure our borders
The most sacred duty of any government is to protect its people. You've worked hard, paid your taxes, played by the rules. It's the least you should expect. Yet the Tories betrayed you.

Mail Online
Open 
Reform is planning to create a British version of Trump's ICE unit and deport 300,000 illegal migrants a year
Nigel Farage's party will today vow to create a British version of Donald Trump's US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) unit to deport up to 288,000 migrants per year.

Mail Online
Open 
'Will we lose? Of course not', Zelensky vows on fourth anniversary of Russia's invasion as he says Putin has already started WWIII
Speaking in Kyiv Volodymyr Zelensky dismissed claims that Ukraine must concede territory to secure peace and warning that Vladimir Putin has already ignited a global conflict.

Mail Online
Open 
Thousands of men with prostate cancer are being denied 'a quality of life-preserving' treatment by the NHS
Focal therapy, a non-invasive treatment which targets cancerous cells while avoiding damaging surrounding tissue, was introduced to the UK in 2006..

Mail Online
Open 
Fromage affray! Moment French farmers use cheeseboards as weapons during brawl with visitors at agriculture show
Fighting erupted at France's premier farming show on Sunday night, resulting in 15 arrests after a violent dispute saw exhibitors and visitors turn heavy cheeseboards into improvised weapons.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mexican drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation - sparking retaliatory violence
One of Mexico's most notorious drug lords, "El Mencho", has been killed in a military operation carried out by Mexican special forces ‌with "intelligence" support from the US.

Russia Today News
Open 
Pro-Palestinian activists call for protest at Nazi death camp memorial

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles tries to put on a brave face as he is pictured leaving church today amid Andrew scandal
The monarch looked grim-faced as he walked out of St Mary Magdalene Church in Sandringham following a service on Sunday morning.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Powerful winter storm slams US northeast as NYC issues travel ban
The nor'easter storm already has left tens of thousands without power and led to thousands of cancelled flights.

Mail Online
Open 
German countess who called Epstein 'Daddy' forged connections at the heart of Whitehall
Nicole Junkermann, 50, stepped down as a trustee of a cancer charity last week after revelations of her friendship with Epstein, during which she called him 'daddy' and 'baby'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Duterte refuses to attend ICC pre-trial hearing, as former Philippine leader’s ‘drug war’ case begins
Duterte, 80, is accused of crimes against humanity over an anti-drugs crackdowns in which thousands of people were killed in the South-east Asian nationThe pre-trial hearing for former Philippine leader Rodrigo Duterte for his alleged role in a deadly “drug war” is set to begin at the international criminal court on Monday, despite his refusal to attend the proceedings.Duterte, 80, who was arrested in Manila and flown to The Hague last year, is accused of crimes against humanity over an anti-drugs crackdown in which thousands of people were killed. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
NASA Delays Launch of Artemis II Lunar Mission Once Again
A failure in the helium flow of the SLS rocket has prompted NASA to delay the Artemis II moon mission. Rather than March 6, the launch is now targeted for April.

Mail Online
Open 
German countess who called Epstein 'Daddy' forged connections at the heart of Whitehall
Nicole Junkermann, 50, stepped down as a trustee of a cancer charity last week after revelations of her friendship with Epstein, during which she called him 'daddy' and 'baby.'

Mail Online
Open 
ANDREW LOWNIE: I've spent years campaigning for greater Royal transparency. Without a new spirit of openness, the monarchy won't survive
It has been a week of firsts for the man once known as Prince Andrew and for our monarchy. No senior royal has been arrested on such serious charges since the ill-fated Charles I in 1647.

Mail Online
Open 
MPs' will threaten to escalate their scrutiny of the Royal Family amid Andrew saga
MPs will return to Parliament today following a week-long recess with a clamour for answers over the Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor scandal.

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS on The Walsh Sisters: These raucous, chaotic sisters are so addictive I couldn't tear myself away
Their dramas are so heady and addictive that, when the first part ended on a shocking cliffhanger, I couldn't help diving into the next. Like eavesdropping when you shouldn't, it's hard to tear yourself away.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew 'would arrive late and only talk to young women' when he was acting as trade envoy - annoying figures around the world
Insiders from the former coalition government claimed yesterday that Andrew was widely viewed as a liability, but terminating his official role was considered politically sensitive.

Mail Online
Open 
Women who say they were drugged by a French civil servant on job interviews and forced to wet themselves have spoken out about their shame until 'police said they were not to blame'
Christian Nègre, a former senior civil servant and human resources director at France 's culture ministry, is under investigation over claims he spiked 248 women with a powerful diuretic.

Mail Online
Open 
Lib dem council boss is filmed 'scruffing' pet in front of children at park
In footage posted online, Salisbury City Council leader Samuel Charleston can be seen allegedly grabbing his dog by the neck as she hangs in the air.

Mail Online
Open 
Tables turned on the Pro-Palestine 'Jew hunters': Activists planning to go door-to-door asking locals to boycott Israeli products are foiled by counter-protesters making them hide in pub
Members the Bristol Apartheid-Free Zone (AFZ) campaign had planned a door-knock encouraging people to boycott Israeli businesses amid the country's ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza.

Mail Online
Open 
Violinist who was left disabled by faulty Pilates machine wins payout after going undercover in gym
Maya Meron, 45, played for top orchestras in venues across the world until a serious accident at a gym ended her career.

Mail Online
Open 
Met Police facing questions over whether officers were used 'as bouncers' at Epstein party house as ex-PM Gordon Brown asks if Andrew used RAF bases to see paedophile
Newly released emails suggest taxpayer-funded protection officers were instructed to provide security for a party thrown at the paedophile's home in honour of the royal.

Mail Online
Open 
Dating app fraudster posed as an ill woman and then blew his fortune from victim on his horse
Adam Mowle, 34, set up a fake account on a dating app in which he pretended to be a woman named Jenna Smith and was contacted by an unsuspecting man.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess Andre says seeing dad Peter with his wife Emily gives her hope 'true love does work' as she speaks out on mum Katie's shock marriage
The reality star, 18, has broken her silence on mum Katie's whirlwind marriage after she revealed she'd tied the knot with so-called businessman Lee Andrews in Dubai last month.

Mail Online
Open 
Luna the cockapoo is reunited with her owner after two-day, 40-person rescue mission when she fell down 500ft cliff
Rescue teams had to carry out a 'coordinated pincer movement' on a cliff face to catch the dog.

Mail Online
Open 
Paul McCartney's daughter Stella reveals her mother Linda's 'pain' over 'ridicule' from critics after Beatles split
Linda McCartney was a founding member of her husband's band Wings, which launched in 1971, just a year after McCartney announced he was leaving The Beatles.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. stock futures drop as investors await clarity on Trump’s latest tariff plans
U.S. stock-market futures declined Sunday, as investors grappled with the implications of Friday’s Supreme Court ruling that overturned most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Mail Online
Open 
Wealthy French couple are ordered to tear down rooftop planters at their £2.5m Notting Hill home after bitter planning spat with 'hostile' neighbours
A wealthy French couple who decked out their £2.5million home with colourful metre-high planters have been ordered to tear them down after a bitter planning spat with 'hostile' neighbours.

Mail Online
Open 
Victim reveals how she was left with flesh-eating disease after GP did not see her face-to-face then fled to India
Oriana McDonald had found a lump on her stomach and discovered her temperature was 36.6C, so she went to see a local GP, Dr Nupur Mittal.

Mail Online
Open 
UK holidaymakers can't switch off - as nearly half say going phone-free is 'extreme'
Despite being surrounded by iconic landmarks or pristine beaches on holiday, many Brits can't get away from their mobile phones.

Mail Online
Open 
'Extreme day trips' are getting more popular - but the average cost for Brits is more than £500
Brits are opting for whirlwind short breaks more and more, where they jet off to an exotic place for an extremely short period of time. But they come with a hefty bill.

Mail Online
Open 
Gavin & Stacey's Joanna Page reveals 'massive arguments' with husband James Thornton - but says hosting a podcast together is 'better than therapy' after four years in separate beds
Gavin & Stacey star Joanna Page has admitted parts of her 26-year marriage to James Thornton have been 'rubbish' - revealing she spent four years sleeping in a separate bed.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman reveals she only pays £450 to LIVE in a five-star hotel in Southeast Asia
Former Love Islander Diamanté Laiva left the UK last year and managed to find a great deal on a hotel in Southeast Asia.

Mail Online
Open 
Time to ditch the wine fridge and Le Creuset! The middle class kitchen gadgets that 'posh' folk would never actually buy because they're 'too new money', according to interiors expert
Speaking to the Daily Mail, Jordana Ashkenazi has revealed how 'anything that feels overly showy, heavily branded or designed' makes the space feel like 'a showroom'.

Mail Online
Open 
Paul Mescal is left red faced as host Alan Cumming calls him out for being on his phone and messing up his gag during the 2026 BAFTAs
Paul Mescal was left very red faced at the 2026 BAFTAs as host Alan Cumming called him out for being on his phone during the star-studded ceremony. 

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Investment Platform eToro Reports Latest Financial Results, Stock Surges But Still Down Considerably from ATH
This past week, eToro Group Ltd. (NASDAQ: ETOR) reported its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 financial results on February 17, 2026, showcasing a resilient performance in a mixed market environment. The multi-asset trading platform highlighted its transition into a publicly listed company while advancing its vision... Read More

Mail Online
Open 
'Smart T-shirt' could detect hidden heart conditions and save hundreds of thousands of people from an early death
Hundreds of thousands of people could benefit from a 'smart T-shirt' that can detect hidden heart conditions, scientists have announced.

Mail Online
Open 
LAURA CRAIK's Baftas fashion verdict: Paddington Blue shades it as best colour of the night
Erin Doherty, 33, chose an avant garde origami-inspired gown by Louis Vuitton, a label also favoured by Emma Stone, 37, who wore a navy column dress with a keyhole detail.

Mail Online
Open 
Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie's steamy Wuthering Heights smashes $150M at global box office
The gothic romance has surged past $150 million worldwide, cementing itself as one of the year's biggest theatrical surprises just two weekends into its run.

Mail Online
Open 
Greenland says 'No thanks' after Trump plans to send 'great hospital boat' to Arctic territory as US crew member evacuated from submarine
Greenland rejected Donald Trump's offer to send a 'great hospital boat' to the territory after the Danish military evacuated a crew member from a US submarine for medical care.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Trio killed in three-car crash in Northern Ireland that also saw three rushed to hospital
Three people, including a young mother and father, have died following a horrific three-car crash in Northern Ireland that saw three more victims rushed to hospital for emergency treatment.

Mail Online
Open 
The Lady review by CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Fergie and her killer dresser is a story so close to the headlines it almost feels like the news...
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Anything you want... you got it! The eerie voice of Roy Orbison, echoing as Sarah Ferguson guzzles champagne and tries on rails of designer clothes.

Mail Online
Open 
Cartel chaos in Mexico sparks major security fears among World Cup fans
The World Cup is facing fresh turmoil after cartel violence erupted in Mexico, prompting the Canadian government to urge people not to visit its co-host for the soccer showpiece.

Mail Online
Open 
ANDREW PIERCE: Is Starmer's 15th U-turn on the horizon?
Having already presided over 14 U-turns, when will Sir Keir Starmer execute his 15th? The answer is unfolding before our eyes. It lies in the PM's ­decision to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.

Mail Online
Open 
Songwriter reignites feud over Robbie Williams' hit song Angels almost 30 years after its release
A songwriter who claims he wrote Robbie Williams' mega hit Angels has reignited his feud over the track almost 30 years after its release.

Mail Online
Open 
Gunman shot dead at Mar-a-Lago was 'obsessed with Epstein cover up,' came from family of 'avid Trump supporters'
Gunman Austin Tucker Martin comes from a family of Trump supporters but may have been radicalized by the administration's handling of the Epstein files

The Hill
Open 
35 million people under blizzard warning as storm hits Northeast
A major winter storm is sweeping through the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Sunday, with conditions expected to persist into Monday.  The National Weather Service (NWS) says that the system will produce heavy snow over the northern mid-Atlantic into the Northeast from Sunday evening into Monday. Snowfall rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour will...

The Register
Open 
Linus Torvalds: Someone ‘more competent who isn't afraid of numbers past the teens’ will take over Linux one day
Emperor Penguin releases kernel 7.0 rc1 with some numerological musings Linus Torvalds has pondered his professional mortality in a self-deprecating post to mark the release of the first release candidate for version 7.0 of the Linux kernel.…

Mail Online
Open 
Leonardo DiCaprio gives a sheepish thumbs up after his latest BAFTA loss makes history
Leonardo DiCaprio gave a sheepish thumbs up after missing out yet another BAFTA award at the star-studded ceremony at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner cheers up boyfriend Timothee Chalamet at BAFTAs dinner as his path to Oscars glory hits a bump in the road
The couple made a cosy appearance in the audience at London's Royal Festival Hall, before joining a string of stars at a post-awards show dinner.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
The Papers: William 'not calm, but carrying on' after Andrew arrest and a Bafta for Buckley
The fallout from Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's arrest continues to dominate Monday's papers.

Mail Online
Open 
All the viral moments from BAFTAs 2026: From Robert Aramayo's father's elation at his Best Actor win and Paddington's 'epic' cameo to Alan Cumming's toe-curling snacks gag
One Battle After Another proved to be the big winner with six gongs, while Jessie Buckley won Best Actress, and Robert Aramayo earned a surprise honour for Best Actor for I Swear.

Mail Online
Open 
Robert Aramayo's dad Michael jumps and cheers while pounding his fists in the air as he excitedly celebrates his son's shock BAFTA win
Robert Aramayo was overcome with emotion after he received the accolade for Lead Actor at the BAFTAs on Sunday night. 

BBC World News
Open 
How budget fast fashion is taking small-town India by storm
More Indians in small towns are now shopping for affordable brands instead of unlabelled goods in the bazaars.

Mail Online
Open 
Who is Robert Aramayo? From humble Hull to his big break at New York's Julliard as I Swear star beats Timothee Chalamet and wins two BAFTAs at this year's ceremony
Robert Aramayo couldn't have appeared more shocked or overwhelmed as he accepted the award for Lead Actor at the BAFTAs on Sunday night. 

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson 'introduced her goddaughter to Epstein after his release from prison over child sex crimes'
The shamed former Duchess of York gave the late sex offender contact details for Poppy Cotterell, the daughter of her former lady-in-waiting, adding 'Over to you!'

Mail Online
Open 
Council boss is filmed 'scruffing' pet in front of children at park
In footage posted online, Salisbury City Council leader Samuel Charleston can be seen allegedly grabbing his dog by the neck as she hangs in the air.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs viewers blast Alan Cumming's 'dreadful and cringe-worthy' opening monologue and British snacks gag as they declare 'who the hell is in charge of this?'
The presenter, 61, took to the stage at London's Royal Festival Hall as the MC of proceedings, but struggling to win over fans with his opener.

Mail Online
Open 
Infamous photo of shamed Andrew being driven from police station after 11 hours in custody is framed and 'put on display at the Louvre'
British political campaign group, Everyone Hates Elon, fixed the photo on a wall of the Louvre Museum in Paris on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026: Aimee Lou Wood kicks off her heels as she joins Kate Hudson and Emma Stone at lavish dinner following the star-studded ceremony
The White Lotus star, 32, held onto her silver stilettos as she made her way to her table at London's Royal Festival Hall where she sat alongside boyfriend Adam Long.

Mail Online
Open 
Marty Supreme is BAFTAs biggest loser as Timothée Chalamet is snubbed leaving movie to tie record for most losses despite 11 nominations
Timothée Chalamet, 30, was predicted to win the prestigious Best Actor gong after his previous triumphs at the Critics Choice Awards and Golden Globes last month.

Mail Online
Open 
Paddington Bear steals the spotlight at the 2026 BAFTAs as he makes an epic appearance at star-studded bash
Britain's most-loved bear won the guests' hearts as he took to the stage to introduce another winning category for the annual ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Violence erupts after Mexican security forces kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Death of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, one of world’s most wanted drug traffickers, sets off wave of disorder across several Mexican statesOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed. The operation set off a wave of violence, with torched cars and gunmen blocking highways in more than half a dozen states.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Two unforgettable weeks' - Winter Olympics close with handover to French Alps
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says the athletes "showed us that the Olympic Games are a place for everyone" as she closes this year's Winter Games.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
McIlroy finishes one shot behind Genesis winner Bridgeman
Rory McIlroy shoots a four-under-par 67 but it is not enough to overhaul winner Jacob Bridgeman, who wins by one shot at the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Two unforgettable weeks' - Winter Olympics close with music and flags at Verona ceremony
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says the athletes "showed us that the Olympic Games are a place for everyone" as she closes this year's Winter Games.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Two unforgettable weeks' - Winter Olympics close with music and flags in Verona's big show
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says the athletes "showed us that the Olympic Games are a place for everyone" as she closes this year's Winter Games.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I thought I was going to die' - Woman calls for tighter weight-loss jabs checks
Emma Dyer says she collapsed on her bathroom floor and began vomiting blood after buying jabs online.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
How South Korea's democracy rallied after the president tried to impose military rule
Yoon Suk Yeol's life sentence for insurrection "offers a rare example of democratic resilience", experts say.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
European football: Barça retake top spot, Parma stun Milan to deal title blow
Fermín López goal caps 3-0 win over LevanteMilan’s Loftus-Cheek hospitalised as Parma win 1-0Barcelona returned to the top of La Liga with a 3-0 victory over relegation-threatened Levante as Marc Bernal, Frenkie de Jong and substitute Fermín López struck at Camp Nou.Last season’s champions moved to 61 points from 25 games, one ahead of Real Madrid after their rivals’ defeat by Osasuna on Saturday. Barça had slipped to second after last week’s 2-1 loss to Girona but rarely looked troubled by a Levante side second from bottom on 18 points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bafta awards 2026 backstage and afterparties – in pictures
Highlights from behind the scenes at the 2026 Baftas ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall on London’s SouthbankNews: One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners as Robert Aramayo takes best actorPeter Bradshaw’s takeFind the full list of the night’s winners hereThe best quotes of the nightThe best looks from the red carpet Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
iPhone 17 Pro Max vs iPhone 3GS perfectly illustrates 16 years of smartphone photography progress

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. stock futures dip as investors await clarity on Trump’s latest tariff plans
U.S. stock-market futures declined Sunday, as investors grappled with the implications of Friday’s Supreme Court ruling that overturned most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Slashdot
Open 
Telegram Disputes Russia's Claim Its Encryption Was Compromised
Russia's domestic intelligence agency claimed Saturday that Ukraine can obtain sensitive information from troops using the Telegram app on the front line, reports Bloomberg. The fact that the claims were made through Russia's state-operated news outlet RIA Novosti signals "tightening scrutiny over a platform used by millions of Russians," Bloomberg notes, as the Kremlin continues efforts to "push people to use a new state-backed alternative."

Russia's communications watchdog limited access to Telegram - a popular messaging app owned by Russian-born billionaire Pavel Durov - over a week ago for failing to comply with Russian laws requiring personal data to be stored locally. Voice and video calls were blocked via Telegram in August. The pressure is the latest move in a long-running campaign to promote what the Kremlin calls a sovereign internet that's led to blocks on YouTube, Instagram and WhatsApp... Foreign intelligence services are able to see Russia's military messages in Telegram too, Russia's Minister for digital development, Maksut Shadaev, said on Wednesday, although he added that Russia will not block access to Telegram for troops for now.

Telegram responded at the time that no breaches of the app's encryption have ever been found. "The Russian government's allegation that our encryption has been compromised is a deliberate fabrication intended to justify outlawing Telegram and forcing citizens onto a state-controlled messaging platform engineered for mass surveillance and censorship," it said in an emailed response.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russia Today News
Open 
Macron asks Trump to lift sanctions on EU officials

Deutsche Welle
Open 
North Korea: Ruling party reelects Kim as general secretary
The Workers' Party congress, North Korea's most important political event, reelected Kim Jong Un as the party's leader.

BBC World News
Open 
Are you cut out for living and working in Antarctica?
Jobs are available on the icy continent for chefs, plumbers, carpenters and even hairdressers.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Tesla Avoids California Suspension By Dropping 'Self-Driving' Claims
Tesla Avoids California Suspension By Dropping 'Self-Driving' Claims

Authored by Rob Sabo via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Tesla Motors avoided a 30-day suspension of its dealer and manufacturer licenses from the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) by removing the term “autopilot” from its vehicle marketing efforts in California.
The Tesla booth at the AI+Expo Special Competitive Studies Project in Washington on June 2, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

According to a statement issued by the California DMV on Feb. 17, Tesla had marketed its full self-driving feature as essentially an autonomous driving feature. Although full self-driving is a hands-free feature, Tesla owners still need to actively supervise the operation of their vehicles.

The DMV said Tesla had been marketing its advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) as a full driver-free autopilot feature since 2021 by including terms such as “autopilot” and “full self-driving capability” in marketing collateral and on its website.

“The system is designed to be able to conduct short and long-distance trips with no action required by the person in the driver’s seat,” Tesla’s website formerly said. The California DMV stated that drivers should be present and supervise the self-driving feature.

“Vehicles equipped with those ADAS features could not at the time of those advertisements, and cannot now, operate as autonomous vehicles,” the DMV wrote.

According to the California DMV, Tesla removed that language from its website and marketing efforts in December 2025. The DMV had initiated accusations of false advertisement against Tesla’s dealer and manufacturer licenses in November 2023.

The California Office of Administrative Hearings heard the case last July and made a proposed decision on Nov. 20, 2025. Tesla was given 60 days to address and remedy the issue of the suspension of its licenses in the state for 30 days. Tesla subsequently rebranded the feature as “full self-driving (supervised)” to clarify that drivers still need to oversee the driving process.

“The DMV is committed to safety throughout all California’s roadways and communities,” DMV Director Steve Gordon said. “The department is pleased that Tesla took the required action to remain in compliance with the State of California’s consumer protections.”

“California has zero tolerance for misleading advertising that puts safety at risk,” the DMV added. “When companies make false claims about vehicle capabilities, they endanger lives, and the state will hold them accountable.”

Days earlier, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said in a post on X on Feb. 13 that Tesla would no longer offer full self-driving on vehicles sold after Feb. 14. In order to get the feature, Tesla owners now need to pay a $99 monthly subscription.

Tesla had included basic autopilot for close to seven years on its vehicles that included two features, traffic-aware cruise control (TACC) to match the speed of traffic, and autosteer, which centers vehicles inside a travel lane.

New vehicles now come standard with just TACC, and Tesla owners will have to pay a monthly fee for the full self-driving feature. Previously, Tesla owners could opt for a one-time payment to have the full self-driving included on their vehicles at the time of purchase.

Reaching 10 million paid full self-driving subscriptions is one of many performance milestones required in Musk’s $1 trillion compensation package.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 17:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Supreme Court Ruling On Tariffs Won't Change US–China Trade Relations, Analysts
Supreme Court Ruling On Tariffs Won't Change US–China Trade Relations, Analysts

Authored by Alex Wu via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Feb. 20 that President Donald Trump’s global tariffs implemented under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were unlawful, analysts told The Epoch Times that it won’t affect U.S. trade relations with China, as there are other legal options for the Trump administration to impose levies.
A China Shipping cargo container sits stacked at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, Calif., on April 10, 2025. Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

By a vote of 6–3, the court ruled that IEEPA does not authorize the president to impose tariffs, including retaliatory tariffs and fentanyl-related tariffs targeting China, Canada, and Mexico.

In his dissent, Justice Brett Kavanaugh noted that “the decision might not substantially constrain a President’s ability to order tariffs going forward.”

“That is because numerous other federal statutes authorize the President to impose tariffs and might justify most (if not all) of the tariffs at issue in this case. … Those statutes include, for example, the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (Section 232); the Trade Act of 1974 (Sections 122, 201, and 301); and the Tariff Act of 1930 (Section 338),” he wrote.

Trump raised global tariffs to 10 percent, effective on Feb. 24, after the Feb. 20 ruling under a separate trade law, Section 122. The president increased it to 15 percent the next day, effective for 150 days.

Impact on Trade With China

The United States and China reached a one-year trade truce in 2025 to de-escalate trade tensions, in which the United States reduced tariffs on goods related to fentanyl issues from 20 percent to 10 percent while China reduced tariffs on U.S. agricultural products and pledged to increase purchases of U.S. soybeans and energy.

This month, Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping promised to purchase more American soybeans and agricultural products in a phone call with Trump.

Frank Xie, ​​a professor at the Aiken School of Business at the University of South Carolina, told The Epoch Times that the Supreme Court’s ruling did not overturn all of Trump’s tariffs, but rather prevented Trump from invoking IEEPA to impose tariffs.

“There are other legal tools that allow Trump to continue raising tariffs, so the tariff war will continue, along with tariff penalties against China. Negotiations with China will also continue, and China will likely continue to purchase U.S. soybeans,” he said.

“Actually, the ruling doesn’t change much for either the CCP or the U.S. government. Judging from Trump adding additional ... global tariffs immediately afterwards, the tariff war is accelerating,” he said.
The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on Feb. 20, 2026. The Supreme Court ruled that President Donald Trump's tariffs were unlawful in a 6-3 decision authored by Chief Justice John Roberts. Heather Diehl/Getty Images

U.S.-based independent economist Davy J. Wong told The Epoch Times that the Supreme Court’s ruling may prompt China to reduce or postpone purchases, but it is unlikely to publicly renege on its commitments.

“This is because China’s purchases of U.S. agricultural products have long been driven by both economic and political motives. Now, Beijing can use the instability of the rules as a pretext to adjust the pace of imports and diversify sources, particularly shifting towards supplies from Brazil and South America,” he said.

“However, China’s feed system has a rigid demand for protein raw materials, and the United States remains an important supplementary source.”

U.S.-based China affairs commentator Wang He noted that Trump agreed to visit China in April per Xi’s invitation during their phone call, and “it has special significance for Xi Jinping to maintain relations with the United States and with Trump,” given the current domestic political tension Xi’s facing due to his purge of top military generals.

Wang said it means that the trade truce between China and the United States will continue, and China won’t dare to renege on its commitments to continue purchasing American agricultural products.

However, Wang noted that the CCP will continue to promote diversification of foreign trade.

“Because the United States and China are currently decoupling, regardless of the Supreme Court’s ruling, this fundamental trend of decoupling is unchangeable. This trend is unaffected by tariff rulings. The CCP will simply use this to its advantage, to pressure Trump in negotiations. The CCP will try to rally more countries to counter the United States,” he said.

Wong said the Chinese economy remains highly dependent on external demand and manufacturing exports, especially from the United States.

So, the CCP will exert pressure in specific areas, such as rare-earth and key-materials export controls, while avoiding a complete trade rupture with the United States, he added.

Wong concluded that the Supreme Court’s ruling does not change the structural reality of Sino-U.S. trade competition.

“China’s purchases from the U.S. will be more strategic, and U.S. economic constraints on China will become more institutionalized. Both sides prefer competition within a controllable scope rather than a complete decoupling.”

Luo Ya and Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 18:55

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
North Korea’s Crypto Theft Machine Shows No Signs of Slowing After ByBit Hack : Analysis
February 21, 2026 marks the first anniversary of the largest confirmed cryptocurrency theft in history. On that day in 2025, hackers drained roughly $1.46 billion in digital assets from Dubai-based exchange ByBit. Blockchain intelligence firm Elliptic was among the first to link the attack to... Read More

Mail Online
Open 
Now Greens set for vote that would make it party policy to back Hamas terror attacks: 'Anti-Jewish' motion would EVEN brand leader's mother a racist
Proponents claim a huge grassroots campaign has led to 'record-breaking' support for the 'Zionism is Racism' proposal which could be debated next month.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bafta awards 2026 backstage and afterparties – in pictures
Backstage and after party highlights from 2026’s Baftas ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall on London’s SouthbankNews: One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners as Robert Aramayo takes best actorPeter Bradshaw’s takeFind the full list of the night’s winners hereThe best quotes of the nightThe best looks from the red carpet Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK job vacancies ‘fall to lowest level since pandemic’
Advertised roles dropped 3% last month to 695,000 – first dip below 700,000 since January 2021, job site Adzuna saysThe number of job vacancies in the UK has tumbled to the lowest level in five years, research suggests, falling to levels not seen since the pandemic.The number of jobs being advertised slid by 3% in January to 695,000, according to the job search site Adzuna, marking the first time advertised vacancies have dropped below 700,000 since January 2021. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Porter holds up ‘F--- Trump’ message at California Democratic convention
Former Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.), who has entered the California gubernatorial race, took a stand against the Trump administration on Saturday, carrying a large sign that read “F--- Trump” on stage at the state Democratic convention.  The phrase has gained steam nationally ahead of midterm elections and the 2028 presidential race. Earlier in the week,...

The Register
Open 
Attacker gets into France's database listing all bank accounts, makes off with 1.2 million records
PLUS: Unpatched Ivanti boxes under attack; 0APT might not be a scam; AI gets better at helping cyber-scum; And more Infosec In Brief  An unknown attacker accessed the French government’s database listing every bank account in the country and made off with 1.2 million records.…

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM VIDEO – Tim Burchett responds to Bernie Sanders claiming he doesn’t know how to get his birth certificate
Rep. Tim Burchett just responded to Bernie Sanders claiming in an interview that he doesn’t know how to get his birth certificate. First, here’s dumb-dumb Bernie:   And here’s Burchett’s response to . . .

Telegraph
Open 
France come through Italy test to maintain Grand Slam bid
France come through Italy test to maintain Grand Slam bid

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-Premier League and England star, 30, is rushed to hospital with nasty head injury - and could be out for 'months' after heavy blow
The former Chelsea and Crystal Palace midfielder was placed in a neck brace and onto a stretcher having been left in a bloody mess following a challenge from opposing goalkeeper Edoardo.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 winners: One Battle After Another dominates with six gongs as Jessie Buckley is awarded Best Actress - but Timothée Chalamet is SNUBBED
One Battle After Another was the big winner at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards on Sunday night, as it scooped six gongs during the ceremony at London's Royal Festival Hall.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Brevo review 2026

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go red carpet official, a 'strong language' apology and other Bafta highlights
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'They were attacking from every angle in the end' - why Spurs couldn't keep Arsenal out
MOTD pundit Danny Murphy explains why, as well as Arsenal's superior quality in Sunday's north London derby, they exploited Tottenham's tactical weakness too.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Appalling weekend' - Arokodare & Mundle latest players to be racially abused
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle have become the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Mescal and Abrams go red carpet official, a 'strong language' apology, Paddington's award, and other Bafta highlights
This year's Bafta Film Awards had it all... A-listers, a touch of royalty, Paddington Bear - and the sun even came out, for what felt like the first time all year.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Trump’s reign of terror must end’: California Democrats plot national return to power
Emboldened by recent wins, elected officials gathered in San Francisco to share strategy for a midterm ‘reckoning’Fury at Donald Trump was the coin of the realm, as thousands of California delegates, activists and elected officials gathered in San Francisco this weekend, emboldened by a string of victories and confident the Golden State would help deliver a power check on the president in the upcoming midterm elections.On Saturday, Democrats streamed through the Moscone Center convention complex, sporting lanyards emblazoned with Gavin Newsom’s name and tote bags adorned with one of Nancy Pelosi’s favorite aphorisms: “We don’t Agonize, we organize” – symbols of a party in transition as the former speaker approaches retirement and the term-limited governor eyes a presidential campaign. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering perimeter of Trump's residence
A man has been shot dead by Secret Service agents after trying to unlawfully enter Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate, authorities in the US have said.

BBC UK News
Open 
Names of Moy fatal crash victims made public
Conor Quinn, 31, from Derryloughan, County Tyrone, John Guy, 48, who was originally from Dublin but living in Keady, and 23- year-old Laura Hoy, from Cookstown, all died at the scene.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s Epstein links not ruled out as police searches continue
Calls mount for Mountbatten-Windsor to be dropped from royal line of succession Police searches of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s former home on the Windsor estate in Berkshire continued on Sunday as a government minister did not rule out having a judge-led inquiry into the former prince’s links with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, representing the government, did not rule out such an inquiry but said it was premature because of the police investigation. Continue reading...

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tech Life
We chat about a conversational AI that's almost human-like in its speech skills

No Agenda Show
Open 
1845 - "Slave Slab"
No Agenda Episode 1845 - "Slave Slab"
"Slave Slab"
Executive Producers:
Benjamin Domzalski
Evan
Noah Watenmaker
Jeffrey Anton
Sir Commodore Mark Bendykowski
Sir Rick of the Cyber Abyss
Associate Executive Producers:
Andrew Ribbe
Striker
Sir Tooth Fairy
Linda Lu, Duchess of Jobs, writer of winning résumés
Juliana Lee
Become a member of the 1846 Club, support the show here
Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain
Title Changes
Dame Denise Robertson > Baronetess Denise Queen of the "COBALT" programmers
Art By: RocketBoy
End of Show Mixes:

deezlaughs EOS endofshow_2.22.26.mp3
MVP EOS Second Half (Edit).mp3
MVP EOS Trolls In The Dark.mp3
Secret Agent Paul EOS AOC Miss South Carolina mashup.mp3

Mark van Dijk - Systems Master
Ryan Bemrose - Program Director
Back Office Jae Dvorak
Chapters: Dreb Scott
Clip Custodian: Neal Jones
Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman
NEW: Gitmo Jams
Sign Up for the newsletter
No Agenda Peerage
ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1845.noagendanotes.com
Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com
RSS Podcast Feed
Full Summaries in PDF
No Agenda Lite in opus format
Last Modified 02/22/2026 16:43:19This page created with the FreedomController



Last Modified 02/22/2026 16:43:19 b

Digital Trends
Open 
AMD reportedly pauses Ryzen Z1 drivers for gaming handhelds
Reports suggest AMD Ryzen Z1 handheld driver updates have stalled across devices like the Legion Go and ROG Ally.
The post AMD reportedly pauses Ryzen Z1 drivers for gaming handhelds appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Nvidia could launch its first laptops with its own processors later this year
Nvidia is preparing to launch its first laptop processors later this year, marking a major return to consumer PCs with new Arm-based designs and AI-focused performance.
The post Nvidia could launch its first laptops with its own processors later this year appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Google is sunsetting the weather app on Android
Google is retiring the Android Weather app experience and moving forecasts into a redesigned Google Search interface.
The post Google is sunsetting the weather app on Android appeared first on Digital Trends.

Adam Curry
Open 
No Agenda Episode 1845 - "Slave Slab"
No Agenda Episode 1845 - "Slave Slab"

Slashdot
Open 
EVs Are Already Making Your Air Cleaner, Research Shows
Fossil fuels produce NO2, which is linked to asthma attacks, bronchitis, and higher risks of heart disease and stroke, according the EV news site Electrek. But the nonprofit news site Grist.org notes a new analysis showing that those emissions decreased by 1.1% for every increase of 200 electric vehicles - across nearly 1,700 ZIP codes.
"A pretty small addition of cars at the ZIP code level led to a decline in air pollution," said Sandrah Eckel, a public health professor at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine and lead author of the study. "It's remarkable."

The study was done at the University of Southern California's medical school, by researchers using high-resolution satellite data, reports Electrek:


The study, just published in The Lancet Planetary Health and partly funded by the National Institutes of Health, adds rare real-world evidence to a claim that's often taken for granted - that EVs don't just cut carbon over time, they also improve local air quality right now... The researchers ran multiple checks to make sure the trend wasn't driven by unrelated factors. They accounted for pandemic-era changes by excluding 2020 in some analyses and controlling for gas prices and work-from-home patterns. They also saw the expected counterexample: neighborhoods that added more gas-powered vehicles experienced increases in pollution. The findings were then replicated using updated ground-level air monitoring data dating back to 2012...

Next, the researchers plan to compare EV adoption with asthma-related emergency room visits and hospitalizations. If those trends line up, it could provide some of the clearest evidence yet of what we already know: that electrifying transportation doesn't just clean the air on paper; it improves public health in practice.


Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader jhoegl for sharing the article.






Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA viewers left furious as Eric Dane and James Van Der Beek are snubbed from the ceremony's emotional In Memoriam segment
BAFTA viewers were left furious after noticing Eric Dane and James Van Der Beek were both missing from the In Memoriam segment during Sunday's ceremony.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mexican Resort Towns Burn As Special Forces Kill Jalisco New Generation Cartel Boss "El Mencho"
Mexican Resort Towns Burn As Special Forces Kill Jalisco New Generation Cartel Boss "El Mencho"

Update (1656):

Mexico's Ministry of Defense announced on X that a military operation targeting the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) in the Tapalpa area resulted in the death of cartel leader Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera.

According to the statement, troops came under attack and returned fire "in defense of their integrity," leaving four CJNG members dead at the incident area and three others critically wounded. The ministry stated that those three later died during a medevac transfer to Mexico City, including Mencho.


During this operation, military personnel were attacked, so in defense of their integrity they repelled the aggression, resulting in four members of the "CJNG" criminal group dead at the scene and three seriously injured, who lost their lives during their transfer via air to Mexico City; among the latter is Ruben "N" (a) Mencho, however, the corresponding authorities will handle the expert activities for their identification.


The ministry also reported that CJNG members had armored vehicles and rocket launchers.


In addition to the above, two other members of this criminal organization were detained and various weaponry and armored vehicles were seized, including rocket launchers capable of downing aircraft and destroying armored vehicles.


The statement noted that National Guard and Mexican Army units were being deployed into the Jalisco area, where CJNG operates, to "reinforce security" amid retaliatory unrest this afternoon.


Rubio realizing he’s going to have to be the new leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel pic.twitter.com/aBi0jNf7Ci
— Nostra, House of Gold (@Nostre_damus) February 22, 2026
Will there be spillover risks? 

*    *    * 

Update (1510):

"Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta, airlines are canceling flights at those airports," website tracker Flightrader24 wrote on X.


Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta airlines are canceling flights at those airports. Some flights remain inbound to Guadalajara at this time. https://t.co/cur1slMRld pic.twitter.com/fBFNjCI247
— Flightradar24 (@flightradar24) February 22, 2026
The situation in Guadalajara, Puerto Vallarta, and other areas controlled by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) remains fluid after Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of CJNG.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026

En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told Americans to "shelter in place" across Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State. 

*    *    * 

According to The Wall Street Journal, Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and assessed as one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders; footage on social media shows utter chaos unfolding across Guadalajara and other CJNG strongholds after Mencho's killing.

WSJ cited a senior Mexican official earlier Sunday who confirmed Oseguera was killed during a military operation against CJNG.

Additional color on CJNG from the outlet:


The cartel also controls vast fuel smuggling schemes and other underworld rackets across Mexico and the U.S., authorities said.

. . .

Oseguera was known for sophisticated paramilitary tactics and the deployment of hundreds of well-equipped and well-trained gunmen. He controlled vast swathes of territory, especially in his home state of Jalisco. He has been expanding his influence and was locked in a bloody struggle for control of Michoacán state in western Mexico.


Following the death of CJNG's leader, local media and X users have posted footage of chaos unfolding across the Guadalajara area, including reports of chaos at Guadalajara Airport and narco blockades spanning Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán, and Autlán.

Let's begin with the chaos at Guadalajara Airport:


Passengers and staff seen fleeing from reported gunfire inside Guadalajara International Airport, as members of the CJNG Cartel attempt to storm the airport and several other nearby locations in the Mexican state of Jalisco. pic.twitter.com/LL2axKaYZF
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 22, 2026

Another video pic.twitter.com/0OXofzHrKB
— Faytuks Network (@FaytuksNetwork) February 22, 2026

LIVE All flights to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico are diverting or returning due to smoke in the city following security incidents @wingbits pic.twitter.com/7xBFMEOXMr
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) February 22, 2026
CJNG blockades across CJNG territories:


Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, en el Salto, López Mateos Sur, macro periférico. Toda la ciudad hecha un caos. pic.twitter.com/7NufE0Cjqc
— Jorge García Orozco (@jorgegogdl) February 22, 2026

Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán y Autlán. Dominios del CJNG.#GuacamayaLeaks pic.twitter.com/PQHks2LGlR
— Guacamaya Leaks (@GuacamayanLeaks) February 22, 2026

⭕️ Reportan bloqueos del crimen organizado en tres estados con fuerte presencia del CJNG
🔹De manera simultánea, se registraron incendios de vehículos e invasiones a la vía pública en Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, la carretera Guadalajara-Colima, Uruapan (Michoacán) y Reynosa… pic.twitter.com/4MeQOpCDIV
— Código Magenta (@CodigoMagentaMx) February 22, 2026
Footage from Puerto Vallarta. 


#PuertoVallarta en estos momentos.#Vallarta #PV #Mexico #Jalisco
Fotografía de Dron DS. pic.twitter.com/1WpTRNFBho
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026

Ahorita en Puerto Vallarta.
No hay presencia de autoridad alguna, hora y media y nada. pic.twitter.com/wMCbsulL10
— Ricardo Badillo G (@Ricardo39687260) February 22, 2026

🚨🇲🇽 | #URGENTE Se registran balaceras en Puerto Vallarta atribuidas a un presunto enfrentamiento entre fuerzas federales y terroristas en medio de información que circula afirmando que Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", líder del CJNG, fue abatido. pic.twitter.com/bQCiRBUpVP
— La Derecha Diario México (@DerechaDiarioMX) February 22, 2026
Additional footage. 


🚨 Atención en #Tapalpa: Un operativo federal desató balaceras en el municipio, principalmente en Tapalpa Country Club. Se reportan helicópteros sobrevolando la zona y bloqueos en los accesos desde Tlajomulco.
📹 @JCMunguiaA92 pic.twitter.com/ZzeRMcBQ0C
— Telediario Guadalajara (@TelediarioGDL) February 22, 2026
Guadalajara is a World Cup Host City... 


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told all U.S. citizens in Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State to "shelter in place" amid "ongoing security operations in multiple states and related road blockages and criminal activity."


Locations: Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), areas of Michoacan State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo Leon State
Event: Due to ongoing security operations in multiple states and… pic.twitter.com/71gKVQ9ec1
— Embajada de EE.UU. en México (@USEmbassyMEX) February 22, 2026
*Developing...

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 16:56

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Warns Netflix About Democrat Ties During Bid To Buy Warner Bros
Trump Warns Netflix About Democrat Ties During Bid To Buy Warner Bros

It's no secret that Netflix is a devout propaganda platform for the political left.  Some critics would argue that the sudden and disturbing surge in woke ideology injected into streaming entertainment started with Netflix and shows like Orange Is The New Black, "Dear White People" and Jessica Jones.  No one remembers such content anymore because it's forgettable tripe, but Netflix was definitely at the helm of the of far-left programming trend just as the Obama Administration was coming to a close.

In fact, multiple prominent Democrats from the Obama regime ended up working closely with Netflix, either as lobbyists or as members of the corporate board.  Barack and Michelle even signed an ongoing production deal with the company in 2018. 



Ferial Govashiri, former Personal Secretary to President Obama in the White House, joined Netflix in a senior role as Chief of Staff to the Chief Content Officer.

Perry Apelbaum, a longtime Democratic lawyer/staffer from the House Judiciary Committee is now a lobbyist for Netflix.

A high percentage of Netflix's lobbyists (around 70%) have prior government experience and most are Democratic-leaning.  Leadership figures like co-CEO Ted Sarandos and executive chairman Reed Hastings have hosted fundraisers or donated heavily to Democrat candidates (Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, Obama, Clinton, Biden, etc). 

Finally, there's Obama-era national security adviser Susan Rice, who is still closely tied to the Obamas and is currently a member of the Netflix board.  

Donald Trump has warned Netflix to remove Susan Rice from its board or “face the consequences”, while the streaming platform is locked in a corporate battle to take control of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD).  In comments posted on his Truth Social platform, the US president described Rice – who served as national security adviser to Barack Obama, UN ambassador and White House adviser under Joe Biden – as a “political hack."  

He said in an interview with NBC News that the justice department would handle the takeover of WBD, having insisted previously he would be involved in reviewing the deal. Any takeover of WBD will have to be approved by federal regulators.

The underlying concern, of course, is that the Netflix acquisition of WBD would result in a far-left super-conglomerate with substantial resources that could be used to saturate entertainment media with the DNC agenda.  To be clear, there is no such thing as a conservative counter-programming corporation in the media space.  Warner Bros. was essentially collapsing under the weight of it's own woke failures when a bidding war between Paramount and Netflix was launched. 

That said, a merger could very well result in yet another Disney; a monstrosity of a company controlling a huge catalog of IPs with agents of the Democrat Party basically steering the ship (Disney is loaded with DNC elites from the Clinton Admin, Obama Admin and Biden Admin). 

The deal requires DOJ approval under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act (Anti-Trust scrutiny). The DOJ opened a probe in early 2026, examining Netflix's business practices for potential "monopolistic" effects on content creation, distribution, and theaters. 

Reports indicate the DOJ may soon announce intent to block it, citing anticompetitive leverage over filmmakers under the Sherman Act.  As President, Trump can direct or influence DOJ leadership (e.g., via appointees) to sue and halt the merger, meaning he does have the power to disrupt the deal should Netflix refuse to remove Susan Rice.  

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 17:10

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I Swear’s Robert Aramayo had Bafta’s feelgood moment, but the night belonged to Paul Thomas Anderson
Six wins for US director’s ICE-baiting film of American resistance recognised Anderson’s commitment to complex drama, while best actor win for rising British star was thoroughly deservedNews: One Battle wins six BaftasFull list of winnersThe night as it happenedBest quotes from the 2026 BaftasThe best looks from the red carpetThis turned out to be a very British night for the Baftas, a smidgen more British than usual in fact. It started out with the Hollywood A-listers in the audience being presented with hilarious British snacks, of whose existence they had no more idea than they had of life forms on the moons of Saturn. Emma Stone got some Hula Hoops, Timothée Chalamet had a bag of Scampi Fries and Leonardo DiCaprio got his laughing gear around a Hobnob flapjack.The other intensely British thing was the red-carpet appearance of the Prince and Princess of Wales (the former being Bafta’s president); their presence enforced that other terribly British tradition of everyone, as if in a Mike Leigh film, avoiding the subject. Everyone trying not to talk or think about the elephant in the room or the elephant slumped and stricken in the speeding car on the way home from the police station. Well, at least William never liked him. Continue reading...

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
US firm awarded contract to build CH-53K helicopter facility in Israel
The U.S. Department of War announced Friday that Exyte US Inc., headquartered in Albany, N.Y., has secured a firm‑fixed‑price contract to design and construct “bed down” facilities for CH‑53K heavy‑lift helicopter in Israel.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Pod-Ed: Chicago’s O’Hare Gate Wars: Capacity vs Restraint
We break down American–United’s O’Hare gate battle, a Venezuela comeback watch, and Air Canada’s A350-1000 move.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
F/A-18 Sqwuaking 7700 off Florida Coast
Spotted it on my feeder first then cross checked through ADSB data and sure enough it is squawking 7700. Hopefully everything‘s all good was a nice catch on the feeder.

The Hill
Open 
Luna slams GOP senator for 'bartending' swipe at AOC after Munich appearance
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) on Saturday criticized Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) for mocking Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s (D-N.Y.) experience as a bartender. Luna wrote on the social platform X that while she does not often agree with Ocasio-Cortez, to “knock her or anyone for being a bartender is not a ‘hit,’ it’s tone deaf."  “Plenty...

The Hill
Open 
Randy Fine censure threat could spark tit-for-tat cycle
The House could soon be forced into another tit-for-tat cycle of members attempting to discipline each other by forcing votes on the House floor — and derailing GOP leaders' control of the chamber. A massive wave of Democrats have called to formally censure Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) and remove him from his committees over a...

Sky News Home
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering perimeter of Mar-a-Lago
A man has been shot dead by Secret Service agents after trying to unlawfully enter Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate, authorities in the US have said.

Russia Today News
Open 
Cartel violence sweeps Mexico following death of drug lord (VIDEOS)

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I Swear’s Robert Aramayo had Bafta’s feelgood moment, but the night belonged to Paul Thomas Anderson
Six wins for US director’s ICE-baiting film of American resistance recognised Anderson’s commitment to complex drama, while best actor win for rising British star was thoroughly deservedNews: One Battle wins six BaftasFull list of winnersThe night as it happenedBest quotes from the 2026 BaftasThis turned out to be a very British night for the Baftas, a smidgen more British than usual in fact. It started out with the Hollywood A-listers in the audience being presented with hilarious British snacks, of whose existence they had no more idea than they had of life forms on the moons of Saturn. Emma Stone got some Hula Hoops, Timothée Chalamet had a bag of Scampi Fries and Leonardo DiCaprio got his laughing gear around a Hobnob flapjack.The other intensely British thing was the red-carpet appearance of the Prince and Princess of Wales (the former being Bafta’s president); their presence enforced that other terribly British tradition of everyone, as if in a Mike Leigh film, avoiding the subject. Everyone trying not to talk or think about the elephant in the room or the elephant slumped and stricken in the speeding car on the way home from the police station. Well, at least William never liked him. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Why are so many elite skaters Russian?

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
VerticalResponse Email Marketing Review: Pros & Cons, Features, Ratings, Pricing and more

Mail Online
Open 
England star, 30, is rushed to hospital with gruesome head injury - and could be out for 'months' after heavy blow
The former Chelsea and Crystal Palace midfielder was placed in a neck brace and onto a stretcher having been left in a bloody mess following a challenge from opposing goalkeeper Edoardo.

Mail Online
Open 
Tributes paid to 'amazing' young climbers, aged 19 and 20, who died in freezing conditions on Snowdon
Eddie Hill, 20, and Jayden Long, 19, had been hiking in Eryri National Park, also known as Snowdonia National Park, when disaster struck.

Mail Online
Open 
Aimee Lou Wood is the epitome of elegance in a stunning pink gown as she make a rare red carpet appearance with boyfriend Adam Long at the star-studded BAFTAs
The White Lotus star, 32, looked sensational in a perfectly tailored pink floral gown which featured a boned corset and Grecian inspired straps.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mainstream schools to receive extra funding for SEND pupils as part of £4bn package
Mainstream schools will receive direct funding to support children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) as part of a £4bn package to make the system more inclusive.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
The winners list in full
One Battle After Another won six awards, followed by I Swear, Sinners and Frankenstein, with three each.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Arokodare & Mundle latest players to be racially abused
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle have become the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Michael Carrick says he has not spoken to Jim Ratcliffe since last month
Manchester United manager last saw Ratcliffe on 25 January‘I’m fine with that,’ says Carrick, in buildup to Everton gameMichael Carrick has revealed he and his Manchester United squad have not received an apology or a message of any sort from Sir Jim Ratcliffe after his claim that the United Kingdom has been “colonised by immigrants”.Ratcliffe, United’s largest single shareholder and head of the club’s football policy, made the comments during a Sky News interview on 11 February. The outcry was strong and immediate, leading the 73-year-old to say the next day he was sorry if his “choice of language has offended some people in the UK and Europe”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Send support for schoolchildren in England to be given £4bn overhaul
‘Generational’ reforms are a key moment for Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, and for Keir StarmerMinisters will unveil a “generational” overhaul of special educational needs and disabilities (Send) support, pledging £4bn to transform provision in schools in England and warning councils they could lose control of Send services if they fail to meet their legal duties.The reforms are expected to be a key policy moment for Keir Starmer and for the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson – who delayed the changes last autumn after a ferocious backlash from MPs and parents. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Watch: Highlights from the Baftas
One Battle After Another took home best film and Hamnet also saw success in the outstanding British film category.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Arokodare & Mundle latest players to be racially abused this weekend
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle have become the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Billions in SEND funding to make schools in England more inclusive, ministers say
The government is setting out big changes to how children with special educational needs get support.

Sky News Home
Open 
British rising star beats A-listers to acting BAFTA - as One Battle After Another named best film
British film newcomer Robert Aramayo has been named best actor at the BAFTAs - beating favourite Timothee Chalamet and other A-listers including Leonardo DiCaprio to win the prize.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Match of the Day
Gabby Logan presents highlights of Sunday’s four Premier League games.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wunmi Mosaku shows 'ancestral power' with Bafta win
Growing up in Manchester, she is the first black British winner of the supporting actress award.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wolves' Arokodare third player racially abused this weekend
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle have become the latest Premier League players to be sent racist abuse on social media this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Watch: Highlights from the Baftas ceremony
One Battle After Another took home best film and Hamnet also saw success in the outstanding British film category.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The Brits are coming again’: Team GB hail their greatest ever Winter Olympics
‘Historic’ Games leaves Britain 15th in medal table‘We can all get excited for 2030 and for Los Angeles’Team GB have hailed a “historic” Winter Olympics after Britain’s greatest performance in the 102 years of the Games left them 15th in the medal table – and warned their rivals the “Brits are coming again”.Zoe Atkin’s women’s halfpipe bronze medal on Sunday ensured that Britain left Milano Cortina with five medals – equalling the tally from Sochi in 2014 and Pyeongchang in 2018. However, Team GB also won a record three gold medals with Matt Weston winning two of them in the individual skeleton and the mixed event with Tabitha Stoecker. Charlotte Bankes and Huw Nightingale also took gold in the mixed snowboard cross, while the men’s curling team won silver. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reform would create ICE-style agency and end leave to remain, Zia Yusuf to say
Nigel Farage’s party plans to deport up to 288,000 people a year on five flights a day and expand stop and searchReform UK would create an ICE-style agency dedicated to deporting hundreds of thousands of people, as well as terminating the status of those with indefinite leave to remain (ILR), the party will say.It would also ban the conversion of churches into mosques and fund a radical expansion of stop and search, the party’s new home affairs spokesperson, Zia Yusuf, will also say in a speech on Monday. The deradicalisation programme Prevent would also have its mandate redrawn to focus on Islamist extremism. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Lady review – this maddening drama’s take on Sarah Ferguson utterly fails to read the room
If you’re hoping for a sensitive depiction of the sad story of Sarah Ferguson’s royal aide who murdered her partner, don’t bother. It’s a gaudy mess, whose version of Ferguson overshadows everything‘This drama has been inspired by a true story,” announces The Lady, ushering us into the solemnly lit antechamber that is the miniseries’ introductory disclaimer. The italics continue: “Some names have been changed,” they read, “and some characters, events and scenes have been created and merged for dramatic purposes.” Hmm, we think, as a queasily off-balance piano lurches and stumbles in the background. “Created and merged”? This, surely, is the language of a school theatre project, with its glue guns and earnest pretensions, not that of a lavish ITV four-parter that focuses on the very real rise, fall and eventual conviction-for-murder of Jane Andrews, a former M&S employee from Grimsby who served, from 1988 to 1997, as a dresser to Sarah Ferguson, the then-Duchess of York. This does not, surely, bode well.Still. The Lady is produced by Left Bank Pictures, who also made The Crown. And it’s written by Debbie O’ Malley, who did many wonderful things with Channel 5’s unexpectedly excellent “reboot” of All Creatures Great and Small. So, let’s give it the benefit of the doubt. And we do. Until, that is, 16 minutes into the first episode, when Sarah Ferguson (Natalie “Game of Thrones” Dormer) bursts into Jane Andrews’ (Mia “Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials” McKenna-Bruce) job interview at Buckingham Palace and … Oh. Oh dear. Any hopes that The Lady might offer a serious and sensitive depiction of the complex real-life events that led a mentally unstable young woman to brutally murder her partner instantly wilt. What we get instead is a gaudy mess; a strange and exasperating thing that clomps between aerated royal soap, plodding police procedural, exuberant coming-of-age period piece and hand-wringing domestic drama with the grace of a pantomime horse at a black-tie buffet. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Billions in SEND funding to make schools more inclusive, ministers say
The government is setting out big changes to how children with special educational needs get support.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Winter Olympics closing ceremony draws curtain on Games
A distinctly Italian mix of opera, dance and DJs was mixed with a few last gold medals as Italy passed the Winter Olympic flame to France. Here's how it happened.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Winter Olympics close with opera, flags and tributes at Verona ceremony
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says the athletes "showed us that the Olympic Games are a place for everyone" as she closes this year's Winter Games.

Boing Boing
Open 
Don't miss out on the last chance to get a refurbished MacBook for $470
TL;DR: From now until Feb. 22 at 11:59 p.m. PT, get an Apple MacBook Pro (2020) 13″ i7 2.3GHz Touchbar 16GB RAM 512GB SSD Space Gray (Refurbished) for $469.99 (MSRP $1,999).
Seamless performance from Apple without the high price tag? It's possible with a Grade A refurbished Apple MacBook Pro (2020) 13″ with Touchbar available only until Feb. — Read the rest
The post Don't miss out on the last chance to get a refurbished MacBook for $470 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Long Before Tech CEOs Turned To Layoffs To Cover AI Expenses, There Was WorldCom
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes:

Jeopardy time. A. This company spurred CEOs to make huge speculative capital expenditures based on wild unverified claims of future demand, resulting in the layoffs of tens of thousands of workers to reduce the resulting expenses, harming their core businesses. Q. What is OpenAI? Sorry, the correct response is, "What is WorldCom?" In 2002, WorldCom, the second largest long-distance company in the U.S., entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy after disclosing accounting fraud that eventually totaled $11 billion, the biggest ever at the time. CEO Bernard Ebbers was subsequently sentenced to 25 years in prison.

CNBC reported that an employee of WorldCom's Internet service provider UUNet set off a frenzy of speculative investment and infrastructure overbuild after he used Excel to create a best-case scenario model for the Internet's growth that suggested in the best of all possible worlds, Internet traffic would double every 100 days, a scenario that would greatly benefit WorldCom, whose lines would carry it. Despite no evidence to support it, WorldCom's lie became an immutable law and businesses around the world made important decisions based on the belief that traffic was doubling every 100 days. "For some period of time I can recall that we were backfilling that expectation with laying cables, something like 2,200 miles of cable an hour," AT&T CEO Michael Armstrong said. "Think of all the companies that went out of business that assumed that that was real."

In 2003, NBC News reported:


Armstrong and former Sprint CEO Bill Esrey struggled for years to understand how WorldCom could beat them so handily. "We would look at the conduct of WorldCom in terms of their pricing, revenue growth, margins, in terms of their cost structure... and the price leader almost every quarter was WorldCom," Armstrong said. Added Esrey, "We couldn't figure out how they were pricing as aggressively as they were.... How could they be so efficient in their costs and expenses?" AT&T and Sprint began cutting jobs to push down their costs to WorldCom's level. "The market said what a marvelous management job WorldCom was doing and they would look over to AT&T and say, 'these guys aren't keeping up.' So, my shareholders were hurt. We laid off tens of thousands of employees in an accelerated fashion [in a futile effort to match WorldCom's phantom profits] and I think the industry was hurt," Armstrong says. "It just wrecked the whole industry," says Esrey.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026 come to a close at Verona Arena after Norway top medal table – as it happened
The Milano Cortina Winter Olympics closed in style amid a fanfare of opera, dance and song in the Verona Arena as Norway topped the medal tableWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Violence erupts after Mexican security forces kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed. The operation set off a wave of violence, with torched cars and gunmen blocking highways in more than half a dozen states.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
You need to listen to Laurie Spiegel’s masterpiece of early ambient music
I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Laurie Spiegel for the site. As preparation for the interview, I spent a lot of time over the last couple of weeks revisiting Spiegel's records, most notably The Expanding Universe, her 1980 masterpiece that blends synth experimentalism with early examples of what would eventually be called ambient music, […]

The Verge
Open 
Samsung is adding Perplexity to Galaxy AI
In addition to summoning Bixby or Gemini, Galaxy S26 users will be able to call on Perplexity by saying "hey, Plex." The integration of Perplexity into Galaxy AI is just one element of the company's embrace of a "multi-agent ecosystem." Often, people will use different AI agents for different tasks, depending on where their strengths […]

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Milan-Cortina 2026 closes with ceremony in Verona
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says the athletes "showed us that the Olympic Games are a place for everyone" as she closes this year's Winter Games.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump preparing for Iran strike in days as Ayatollah sets up doomsday succession plan
Iranian leader Ayatollah Khamenei is undoubtedly plotting for a doomsday scenario as President Donald Trump has set a new deadline for nuclear negotiations with the nation.

Mail Online
Open 
Jessie Buckley wins Leading Actress BAFTA and recalls her journey from a Judi Dench wannabe with a 'nuclear bad fake tan' to 'the best role of my life, being a mum' in tearful speech
The actress, 36, emotionally accepted the honour for her role in Chloe Zhao's Hamnet, one of the two awards given to the film during the ceremony.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Adyen Shares Drop Up to 20% Following Cautious Outlook for Future Growth
Dutch payments Fintech Adyen (AMS: ADYEN) released its half-year results on February 12, 2026, highlighting steady expansion and operational excellence in a competitive fintech environment. The company reported net revenue of €1.27 billion for the second half of 2025, reflecting a 17% year-over-year increase on... Read More

The Hill
Open 
House Democrat says 'diplomacy is the best way' on Iran
Rep. Greg Stanton (D-Ariz.) said Sunday that “diplomacy is the best way” when it comes to the U.S.'s handling of Iran’s nuclear program after recent tensions between the two countries. “Well, there's the largest buildup, as you pointed out earlier, the largest buildup since the Iraq War in that region. The president is still ongoing...

The Hill
Open 
European Central Bank chief says world needs 'clarity' on US trade relationships
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde on Sunday said countries need "clarity" on the future of their trade relationships with the United States after the Trump administration's tariffs were struck down by the Supreme Court. “I think it's, it's critically important that all people in the trade, both outside of the United States, but also...

The Hill
Open 
JPMorgan admits to closing Trump’s accounts after Jan. 6 Capitol attack
JPMorgan Chase this week acknowledged it closed President Trump’s bank accounts in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, The Associated Press reported. In a court filing the bank submitted this week in Trump’s lawsuit against it, JPMorgan’s former chief administrative officer, Dan Wilkening, wrote, “In February 2021, JPMorgan informed Plaintiffs...

The Hill
Open 
US Embassy tells Americans to shelter in place after Mexican army kills cartel leader
The State Department on Sunday issued a warning to U.S. citizens in certain parts of Mexico to shelter in place until further notice on account of "ongoing security operations and related road blockages and criminal activity." The regions listed in the advisory include the Mexican states of Jalisco, Tamaulipas, Michoacán, Guerrero and Nuevo Leon. The warning came after...

Gizmodo
Open 
‘The Mummy Returns’ To Theaters in March
Universal's pretty sure your love of 'The Mummy' movies is so strong, you're willing to see bad Dwayne Johnson CG again.

Gizmodo
Open 
Sam Altman: Know What Else Used a Lot of Energy? Human Civilization
The OpenAI CEO, very smart, brushed away concerns about AI's environmental impact with one hell of a take.

BBC UK News
Open 
Watch: Highlights from the Baftas 2026
One Battle After Another took home best film and Hamnet also saw success in the outstanding British film category.

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 23, #1710
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 23, No. 1,710.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 23, #988
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 23 #988.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 23 #722
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 23, No. 722.

Mail Online
Open 
The White House brutally trolls Canada with vicious dig after Team USA wins Winter Olympic gold
Donald Trump's administration got the last laugh over former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and their neighbors to the north on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Furious Canada hockey star goes viral for awkward moment he's given a stuffed toy after losing gold to USA
Moments after suffering Winter Olympics heartbreak, Canada hockey star Nathan Mackinnon went viral for a bizarre incident during the medal ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Iran plots doomsday succession as Trump sets strike deadline
Iranian leader Ayatollah Khamenei is undoubtedly plotting for a doomsday scenario as President Donald Trump has set a new deadline for nuclear negotiations with the nation.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Beating Tottenham can be a ‘turning point’ for Arsenal, says proud Arteta
Manager delighted with reaction to midweek drawArsenal go five points clear of Manchester City at topMikel Arteta said that he could not be “prouder or happier” after his Arsenal side restored their five-point lead at the top of the Premier League table with a 4-1 win against Tottenham on Sunday that he suggested could be a “turning point” in their season.This was an emphatic response after squandering a 2-0 lead at Wolves on Wednesday, a result that means City will win the league if they win all their remaining 11 games this season. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners at Baftas, as I Swear’s Robert Aramayo takes best actor
Paul Thomas Anderson drama scores six awards, as Jessie Buckley becomes first Irish woman to win leading actress prizeFull list of winnersPeter Bradshaw’s verdictHow the ceremony unfolded – the action as it happenedOne Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s counterculture comedy about a washed-up revolutionary trying to protect his daughter from a ruthless military officer, has dominated the Baftas, taking home six awards including best film, best director, best cinematography, best editing, best supporting actor and best adapted screenplay.The film, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, was nominated for 14 awards going into Sunday’s ceremony, the most of any contender – including nods for stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Charming closing ceremony brings Milano Cortina Games to an end – live
Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNorway beats US to top medal table | email GrahamWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican security forces kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed. The operation set off a wave of violence, with torched cars and gunmen blocking highways in more than half a dozen states.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I Swear’s Robert Aramayo had Bafta’s feelgood moment, but the night belonged to Paul Thomas Anderson
Six wins for US director’s ICE-baiting film of American resistance recognised Anderson’s commitment to complex drama, while best actor win for rising British star was thoroughly deservedNews: One Battle wins six BaftasFull list of winnersThe night as it happenedThis turned out to be a very British night for the Baftas, a smidgen more British than usual in fact. It started out with the Hollywood A-listers in the audience being presented with hilarious British snacks, of whose existence they had no more idea than they had of life forms on the moons of Saturn. Emma Stone got some Hula Hoops, Timothée Chalamet had a bag of Scampi Fries and Leonardo DiCaprio got his laughing gear around a Hobnob flapjack.The other intensely British thing was the red-carpet appearance of the Prince and Princess of Wales (the former being Bafta’s president); their presence enforced that other terribly British tradition of everyone, as if in a Mike Leigh film, avoiding the subject. Everyone trying not to talk or think about the elephant in the room or the elephant slumped and stricken in the speeding car on the way home from the police station. Well, at least William never liked him. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Last surviving teacher of Aberfan disaster still remembers faces of the children who died
Mair Morgan says the disaster that killed 144 people remains etched into her memory.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Zelensky tells BBC Putin has started WW3 and must be stopped
Ukraine's president sat down with the BBC's Jeremy Bowen in Kyiv days before the four-year anniversary of the war.

Mail Online
Open 
Mom who went missing without a trace 24 years ago is found ALIVE living double life in North Carolina
A missing mother of three was found after 24 years 'alive and well' living a double life in North Carolina.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: charming closing ceremony brings Milano Cortina Games to an end – live
Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNorway beats US to top medal table | email GrahamWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Baftas 2026: The winners list in full
One Battle After Another won six awards, followed by I Swear, Sinners and Frankenstein, with three each.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Hamnet's Jessie Buckley and I Swear's Robert Aramayo win big at the Baftas
Brit Aramayo beat US stars such Leonardo DiCaprio and Timothée Chalamet, while One Battle After Another picked up six awards.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Firefighters tackling large blaze at school
Several fire appliances are currently at the school building in Okehampton.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Powerful winter storm targets US northeast as NYC issues travel ban
The nor'easter storm has led to travel restrictions in multiple areas, including a full travel ban in New York City.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Baftas red carpet: Wunmi Mosaku, Paul Mescal and Teyana Taylor among stars at film awards
Stars of Sinners, Hamnet and One Battle After Another were among big names attending the ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Emma Stone stuns in a racy black Louis Vuitton gown as she arrives at the BAFTAs following her Leading Actress nomination
The actress, 37, who is up for a Best Actress gong for her performance in Bugonia, opted for a daring look in a black Louis Vuitton gown.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican security forces kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Rising British star Robert Aramayo shocks DiCaprio and Chalamet to win best actor as One Battle After Another is named top film
Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners at Baftas, as I Swear’s Robert Aramayo takes best actor
Paul Thomas Anderson drama scores six awards, as Jessie Buckley becomes first Irish woman to win leading actress prizeFull list of winnersHow the ceremony unfolded – the action as it happenedOne Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s counterculture comedy about a washed-up revolutionary trying to protect his daughter from a ruthless military officer, has dominated the Baftas, taking home six awards including best film, best director, best cinematography, best editing, best supporting actor and best adapted screenplay.The film, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, was nominated for 14 awards going into Sunday’s ceremony, the most of any contender – including nods for stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Mexican drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation
Mexican drug lord "El Mencho" has been killed in a military operation.

Mail Online
Open 
My son was mowed down by an illegal migrant in a hit-and-run crash in August... I'm now told his killer could walk free next year
Phillip Bruce, 35, was killed when the vehicle ploughed into the moped he was riding. The driver, illegal migrant Erald Kamberi, took off on foot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘He is an animal’: Jack Hughes loses teeth then scores Olympic ice hockey winner for US
Center secures first men’s title for US since 1980Americans break Canadian hearts in overtimeIt might not have been a shocker on the order of a bunch of scrappy college kids toppling the polished Soviet juggernaut at Lake Placid. But 46 years to the day of the Miracle on Ice, it often felt that way as another underdog United States men’s hockey team ended their Olympic gold drought in a white-knuckle contest dominated by Canada until Jack Hughes’ seismic overtime winner.Call it the Marvel in Milan. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US north-east braces for heavy snow and ferocious winds amid blizzard warnings
East coast scrambles to prepare for storm forecast to bring major disruption to more than 35 million peopleSnow began falling across parts of the north-eastern United States on Sunday to mark the onset of an intense winter storm that is forecast to reach blizzard strength and bring major disruption amid heavy snowfall and ferocious wind gusts of up to 70mph.Residents along the east coast scrambled to prepare for the late-winter storm that spurred blizzard alerts and weather warnings from Maryland to Massachusetts, affecting more than 35 million people. More than a foot of snow was expected, with gales inland and warnings of potential coastal flooding from Cape Cod to Delaware. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My daughter turns 18 today. I’m giving her the gift of shared caring responsibilities with her brothers | Ranjana Srivastava
As a doctor, I have a front-row seat to the physical, emotional and financial impact on women who find themselves in the role of primary carer‘Why do you always grip the dashboard like that when I am driving?’It’s the bleary-eyed 5am run to rowing practice and I have just relented to the eager “can I drive?” When your teenager takes a reluctant “I guess” as full-throated approval, you still want to show grace. Especially when there are many more mandated hours of supervision en route to a probationary licence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners at Baftas, as I Swear’s Robert Aramayo takes best actor
Paul Thomas Anderson drama enters final Oscars furlong as firm favourite after scoring six awards, as Hamnet’s Jessie Buckley becomes first Irish woman to win leading actress Bafta, and Chalamet and DiCaprio denied leading actor awardFull list of winnersHow the ceremony unfolded – the action as it happenedOne Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s counterculture comedy about a washed-up revolutionary trying to protect his daughter from a ruthless military officer, has dominated the Baftas, taking home six awards including best film, best director, best cinematography, best editing, best supporting actor and best adapted screenplay.The film, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, was nominated for 14 awards going into Sunday’s ceremony, the most of any contender – including nods for stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Why 2026 Winter Olympics mark a turning point for Team GB
Three golds, a record-equalling medal haul - the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics has been one to remember for Team GB.

TechRadar News
Open 
Don't trust AI to come up with a strong new password for you — LLMs are pretty poor at creating new logins, experts warn

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Last week’s slump in asset-manager stocks was driven by private-credit fears. Here’s what’s worrying investors.
Shares of asset managers fell due to worries over a private-credit fund managed by Blue Owl Capital, triggering broader anxiety about spillover effects.

Slashdot
Open 
'Open Source Registries Don't Have Enough Money To Implement Basic Security'
Google and Microsoft contributed $5 million to launch Alpha-Omega in 2022 - a Linux Foundation project to help secure the open source supply chain. But its co-founder Michael Winser warns that open source registries are in financial peril, reports The Register, since they're still relying on non-continuous funding from grants and donations.
And it's not just because bandwidth is expensive, he said at this year's FOSDEM. "The problem is they don't have enough money to spend on the very security features that we all desperately need..."


In a follow-up LinkedIn exchange after this article had posted, Winser estimated it could cost $5 million to $8 million a year to run a major registry the size of Crates.io, which gets about 125 billion downloads a year. And this number wouldn't include any substantial bandwidth and infrastructure donations (Like Fastly's for Crates.io). Adding to that bill is the growing cost of identifying malware, the proliferation of which has been amplified through the use of AI and scripts. These repositories have detected 845,000 malware packages from 2019 to January 2025 (the vast majority of those nasty packages came to npm)...

In some cases benevolent parties can cover [bandwidth] bills: Python's PyPI registry bandwidth needs for shipping copies of its 700,000+ packages (amounting to 747PB annually at a sustained rate of 189 Gbps) are underwritten by Fastly, for instance. Otherwise, the project would have to pony up about $1.8 million a month. Yet the costs Winser was most concerned about are not bandwidth or hosting; they are the security features needed to ensure the integrity of containers and packages. Alpha-Omega underwrites a "distressingly" large amount of security work around registries, he said. It's distressing because if Alpha-Omega itself were to miss a funding round, a lot of registries would be screwed. Alpha-Omega's recipients include the Python Software Foundation, Rust Foundation, Eclipse Foundation, OpenJS Foundation for Node.js and jQuery, and Ruby Central.

Donations and memberships certainly help defray costs. Volunteers do a lot of what otherwise would be very expensive work. And there are grants about...Winser did not offer a solution, though he suggested the key is to convince the corporate bean counters to consider paid registries as "a normal cost of doing business and have it show up in their opex as opposed to their [open source program office] donation budget."

The dilemma was summed up succinctly by the anonymous Slashdot reader who submitted this story.

"Free beer is great. Securing the keg costs money!"





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Airlines Cancel Flights To Top Mexican Resort Town After Cartel Chaos Spreads After Drug Kingpin's Death
Airlines Cancel Flights To Top Mexican Resort Town After Cartel Chaos Spreads After Drug Kingpin's Death

Update (1510):

"Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta, airlines are canceling flights at those airports," website tracker Flightrader24 wrote on X.


Due to developing security situations in Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta airlines are canceling flights at those airports. Some flights remain inbound to Guadalajara at this time. https://t.co/cur1slMRld pic.twitter.com/fBFNjCI247
— Flightradar24 (@flightradar24) February 22, 2026
The situation in Guadalajara, Puerto Vallarta, and other areas controlled by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) remains fluid after Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of CJNG.


NEW:
🇲🇽 Puerto Vallarta, is one of Mexico's top tourist destinations, welcoming a record-breaking 6.3 million visitors last year.
Today, it's a war zone following the take out of the Mexican CJNG cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the military, reportedly assisted by… pic.twitter.com/Ib7P6XzD8z
— Megatron (@Megatron_ron) February 22, 2026

En la zona turística de Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, se observan columnas de humo derivadas de los bloqueos y ataques perpetrados por el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, luego del abatimiento de Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “El Mencho”. pic.twitter.com/sQToLtl0Ev
— Raúl Brindis (@raulbrindis) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told Americans to "shelter in place" across Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State. 

*    *    * 

According to The Wall Street Journal, Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and assessed as one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders; footage on social media shows utter chaos unfolding across Guadalajara and other CJNG strongholds after Mencho's killing.

WSJ cited a senior Mexican official earlier Sunday who confirmed Oseguera was killed during a military operation against CJNG.

Additional color on CJNG from the outlet:


The cartel also controls vast fuel smuggling schemes and other underworld rackets across Mexico and the U.S., authorities said.

. . .

Oseguera was known for sophisticated paramilitary tactics and the deployment of hundreds of well-equipped and well-trained gunmen. He controlled vast swathes of territory, especially in his home state of Jalisco. He has been expanding his influence and was locked in a bloody struggle for control of Michoacán state in western Mexico.


Following the death of CJNG's leader, local media and X users have posted footage of chaos unfolding across the Guadalajara area, including reports of chaos at Guadalajara Airport and narco blockades spanning Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán, and Autlán.

Let's begin with the chaos at Guadalajara Airport:


Passengers and staff seen fleeing from reported gunfire inside Guadalajara International Airport, as members of the CJNG Cartel attempt to storm the airport and several other nearby locations in the Mexican state of Jalisco. pic.twitter.com/LL2axKaYZF
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 22, 2026

Another video pic.twitter.com/0OXofzHrKB
— Faytuks Network (@FaytuksNetwork) February 22, 2026

LIVE All flights to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico are diverting or returning due to smoke in the city following security incidents @wingbits pic.twitter.com/7xBFMEOXMr
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) February 22, 2026
CJNG blockades across CJNG territories:


Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, en el Salto, López Mateos Sur, macro periférico. Toda la ciudad hecha un caos. pic.twitter.com/7NufE0Cjqc
— Jorge García Orozco (@jorgegogdl) February 22, 2026

Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán y Autlán. Dominios del CJNG.#GuacamayaLeaks pic.twitter.com/PQHks2LGlR
— Guacamaya Leaks (@GuacamayanLeaks) February 22, 2026

⭕️ Reportan bloqueos del crimen organizado en tres estados con fuerte presencia del CJNG
🔹De manera simultánea, se registraron incendios de vehículos e invasiones a la vía pública en Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, la carretera Guadalajara-Colima, Uruapan (Michoacán) y Reynosa… pic.twitter.com/4MeQOpCDIV
— Código Magenta (@CodigoMagentaMx) February 22, 2026
Footage from Puerto Vallarta. 


#PuertoVallarta en estos momentos.#Vallarta #PV #Mexico #Jalisco
Fotografía de Dron DS. pic.twitter.com/1WpTRNFBho
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026

Ahorita en Puerto Vallarta.
No hay presencia de autoridad alguna, hora y media y nada. pic.twitter.com/wMCbsulL10
— Ricardo Badillo G (@Ricardo39687260) February 22, 2026

🚨🇲🇽 | #URGENTE Se registran balaceras en Puerto Vallarta atribuidas a un presunto enfrentamiento entre fuerzas federales y terroristas en medio de información que circula afirmando que Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", líder del CJNG, fue abatido. pic.twitter.com/bQCiRBUpVP
— La Derecha Diario México (@DerechaDiarioMX) February 22, 2026
Additional footage. 


🚨 Atención en #Tapalpa: Un operativo federal desató balaceras en el municipio, principalmente en Tapalpa Country Club. Se reportan helicópteros sobrevolando la zona y bloqueos en los accesos desde Tlajomulco.
📹 @JCMunguiaA92 pic.twitter.com/ZzeRMcBQ0C
— Telediario Guadalajara (@TelediarioGDL) February 22, 2026
Guadalajara is a World Cup Host City... 


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told all U.S. citizens in Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State to "shelter in place" amid "ongoing security operations in multiple states and related road blockages and criminal activity."


Locations: Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), areas of Michoacan State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo Leon State
Event: Due to ongoing security operations in multiple states and… pic.twitter.com/71gKVQ9ec1
— Embajada de EE.UU. en México (@USEmbassyMEX) February 22, 2026
*Developing...

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 15:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AI Surveillance Should Scare Both Democrats And Republicans
AI Surveillance Should Scare Both Democrats And Republicans

Authored by Brendan Steinhauser via RealClearPolitics,

In a country desperate for unifying issues, there is growing consensus on one: surveillance of American citizens. From progressives who want to hold ICE accountable to conservatives who fear Big Government, an ever-expanding federal government has put many Americans on high alert, and artificial intelligence is only making matters worse.



To quote New York Times columnist Tressie McMillan Cottom, “ICE is watching you.” It is true: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement saw its 2025 budget triple to nearly $30 billion, which would rank the agency as the 14th highest-funded military in the world. Much of the money is funding surveillance technology, including tools to crack phones, monitor social media, and track the movements of U.S. citizens and non-citizens alike. The Department of Homeland Security and affiliated agencies are currently piloting and deploying more than 100 AI systems, including some used in law enforcement activities.

Wherever one may stand on illegal immigration and related policies, there is cause for concern whenever Big Government threatens individual rights. Advanced, aggressive AI transcends the issue. Last year, federal agencies publicly reported more than 1,700 AI use cases – from the Department of Health and Human Services to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

We have heard the horror stories out of China, where AI is combined with social media monitoring, facial recognition, and new-age cameras to track the Chinese Communist Party’s critics (perceived or real), with the CCP following their statements and locations. But is that really unimaginable here?

Leaning on AI companies as core contractors, DHS has long scanned millions of social media posts, using new technologies to summarize findings. At the Environmental Protection Agency, AI spies on federal workers by monitoring communications. Citing “national security” at every turn, the federal government has given carte blanche to Palantir, whose sales and stock price have spiked in recent years. This means integrating Palantir data collection into operations at HHS and the Internal Revenue Service. Is that for national security, too?

What about “pattern of life” modeling that identifies when people deviate from normal routines? Or the rise of “predictive policing,” à la Steven Spielberg’s “Minority Report”?

When pressed on Palantir’s surveillance agenda, Palantir CEO Alex Karp’s argument is that Americans essentially need more surveillance now to be more free later. You read that right: As Karp recently put it, “Freedom from unwarranted government surveillance ... requires the construction of a technical system that is built to make possible oversight of its own use and limit, not expand, the material and information subject to access.”

Federal surveillance is only the beginning of the problem. State by state, police departments and other entities are leaning into AI tools to study citizens and share data from coast to coast. In Florida, Massachusetts, Texas, and other states, thousands of police departments are using Flock’s AI-powered license plate reader cameras to track drivers when they pass one of Flock’s cameras on the road. 

Take Massachusetts, where the state has spent millions of taxpayer dollars to monitor the locations of drivers and share that information with a network of over 7,000 agencies and organizations across America. Or consider Maine, where localities are using AI to scan license plates, create digital profiles, and experiment with facial recognition. This information can then be entered into a national database for federal access to information.

With each passing week, the mainstream media reports on “authoritarian AI surveillance” in China, but Americans do not need to look overseas for proof. From social media to our morning commute, we have countless case studies in government overreach right here at home. Our AI surveillance state is driven by a sweeping alliance of federal, state, and local governments with Silicon Valley’s most innovative monitoring systems.

It is not just Washington, D.C., or your state capitol or city hall or Palantir; it is all of the above. When it comes to civil liberties, no fight is more important than the people against the surveillance state. AI has pushed the limits of what is possible at our expense, making post-Patriot Act surveillance look like child’s play.

Democrat or Republican, liberal, conservative, or libertarian, now is the time for the people to check “the machine” and its machine learning. This is not political; it is about every American’s personal liberty.

Brendan Steinhauser is CEO of The Alliance for Secure AI, a nonprofit organization that educates policymakers and the public about the implications of advanced AI.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 15:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Here's All The Key Figures Who Have Resigned Over The Epstein Files...So Far
Here's All The Key Figures Who Have Resigned Over The Epstein Files...So Far

We are starting to finally see the beginning of a series of high-profile resignations following the Justice Department’s latest release of millions of pages tied to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The documents—emails, financial records, and photographs—name figures from politics, finance, diplomacy, academia, and the arts. Although inclusion in the files is not evidence of wrongdoing, the renewed scrutiny has prompted several prominent leaders to step down, as was documented by Time yesterday. 

As we've covered individually, those who have resigned include Thomas Pritzker, Kathy Ruemmler, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, Brad Karp, Mona Juul, Peter Mandelson, Miroslav Lajcak, Jack Lang, and David A. Ross. In many instances, the records describe years of contact with Epstein, sometimes extending beyond his 2008 guilty plea for soliciting prostitution from a minor, intensifying public and political pressure.

Thomas Pritzker resigned as executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels after emails showed he remained in contact with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell beyond Epstein’s conviction.

Some messages referenced plans to meet, including for dinners. Pritzker said he exercised “terrible judgment” in maintaining the relationships and expressed deep regret, while authorities have not accused him of misconduct.

Kathy Ruemmler stepped down as chief legal officer of Goldman Sachs after emails suggested a friendly relationship with Epstein years after his plea deal, including correspondence referencing gifts.

Ruemmler, who previously served as White House counsel under President Barack Obama, has said she never represented Epstein and was unaware of his crimes. She later described him as a “monster” and said she regretted ever knowing him.

Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem resigned as chairman and CEO of DP World after correspondence indicated a lengthy friendship with Epstein that continued for years.

Some emails released by the Justice Department included personal exchanges that drew scrutiny. Authorities have not accused him of wrongdoing, and the company did not cite Epstein in announcing his departure.



Brad Karp left his post as chairman of Paul, Weiss after emails revealed an extended relationship with Epstein, including exchanges in which he praised a draft legal motion related to Epstein’s 2008 plea agreement.

Karp said the controversy had become a distraction to the firm, where he had served for decades, and denied any misconduct. The firm has said it never represented Epstein.

Several diplomats and cultural figures also stepped down. Mona Juul resigned from her role as a Norwegian ambassador after reports highlighted her past contact with Epstein and scrutiny over a will that allegedly left money to her children.

Norway’s foreign ministry said the situation raised concerns about judgment, though Juul has denied wrongdoing.

Peter Mandelson stepped down from the U.K. Labour Party after bank records and emails in the files showed financial transfers and correspondence with Epstein dating back to the early 2000s.

He had previously lost a diplomatic post after earlier disclosures about the relationship. Mandelson has said he did nothing criminal.

Miroslav Lajcak resigned as Slovakia’s national security adviser after text messages and emails showed exchanges with Epstein on a range of topics.

Lajcak said he stepped aside to spare the government political fallout and has denied any improper conduct.

In France, Jack Lang resigned as head of the Arab World Institute amid an investigation into alleged financial links between his family and entities associated with Epstein.

Lang, a former culture minister, has denied the allegations and said he was stepping down in the institution’s interest.

In New York, David A. Ross stepped down as a department chair at the School of Visual Arts after emails revealed continued communication with Epstein following his conviction, including exchanges about provocative artistic ideas.

Ross said he regretted being “taken in” by Epstein and expressed concern for the victims, while denying wrongdoing.

The latest release has reignited global attention on Epstein’s network, underscoring how associations—whether social, financial, or professional—continue to carry reputational and professional consequences years after his death in 2019.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 16:00

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA viewers left furious as Eric Dane and James Van Der Beek are snubbed from the ceremony's emotional In Memoriam segment
BAFTA viewers were left furious after noticing Eric Dane and James Van Der Beek were both missing from the In Memorium segment during Sunday's ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Hamnet wins Outstanding British Film as child actors Jacobi Jupe and Olivia Lynes sweetly hug on stage
Hamnet was among the big winners at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards on Sunday night, despite star Paul Mescal missing out on his honour.

Mail Online
Open 
Jessie Buckley wins Leading Actress BAFTA for Hamnet and recalls her journey from a Judi Dench wannabe with a 'nuclear bad fake tan' to the golden girl of awards season in emotional speech
The actress, 36, emotionally accepted the honour for her role in Chloe Zhao's Hamnet, one of the two awards given to the film during the ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Eight hurt after car travelling the wrong way on the A1 ploughs head-on into vehicle: Man, 37, is arrested
A blue Audi Q3 that had been travelling on the correct side of a stretch of the A1 in Northumberland suddenly entered the wrong side of the carriageway for an unknown reason.

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William delivers speech at the BAFTAs about Britain's 'greatest strength' as he and Princess Kate put on a cheery display in first public appearance since Andrew's arrest
The Prince and Princess of Wales dazzled as they appeared at the Royal Festival Hall in London for the annual film awards on Sunday evening.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eze and Gyökeres at the double to boost Arsenal title bid with Spurs rout
Arsenal could feel the breath of Manchester City on their necks and the questions mounting; the anxiety all around them.The draw at Wolves on Wednesday had been a disaster and, with only two Premier League wins in seven, everybody seemed to want to say the same thing. Mikel Arteta and his players were cracking up in their pursuit of the title. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Battle After Another defeats Hamnet and Sinners at Baftas, as I Swear’s Robert Aramayo takes best actor
Paul Thomas Anderson drama enters final Oscars furlong as firm favourite after scoring six awards, as Hamnet’s Jessie Buckley becomes first Irish woman to win leading actress Bafta, and Chalamet and DiCaprio denied leading actor awardFull list of winnersHow the ceremony unfolded – the action as it happenedOne Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s counterculture comedy about a washed-up revolutionary trying to protect his daughter from a ruthless military officer, has dominated the Baftas, taking home six awards including best film, best director, best cinematography, best editing, best supporting actor, and best adapted screenplay.The film, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, was nominated for 14 awards going into Sunday’s ceremony, the most of any contender – including nods for stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor. Continue reading...

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Vitalik Buterin Unveils “Cypherpunk Principled” Extension to Strengthen Ethereum’s Core
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has outlined a new initiative to enhance the blockchain’s foundational architecture. On Friday, February 20, 2026, Buterin shared his vision for creating what he calls a “cypherpunk principled non-ugly Ethereum” — a specialized layer designed as a seamless bolt-on addition to... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Yotta’s Fraud Suit Against Evolve Bank Dismissed by San Francisco Judge, Provisionally
A San Francisco federal judge has granted a significant victory to Evolve Bank & Trust by dismissing a fraud lawsuit brought against it by fintech company Yotta Technology, at least in federal court. The ruling, issued on February 18, 2026, by Judge Trina L. Thompson... Read More

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Arsenal pass derby test of nerve as title race looks set to go to wire
Arsenal passed the north London derby test with flying colours as Premier League title race looks likely to go to the wire, says chief football writer Phil McNulty

The Hill
Open 
GOP governor: Trump’s push to end TPS for Haitians 'is wrong'
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) again defended Haitian migrants Sunday, as a legal challenge to the Trump administration’s attempts to revoke temporary protected status (TPS) for those from the Caribbean island plays out. “I think the policy to revoke that is wrong,” DeWine told host Margaret Brennan on CBS News’s “Face the Nation.” “I think...

The Hill
Open 
US trade representative says GOP lawmakers who weren’t always in favor of tariffs have 'now come around'
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday said GOP lawmakers who have not traditionally favored tariffs have “now come around” to the Trump administration’s levies on foreign partners. “I've heard from a lot of Republicans over the past year, ones who traditionally, you know, weren't always in favor of tariffs, they've now come around. And...

The Hill
Open 
This 89-year-old 'King of the Volunteers' at the Olympics will star in the closing ceremony
VERONA, Italy (AP) — When Mario Gargiulo traveled to the 1956 Cortina Winter Games, his first trip to northern Italy from his hometown of Naples, the 20-year-old never imagined he'd return to the Olympics. But he has, 70 years later, this time as the so-called “King of the Volunteers.” He was among the first of...

The Hill
Open 
TSA says PreCheck still operational after previous announcement of suspension during funding fight
“As staffing constraints arise, TSA will evaluate on a case by case basis and adjust operations accordingly,” the agency said.

The Hill
Open 
House Democrat says ‘diplomacy is the best way’ on Iran
Rep. Greg Stanton (D-Ariz.) said Sunday that “diplomacy is the best way” when it comes to the U.S.'s handling of Iran’s nuclear program after recent tensions between the two countries. “Well, there's the largest build-up, as you pointed out earlier, the largest buildup since the Iraq War in that region. The president is still ongoing...

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEOS – Cartel TERRORIZING Mexico after army takes out major cartel leader
The CJNG Cartel in Mexico is terrorizing the country after their leader, El Mencho, was taken out by the Mexican army. This comes after Trump designated the cartel a foreign terrorist organization . . .

Mail Online
Open 
My son was mowed down by an illegal migrant in a hit-and-run crash in August... now told his killer could walk free next year
Phillip Bruce, 35, was killed when the vehicle ploughed into the moped he was riding. The driver, illegal migrant Erald Kamberi, took off on foot.

Mail Online
Open 
Nearly a dozen wild animals including red-listed birds are tortured and killed using 'catapults' in leafy London borough hit by string of similar attacks
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT Nearly a dozen wild animals, including red-listed birds, have been tortured and killed using 'catapults' in a leafy London borough.

Mail Online
Open 
MG puts two cheap EV hatchbacks on sale at the same time - but which one should you buy?
MG has refreshed its top-selling MG4 EV for 2026, and brought out an MG4 Urban model to go alongside it. But which cheap EV is a better family buy? We tests both to find out.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Shock win as Robert Aramayo walks away with best actor award for I Swear – follow live!
Paul Thomas Anderson wins best director for One Battle After Another and Hamnet’s named outstanding British film. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereFind all the biggest news from the night hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

Telegraph
Open 
Eze torments Spurs again as Arsenal bounce back in title race
Eze torments Spurs again as Arsenal bounce back in title race

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Best Bafta Awards pictures as stars gather for ceremony
Stars of Sinners, Hamnet and One Battle After Another were among big names attending the ceremony.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lionel Messi’s referee confrontation in tunnel did not violate policy, MLS says
Miami star confronted officials in a doorway after 3-0 lossLeague determined area was not off-limits to playersMLS has suspended players for entering officials’ roomMajor League Soccer has cleared Lionel Messi of wrongdoing after the Argentinian appeared to pursue match officials after Inter Miami’s season-opening loss to LAFC on Saturday evening.In a video posted to X by Síntesis Deportes reporter Giovanni Guerrero, Messi appears to confront match officials as they entered a doorway within the LA Coliseum after the match, a 3-0 win for LAFC. Miami forward Luis Suárez is seen restraining Messi, who slips out of his teammate’s grip and disappears behind a door. He emerged seconds later and retreated with Suárez to Miami’s locker room. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: One Battle After Another wins best film – follow live!
Shock as Robert Aramayo named best actor for I Swear, and Jessie Buckley less surprisingly wins best leading actress for Hamnet. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereFind all the biggest news from the night hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Mexico's most wanted drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho", headed one of Mexico's most powerful drug cartels.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What would happen to the world if computer said yes?
The long-running series in which readers answer other readers’ questions asks whether we could cope with a world where computer gave up saying no …Readers reply: what would be the most socially useful way to spend a billion dollars?After years of computer saying no, and giving us all migraines and premature grey hair, I’m starting to worry that computer – or rather AI large language models like ChatGPT and Gemini – are taking too much of a fancy to playing nice and saying yes. I confess to using both of these programs, but I’ve noticed that, well, it’s as if they’re trying to please, with statements like “You’re absolutely right, Jeff,” and “That’s pretty much right.” Often, when I ask, “Would you mind thinking for a bit longer on that?”, I then get another response saying: “Jeff, you’re absolutely right, again, to query that result. It turns out I was a bit hasty in my reply …”If the world runs even more on information filleted out from the sump of the internet by LLMs, what are the consequences? Can we look forward to a future in which AI is more concerned with appearing sympathetic (getting good reviews?) than being factual? Er, a bit too human? Jeff Collett, Edinburgh Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican security forces reportedly kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers, the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho”, has been killed by security forces, Mexico’s defence ministry has confirmed.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco along with at least six alleged accomplices, the ministry said in a statement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eze and Gyökeres at the double to boost Arsenal title bid with Spurs rout
Arsenal could feel the breath of ­Manchester City on their necks and the questions mounting; the ­anxiety all around them.The draw at Wolves on Wednesday had been a disaster and, with only two Premier League wins in seven, everybody seemed to want to say the same thing. Mikel Arteta and his ­players were cracking up in their pursuit of the title. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Paul Thomas Anderson wins best director for One Battle After Another – follow live!
Hamnet wins outstanding British film, Sentimental Value bags best film not in the English language. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereFind all the biggest news from the night here The Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is MrWilson (who racked up a lot of wins this week) with a comment about the Twitter Files crew staying quiet when there are real attacks on free speech: “Free speech absolutists”: “You’re absolutely free to shut up and listen to my speech. Also, your […]

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump tariffs: 'A deal is a deal,' EU insists
The EU's executive insisted that "a deal is a deal" after US President Donald Trump said he was raising a global 10% tariff to 15% in response to the US Supreme Court blocking many of his emergency tariffs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mac Allister’s last-gasp winner gives Liverpool points at Nottingham Forest
As this game ticked into the 97th minute – or as Arne Slot put it, the extra time of extra time – Liverpool snatched victory with Alexis Mac Allister feasting on a loose ball in the Nottingham Forest six-yard box. If it felt like a touch of deja vu, that was because just before stoppage time it was Mac Allister who hurtled off celebrating what would have been a bizarre winner.After Stefan Ortega pawed away Hugo Ekitiké’s header from Rio Ngumoha’s feathery dinked cross with his right glove, the Forest defender Ola Aina sought to clear the danger once and for all. But he inadvertently smashed his clearance against Mac Allister, who turned his back on the ball and it cannoned off his elbow and into the back of the Forest net. The intervention of the video assistant referee, Paul Tierney, extended the at least five minutes of added time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bielle-Biarrey and France power past Italy to keep Six Nations grand slam plans on track
France 33-8 ItalyWing scores in eighth consecutive matchFrance pulled clear at the top of the Six Nations table and kept their grand slam ambitions on track with a hard-fought victory against Italy on Sunday.The Azzurri had unfinished business in Lille. It was two years ago in the northern city that Les Bleus, still in the midst of a post-World Cup hangover, miraculously escaped with a draw after being outplayed by the visitors. For the French, that quasi-defeat prompted a complete rejuvenation of the team which yielded immediate results. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Hamnet wins outstanding British film – follow live!
Sentimental Value bags best film not in the English language, Ryan Coogler nabs best original screenplay for Sinners. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
‘No thank you’: Greenland PM sinks Trump hospital ship idea

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Paul Thomas Anderson wins best director for One Battle After Another – follow live!
Hamnet wins outstanding British film, Sentimental Value bags best film not in the English language. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service fatally shoots armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted a white male in his early 20s carrying shotgun and gasoline can early Sunday The US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany: Protests against AfD events in Dortmund, Düsseldorf
Over 3,000 people protested against the attendance of AfD politician Björn Höcke at a party event at Dortmund city hall on Sunday. An even bigger protest is expected in nearby Düsseldorf on Monday.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
In pictures: London's Chinese New Year parade 2026
London's Chinatown is said to host the as the biggest Lunar New Year festival outside of Asia.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Wolves' Arokodare third player racially abused this weekend
Wolves say they are "disgusted" after striker Tolu Arokodare was sent racist abuse on social media by "multiple perpetrators" following his side's 1-0 loss to Crystal Palace.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Old Firm 'buckle under pressure' as incredible title race twists again
After a defeat for Celtic and surprise draw for Rangers, where does the latest weekend of drama leave the Scottish Premiership title race?

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 winners: One Battle After Another dominates with six gongs as Jessie Buckley is awarded Best Actress - but Timothee Chalamet is SNUBBED
One Battle After Another was the big winner at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards on Sunday night, as it scooped six gongs during the ceremony at London's Royal Festival Hall.

Digital Trends
Open 
Here’s your chance to grab a cheaper Cybertruck but you have to hurry
Tesla dropped the Cybertruck’s price for a limited 10-day window, aiming to spark demand after slow sales. It’s the lowest price yet — but the offer won’t last.
The post Here’s your chance to grab a cheaper Cybertruck but you have to hurry appeared first on Digital Trends.

Slashdot
Open 
Researchers Develop Detachable Crawling Robotic Hand
Long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot writes: Researchers have developed a robotic hand that can not only skitter about on its fingertips, it can also bend its fingers backward, connect and disconnect from a robotic arm, and pick up and carry one or more objects at a time.

This article in Science News includes footage of the robotic arm reattaching itself to the skittering robot hand, which can also hold objects against both sides of its palm simultaneously, and "can even unscrew the cap off a mustard bottle while holding the bottle in place."

With its unusual agility, it could navigate and retrieve objects in spaces too confined for human hands. When attached to the mechanical arm, the robotic hand could pick up objects much like a human hand. The bot pinched a ball between two fingers, wrapped four fingers around a metal rod and held a flat disc between fingers and palm.


But the bot isn't constrained by human anatomy... When the robot was separated from the arm, it was most stable walking on four or five fingers and using one or two fingers for grabbing and carrying things, the team found. In one set of trials with both bots, the hand detached from the robotic arm and used its fingers as legs to skitter over to a wooden block. Once there, it picked up the block with one finger and carried it back to the arm.

The crawling bot could one day aid in industrial inspections of pipes and equipment too small for a human or larger robot to access, says Xiao Gao, a roboticist now at Wuhan University in China. It might retrieve objects in a warehouse or navigate confined spaces in disaster response efforts.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mexican drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation, official says
Mexican drug lord "El Mencho" has been killed in a military operation.

Sky News Home
Open 
Call for 'treason' probe into Andrew's Epstein links
Searches of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's former home have continued for a fourth day - as a Conservative former security minister called for a "treason" probe into Andrew's links to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Mail Online
Open 
Rising British star Robert Aramayo shocks DiCaprio and Chalamet to win best actor as One Battle After Another is named top film: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 winners: One Battle After Another dominates with six gongs as Jessie Buckley is awarded Best Actress - but Timothee Chalamet is SNUBBED
Hamnet was among the big winners at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards on Sunday night, despite star Paul Mescal missing out on his honour.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mexican Forces Kill Jalisco Cartel Kingpin, Sparking Chaos And Violence Across Guadalajara
Mexican Forces Kill Jalisco Cartel Kingpin, Sparking Chaos And Violence Across Guadalajara

According to The Wall Street Journal, Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and assessed as one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders; footage on social media shows utter chaos unfolding across Guadalajara and other CJNG strongholds after Mencho's killing.

WSJ cited a senior Mexican official earlier Sunday who confirmed Oseguera was killed during a military operation against CJNG.

Additional color on CJNG from the outlet:


The cartel also controls vast fuel smuggling schemes and other underworld rackets across Mexico and the U.S., authorities said.

. . .

Oseguera was known for sophisticated paramilitary tactics and the deployment of hundreds of well-equipped and well-trained gunmen. He controlled vast swathes of territory, especially in his home state of Jalisco. He has been expanding his influence and was locked in a bloody struggle for control of Michoacán state in western Mexico.


Following the death of CJNG's leader, local media and X users have posted footage of chaos unfolding across the Guadalajara area, including reports of chaos at Guadalajara Airport and narco blockades spanning Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán, and Autlán.

Let's begin with the chaos at Guadalajara Airport:


Passengers and staff seen fleeing from reported gunfire inside Guadalajara International Airport, as members of the CJNG Cartel attempt to storm the airport and several other nearby locations in the Mexican state of Jalisco. pic.twitter.com/LL2axKaYZF
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 22, 2026

Another video pic.twitter.com/0OXofzHrKB
— Faytuks Network (@FaytuksNetwork) February 22, 2026

LIVE All flights to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico are diverting or returning due to smoke in the city following security incidents @wingbits pic.twitter.com/7xBFMEOXMr
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) February 22, 2026
CJNG blockades across CJNG territories:


Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, en el Salto, López Mateos Sur, macro periférico. Toda la ciudad hecha un caos. pic.twitter.com/7NufE0Cjqc
— Jorge García Orozco (@jorgegogdl) February 22, 2026

Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán y Autlán. Dominios del CJNG.#GuacamayaLeaks pic.twitter.com/PQHks2LGlR
— Guacamaya Leaks (@GuacamayanLeaks) February 22, 2026

⭕️ Reportan bloqueos del crimen organizado en tres estados con fuerte presencia del CJNG
🔹De manera simultánea, se registraron incendios de vehículos e invasiones a la vía pública en Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, la carretera Guadalajara-Colima, Uruapan (Michoacán) y Reynosa… pic.twitter.com/4MeQOpCDIV
— Código Magenta (@CodigoMagentaMx) February 22, 2026
Footage from Puerto Vallarta. 


#PuertoVallarta en estos momentos.#Vallarta #PV #Mexico #Jalisco
Fotografía de Dron DS. pic.twitter.com/1WpTRNFBho
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026

Ahorita en Puerto Vallarta.
No hay presencia de autoridad alguna, hora y media y nada. pic.twitter.com/wMCbsulL10
— Ricardo Badillo G (@Ricardo39687260) February 22, 2026

🚨🇲🇽 | #URGENTE Se registran balaceras en Puerto Vallarta atribuidas a un presunto enfrentamiento entre fuerzas federales y terroristas en medio de información que circula afirmando que Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", líder del CJNG, fue abatido. pic.twitter.com/bQCiRBUpVP
— La Derecha Diario México (@DerechaDiarioMX) February 22, 2026
Additional footage. 


🚨 Atención en #Tapalpa: Un operativo federal desató balaceras en el municipio, principalmente en Tapalpa Country Club. Se reportan helicópteros sobrevolando la zona y bloqueos en los accesos desde Tlajomulco.
📹 @JCMunguiaA92 pic.twitter.com/ZzeRMcBQ0C
— Telediario Guadalajara (@TelediarioGDL) February 22, 2026
Guadalajara is a World Cup Host City... 


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told all U.S. citizens in Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State to "shelter in place" amid "ongoing security operations in multiple states and related road blockages and criminal activity."


Locations: Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), areas of Michoacan State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo Leon State
Event: Due to ongoing security operations in multiple states and… pic.twitter.com/71gKVQ9ec1
— Embajada de EE.UU. en México (@USEmbassyMEX) February 22, 2026
*Developing...

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 13:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
DOJ Files To Revoke Citizenship Of Former Mayor Over Alleged Fraud
DOJ Files To Revoke Citizenship Of Former Mayor Over Alleged Fraud

Authored by Matthew Vadum via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Trump administration said Feb. 20 it has filed court papers to strip a former elected official in Florida of U.S. citizenship for allegedly committing fraud during the naturalization process.
Immigrants await their turn for green card and citizenship interviews at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Queens office in the Long Island City neighborhood of New York City on May 30, 2013. John Moore/Getty Images

The civil legal process against former North Miami Mayor Philippe Bien-Aime was initiated months after the federal government made a policy announcement.

In June 2025, the government said it would begin prioritizing the denaturalization of foreign-born citizens who either “illegally procured” naturalization or procured naturalization by “concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation.”

Bien-Aime, a native of Haiti, used two identities to secure immigration benefits and eventually obtain U.S. citizenship after unlawfully entering the United States, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) said in a statement.

CIS said the fraud was confirmed by comparing the fingerprints he provided while using the two identities, as part of a joint project carried out by CIS and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).

CIS alleged that before he became a U.S. citizen using the name Philippe Bien-Aime, the individual used a fraudulent passport with a switched photo to come to the United States under the name Jean Philippe Janvier. As Janvier, he was ordered deported. He later withdrew his appeal and represented that he had returned to Haiti.

In reality, according to CIS, he remained in the United States, used a new name and birthdate, and was married to a U.S. citizen to procure permanent resident status. The marriage was invalid because he was already married to a citizen of Haiti. He also made various false statements during the immigration and naturalization process and became a U.S. citizen in 2006 using the Bien-Aime identity, CIS alleged.

The DOJ said in a statement that a legal complaint was filed Feb. 18 with the U.S. District Court in Miami to launch the denaturalization proceeding against Bien-Aime. Miami-based U.S. Attorney Jason A. Reding Quiñones said U.S. citizenship “is a privilege grounded in honesty and allegiance to this country.”

“The complaint alleges that this defendant built his citizenship on fraud — using false identities, false statements, and a sham marriage to evade a lawful removal order,” Quiñones said in the DOJ statement.

“The fact that he later served as an elected mayor makes the alleged deception even more serious, because public office carries a duty of candor and respect for the rule of law,” he added.

Assistant U.S. Attorney General Brett Shumate said the Trump administration “will not permit fraudsters and tricksters who cheat their way to the gift of U.S. citizenship.”

“The passage of time does not diminish blatant immigration fraud,” he said in the statement.

The Epoch Times reached out for comment to Bien-Aime. No reply was received by publication time.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 14:15

ZDNet News
Open 
Forget the flagship - this midrange Galaxy checks all the right boxes at less than $200
The Samsung Galaxy A35 isn't perfect, but its OLED screen, reliable cameras, and two-day battery life make it a great phone for most.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Park Square Capital Expands Senior Debt Offering with European CLO Platform
Park Square Capital, a key player in the private credit space, has introduced a dedicated European Collateralized Loan Obligation (CLO) senior debt strategy. This development builds upon the firm’s established Credit Partners platform, which specializes in large-scale senior debt investments, and aims to provide investors... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
UK Business Cost Pressures Reach Significant Levels for SMEs Ahead of April Tax Changes : Research
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across the UK are facing mounting financial strain, with concerns over rising business costs hitting a record high, according to the latest insights from finance brokers. The findings, drawn from iwoca’s SME Expert Index for the fourth quarter of 2025,... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Victory Park and Privacore Introduce Asset backed Credit Fund
Affiliates of Janus Henderson have joined forces with Privacore Capital and Victory Park Capital to introduce the Privacore VPC Asset Backed Credit Fund, known as AltsABF. This now marks the debut of what they describe as the inaugural interval fund dedicated to private asset-backed credit... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Nvidia Set to Acquire $30 Billion Stake in OpenAI, Potentially Reshaping AI Alliances
In a maneuver that underscores the deepening interdependence of AI hardware developers and frontier model developers, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) is nearing the completion of a $30 billion equity investment in OpenAI. According to Reuters reporting on February 20, 2026, this commitment represents a pivotal element in... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bitso Partners with Alpaca to Enable US Stock Trading for Mexican Investors
In Latin America, where traditional finance often leaves millions behind, only 2-3% of the population participates in stock markets. High entry barriers, steep minimum investments, and rigid trading schedules have long kept global equities out of reach for everyday citizens facing economic uncertainty. Recently, Bitso,... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Darknet Markets Remain Resilient as Crypto Volumes Hold Steady : Analysis
Blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis has released fresh data highlighting the enduring strength of cryptocurrency-fueled drug trade on darknet platforms. In its latest insights from the Crypto Crime Report, the firm reports that total cryptocurrency flows tied to darknet marketplaces and drug vendors reached slightly more... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Betterment Strengthens Client Offerings with Mortgage Partnership and Advisor Model Marketplace Expansion
Betterment, a digital wealth management platform, continues to innovate by expanding access to homeownership tools and professional-grade investment strategies. Recently, Robo-advisory and wealthtech Betterment the company announced two key updates designed to deliver greater value to its more than one million customers and the independent... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Wirex Unveils Stablecoin Push-to-Card
Wirex, a full-stack crypto card issuer and Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) provider, this week unveiled Stablecoin Push-to-Card, powered by Visa Direct. Via Wirex BaaS APIs, partners can embed Stablecoin Push-to-Card and deliver stablecoin-funded payouts directly to recipients’ eligible cards worldwide, turning on a familiar “paid to card”... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
FBI Warns Against Rise in ATM Jackpotting Attacks
The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) has issued a stark warning about a dramatic rise in ATM jackpotting attacks, a sophisticated form of cyber-enabled theft that allows criminals to force automated teller machines to dispense large sums of cash without any legitimate transaction. In a... Read More

Gizmodo
Open 
Dwayne McDuffie Would’ve Been 64 This Weekend
15 years later, McDuffie should still be with us as a person and as a creator whose work left a mark on people.

Gizmodo
Open 
Trump’s FCC Chair Wants Networks to Run Nationalistic Content and Pledge Loyalty for America’s Big Bday
Fealty and Sousa marches in lieu of gifts, please.

Chatham House
Open 
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
20 February 2026

Chatham House analysts give their Initial reactions to the Supreme Court’s tariffs ruling, its likely impact on President Donald Trump’s economic agenda, and his angry response to the ruling.















The US Supreme Court has ruled against President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs in a long-awaited ruling that will be seen as a blow for the president’s economic agenda.By 6-3 the court found that President Trump exceeded his authority by using a law reserved for national emergencies.Trump called the ruling ‘deeply disappointing’ and said he will impose global tariffs of 15%. Here is early analysis from Chatham House experts, who are are monitoring developments.Bruce Stokes, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The head-spinning changes in US tariff policy in the last few days — first the Supreme Court decision invalidating the Trump administration’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), then President Donald Trump’s imposition of a 10% across the board tariff under Section 122 of U.S. trade law, followed just a day later with the president upping that duty to 15% – have left the American and foreign business communities, US consumers, and foreign governments with more questions than answers.Any sighs of relief in the wake of the Court’s decision should be tempered by a new reality.The effective global U.S. tariff rate was 13.7% before the Court decision, according to the Yale Budget Lab. With Trump’s new Section 122 action duties will now be 8%. But in January 2025, before the Trump administration came to power, the effective U.S. tariff rate was roughly 3%. More than a doubling of American protectionism is better than a quadrupling, but it is still higher than at any time in more than 60 years.It is highly likely some affected party will challenge the use of Section 122, which has never been invoked by any president in its half century on the books.






It is a fallacy to assume that Trump will play by the rules






The law stipulates this power is to be used for a balance of payments problem. But the Department of Justice lawyers claimed in the IEEPA case that: ‘Nor does [122] have any obvious application here, where the concerns the President identified in declaring an emergency arise from trade deficits, which are conceptually distinct from balance-of-payments deficits.’ This awkward statement may come back to haunt the Trump Administration.For those outside the United States, a major question is how the many trade and investment deals Washington has imposed on countries around the world will be affected by the scrambling of U.S. tariff policy.The Financial Times was quick to opine that: ‘Analysts say the risk of retaliation is likely to deter countries from seeking to backtrack on already agreed deals.’But the Japan Times saw it differently: ‘Trump’s treasured negotiating edge dulled by tariff defeat…With a stroke of a pen, the U.S. Supreme Court wreaked havoc on President Donald Trump’s favorite method of wielding leverage over other countries.’At the very least, the uncertainty created by the Court’s decision may lead to more foot dragging by other nations as Washington attempts to finalize the details of its framework trade and investment deals with the EU, Japan, India and others. If they do, who knows what America’s hair-triggered President may do.It is a fallacy to assume that Trump will play by the rules. The 122 tariffs expire in 150 days. To be extended, Congress must vote to do so. Congress has shown no appetite for tariffs, especially with Congressional mid-term elections in November.






The bottom line is that US protectionism will continue, and it may be even more chaotic, unpredictable and disruptive






The Administration claims they can use other trade powers — Section 301 that deals with ‘unfair’ trade practices and Section 232 that allows duties for ‘national security’ purposes — to replace the 122 tariffs.But the scope of these sections is not as broad as an across the board 15% tariff. Once this becomes apparent to the president, his past behavior suggests he may simply extend the 122 tariffs or use his 301 and 232 authority in unprecedented and arguably illegal ways, challenging importers to ‘sue me’. As the IEPA suit showed, this could take months.Finally, it is not clear that the invocation of Section 122 and its 15% tariffs will help the president politically. Just before the Court ruled, the Washington Post and ABC News conducted a public opinion survey showing that 64% of Americans disapproved of how Trump was handling tariffs on imported goods.And in the wake of the Court decision a snap YouGov poll found that 60% of Americans strongly approve of striking down the IEEPA tariffs.So the bottom line is that US protectionism will continue, and it may be even more chaotic, unpredictable and disruptive.Bruce Stokes is a US-based non-resident fellow at the German Marshall Fund. Read his full biography here.Heather Hurlburt, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:At first glance, this is a more comprehensive repudiation of the Trump administration’s tariff policies than many (including me) expected.The language of the majority opinion appears to include an attempt to close off some of the other unilateral options that President Trump had said he had at his disposal.






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision. It may reflect both the breadth of corporate support for the lawsuit and concern with Trump’s recent rounds of tariff threats, including against Europe over Greenland.The SCOTUS ruling covers President Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ baseline 10% tariff that he announced on 2 April 2025, higher tariffs on many countries, and fentanyl and other “national security” tariffs.However it does NOT cover steel/aluminum and many other product-specific tariffs issued as a result of a “232” or “301” investigation. (‘232’ and ‘301’ refer to specific sections of decades-old trade laws passed by Congress, which authorize the executive branch to impose tariffs in specific circumstances, after an investigation. 232 tariffs may include national security as a justification.)President Trump still has lots of ways to impose tariffs. He’s not going to back down.I’m very struck by this phrase from Justice Kavanaugh’s dissent: ‘So the Court’s decision is not likely to greatly restrict presidential tariff authority going forward.’The court also did not mandate refunds of the tariffs collected to date, either to consumers or to manufacturers reliant on tariffed imports.Does that suggest that Chief Justice Roberts identified an approach to the law that feels like a momentous defense of the Constitution but has relatively little practical effect?Or will this ruling presage a vibe shift that gets the administration to change course?Senator Bernie Moreno, the senior Republican senator from Ohio, has called on Congress to use reconciliation to enact the president’s tariffs.This would presumably be challenging given that Republicans in both houses have joined Democrats in opposing President Trump’s tariffs.Heather Hurlburt served as Chief of Staff to US Trade Representative Katherine Tai from 2022 to 2024. Read her full Chatham House biography here.Ambassador Julián Ventura, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The 20 February US Supreme Court 6-3 decision on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) is a significant fork in the tariff-driven trade policy road taken exactly 13 months ago by President Donald Trump when he announced his America First Trade Policy.It does not, however, mark an end to his expansive use of Executive authority to shape his engagement with global trading partners.In his combative reaction to the ruling, the president previewed alternative legal authorities that his administration will use as a basis for continued tariff action, including a new 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows for temporary import surcharges or import quotas to address balance-of-payments issues.






Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game






With details on scope, applicability and implementation of additional actions still unclear, US trade partners around the world will scramble in the coming days to determine the potential impact on their respective deals or framework agreements reached with Washington. Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game.The ruling comes on the heels of the release of the US Census Bureau’s 2025 international trade data confirming Mexico and Canada’s place as the first and second US trading partners, export markets and sources of imports, and as the three countries undertake the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA)’s first joint review.In North America, with intraregional annual trade at almost 2 trillion dollars and millions of jobs and investment decisions linked to the continuity of the agreement, a great deal is at stake.In its initial reaction to the ruling, the government of Canada stated that it reinforces its view that the IEEPA tariffs ‘are unjustified’. Mexico´s Secretary of the Economy said he would be reaching out to his US counterparts and await more details on the announced 10% global tariff. Both countries were subject to IEEPA tariffs (35% on Canada and 25% on Mexico) on non-USMCA compliant exports, in addition to various Section 232 sectorial tariffs which continue to apply.It’s important to keep in mind that roughly 85% of massive Canadian and Mexican USMCA-compliant exports – totalling approximately 780 billion dollars – maintains tariff-free access to the US market.Beyond specific negotiating strategies with Washington, Ottawa and Mexico City will continue to focus on reducing uncertainty and preserving their current relative competitive advantages in a rapidly changing tariff environment.Ambassador Julián Ventura is a career diplomat, currently on leave from the Mexican Foreign Service, with over 33 years in public service. Read his full Chatham House biography here.Professor Roland Paris, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs may have removed one instrument from his tariff toolkit, but it has done nothing to make US trade policy more predictable. If anything, it may herald even greater volatility.Trump retains several alternative instruments now that tariffs imposed under the IEEPA have been ruled unlawful. Each entails procedural hurdles, evidentiary thresholds, time limits and litigation risks. Yet, as Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed in his dissenting opinion, “the Court’s decision might not prevent Presidents from imposing most, if not all, of these same sorts of tariffs under other statutory authorities.”That Trump, visibly angered by the ruling, quoted Kavanaugh’s statement not just once but twice suggests that he is not reconsidering his long-held belief in the benefits of tariffs. He has already pledged to introduce a new global tariff of 15 per cent, while signalling that further measures may follow.For US trade partners – including several that negotiated agreements intended to reduce IEEPA tariffs on their exports – the outlook is unclear. The uncertain status of those arrangements, together with the prospect of new tariffs, now adds an additional layer of unpredictability to an already unstable picture.






The US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner






Canada, for its part, gains little from the removal of the IEEPA tariffs, since goods compliant with the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement were already exempt. Meanwhile, the tariffs inflicting real pain on key Canadian sectors – including autos, steel, aluminium and lumber – remain in place because they rest on different statutory authorities. And any new US global tariffs may prove more damaging than the IEEPA measures if they eliminate existing exemptions.The logic of Canadian prime minister Mark Carney’s speech at Davos, in other words, remains unchanged: the US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner, leaving its jilted allies with little choice but to diversify their trade partnerships and invest in their own resilience.Canada-based Roland Paris is director of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa, and former foreign policy adviser to the prime minister of Canada. Read his full Chatham House biography here.

The Hill
Open 
Bessent dodges questions about tariff refunds
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday dodged questions about refunds after the Supreme Court struck the vast majority of President Trump’s tariffs down. “I do want to start with the big question, will you refund the roughly $134 billion in revenue taken by these emergency tariffs?” CNN’s Dana Bash asked Bessent on “State of the...

The Hill
Open 
US trade rep: Trump administration 'found ways to really reconstruct' its tariff agenda after SCOTUS ruling
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday said the Trump administration “found ways to really reconstruct” its policies on tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down the use of an emergency statute for current levies.  Greer said the president addressed this in his press conference Friday.  “And he said that since we were looking at...

The Hill
Open 
Greer on tariff refunds: 'We need the court to tell us what to do'
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday said the Trump administration would need guidance from the courts on how to handle tariff refunds after the Supreme Court struck down duties authorized under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). “Well, we need the court to tell us what to do. They’ve created a situation where...

The Hill
Open 
Texas GOP Senate candidate: 'It's time for the next generation of American first patriots to lead'
Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) on Sunday said its time for the next generation of “American patriots” to lead on a national level as he vies to oust Sen. John Cornyn in a crowded Texas GOP primary. “I'm a West Point graduate. I'm a former Apache pilot. Flew 55 combat air missions in Baghdad. And the...

The Hill
Open 
Trump wages a war on truth, promoting fake history and fake science 
President Trump is attempting to replace factual information about American history and the environment with false narratives, leading to censorship of displays and signage about slavery, Native American land seizures, and climate change in national parks and other federal sites.

The Hill
Open 
Iranian foreign minister says US deal is still 'quite possible'
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Sunday that a nuclear deal with the U.S. is still “quite possible” after recent tension with the Americans. “Well, you said on Friday that you would have a draft proposal within two to three days. Have you gotten the supreme leader to sign off on that proposal yet? And...

Mail Online
Open 
Russia blames Britain for assassination bid against one of Putin's most senior military spy chiefs
Britain was accused by the Kremlin today of being behind an assassination bid in Moscow aimed at one of Vladimir Putin's highest-level military spy chiefs. 

Mail Online
Open 
Urgent hunt for missing sisters, aged 10 and 16, who vanished from London on Friday
Sisters Afia and Bilal have been reported missing after disappearing together from their home on Friday evening.

Mail Online
Open 
Nurses at bug-death hospital warned me an infection would kill my boy before cancer did
The father of a child who was being treated for cancer at the QEUH has told how a cleaner warned him tap water on the boy's ward was not fit for animals.

Mail Online
Open 
I forgive man who murdered my daughter - and I have prayed for him, says anguished father
The father of murdered student Karen Buckley revealed he has forgiven his daughter's killer.

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles tries to put on a brave face as he is pictured leaving church today amid Andrew scandal
The monarch looked grim-faced as he walked out of St Mary Magdalene Church in Sandringham following a service this morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's Got Talent launch pulls in 'lowest ratings EVER' after viewers brand show 'boring' and moan acts are the 'same thing over and over'
Britain's Got Talent launch reportedly saw its lowest ratings ever on Saturday as the show returned for its 19th series. 

Mail Online
Open 
Rising British star shocks DiCaprio and Chalamet to win best actor as One Battle After Another scoops multiple awards: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
American tourists left stranded in beautiful Mexico hotspot as cartels torch cars and wreak havoc in 'code red' attack
Columns of smoke are rising over Puerto Vallarta, a popular tourist spot, after Mexican authorities conducted an operation to kill a prominent cartel leader on Sunday morning.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Decades of feminism paved the road to Andrew’s arrest | Rebecca Solnit
The outcry and activism of the 2010s – itself enabled by earlier generations of feminists – brought us to this moment. But if the Trump administration has its way, opposing forces will prevailThis week, for the first time since 1647, a member of the royal family was arrested in the United Kingdom, not over allegations of sexual wrongdoing but for trade-related communications with the supplier of those victims, Jeffrey Epstein, to whom he is supposed to have leaked state secrets. The public outrage in the US about Epstein forced the government to release the files, including emails between Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Epstein now under investigation in the criminal case.The arrestee formerly known as Prince Andrew was accused by Virginia Guiffre with having had sex with her when she was a minor being trafficked by Epstein. He has always denied wrongdoing. Until his arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office, only his family had held him accountable for his ongoing association with Epstein after Epstein’s 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor for prostitution. “Today our broken hearts have lifted,” Virginia Giuffre’s family stated, “at the news that no one is above the law, not even royalty.”Rebecca Solnit is a Guardian US columnist. She is the author of Orwell’s Roses and the forthcoming The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will Jacks stars for England as Sri Lanka flail with bat in T20 World Cup
Super 8s: England, 146-9, beat Sri Lanka, 95, by 51 runsHarry Brook hails ‘awesome performance’ in Super 8 winOver the first hour of this match the grass banks on either side of the wicket filled both in numbers and in belief. Dot balls set off boisterous celebrations, wickets provoked delirium. An increasingly joyous crowd whooped as England’s batters trooped dolefully to and from the middle. Mexican waves rippled around a stadium already, and prematurely as it turned out, in full celebration.England were restricted to just 146 for nine, an innings that revealed few demons in the pitch – for all that it had spent much of the previous few days sweating under covers – but several in their heads. Again they faltered against spin. Jos Buttler remains in dismal form. Tom Banton was run out seeking a make-believe single, victim of scrambled decision making. Jacob Bethell, rather than giving himself a few moments to get the measure of Maheesh Theekshana, attacked the spinner’s first ball of the game and sent a leading edge to short third. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pied Piper review – beatbox rewrite of the rat-infested fairytale
Derby theatreConrad Murray’s family musical is serious about its commitment to community – but completely lacks dramatic thrustThis is not the first time the tale of the Pied Piper has had the hip-hop treatment. Way back in 2007, dance company Boy Blue won an Olivier award for their rewrite of the German legend, their plague of rats busting out tight street dance routines. This time round, the story is powered by beatboxing, and by writer/composer/performer Conrad Murray, who also plays the Piper. It is a show with the best of intentions, a family musical that’s serious about its commitment to community – a cast of local children flood the stage at one point – there’s audience participation (practise your hi-hats), there are messages about friendship, freedom and, above all, the power of music. None of that can you cast shade on.
The main problem might be the complete lack of dramatic thrust. The story is based around the mayor of Hamelin, who also runs a pie factory full of rats and exploited workers who only get seven minutes for their lunch break. In subplots, there’s the mayor’s daughter, who just wants to sing but is too shy (except that she actually does a lot of singing), and a fellow factory worker in some kind of crisis that feels very surface until suddenly she’s about to jump off a building (the lyrics aren’t always clear, which undermines a lot of the detail and thus Murray’s desire to make this a story of class struggle as well as pest control). The emotional payoffs are not earned, and the major reveals – a pie full of rats, the stealing of the town’s children – all pass like just another beat.It is a huge challenge to create a score with only seven voices and no backing track, so respect to Murray for that, although the arrangements do sometimes feel bare, the harmonies not always sound, the performers occasionally breathless – to be fair, they’re working hard, and on the go constantly to keep the stage moving. And there’s talent here, beatboxer Alex “Apollo” Hardie especially, with an encyclopedia of sounds in his percussive armoury. Pied Piper is a worthy idea, sincerely and energetically performed, with the seeds of something more, but they haven’t pulled it off, yet.
• Pied Piper is at Derby theatre until 22 February; then touring Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Paul Thomas Anderson wins best adapted screenplay One Battle After Another – follow live!
Ryan Coogler nabs best original screenplay for Sinners, Sean Penn takes best supporting actor for One Battle. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow every prize as it happens live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Closing ceremony from Verona Arena after Norway top medal table – live
Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNorway beats US to top medal table | email GrahamWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
What Happened in Hulu's 'Paradise'? Here's a Recap Before Season 2 Premieres
Get ready for season 2 to head outside the bunker.

Telegraph
Open 
Arsenal restore five-point title advantage as Eze torments Spurs again
Arsenal restore five-point title advantage as Eze torments Spurs again

Telegraph
Open 
France maintain bulldozing procession towards Six Nations Grand Slam
France maintain bulldozing procession towards Six Nations Grand Slam

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Iwobi seals Fulham’s victory at Sunderland after Raúl Jiménez double
Raúl Jiménez will turn 35 in May yet Fulham’s Mexican striker remains as vital to Marco Silva’s team as ever. It is now approaching six years since his career was placed in serious jeopardy by a skull fracture but Jiménez exhibited precious few signs of wear and tear as his latest two goals, a second-half header and a penalty, sunk Sunderland.Although Enzo Le Fée’s penalty briefly reduced the deficit, Alex Iwobi’s deft chip rubber-stamped Fulham’s victory, leaving the home side to rue clearcut chances missed by Romaine Mundle and Nilson Angulo. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eze and Gyökeres at the double to boost Arsenal title bid with Spurs rout
Arsenal could feel the breath of Manchester City on their necks and the questions mounting; the anxiety all around them. The draw at Wolves on Wednesday had been a disaster and, with only two Premier League wins in seven, everybody seemed to want to say the same thing. Mikel Arteta and his players were cracking up in their pursuit of the title.This was the soothing tonic they craved, a comfortable and confident dismissal of a Tottenham team desperate to feel a new manager bounce under Igor Tudor. Spurs did show personality to find a Randal Kolo Muani goal for 1-1 in the 34th minute; it was the striker’s first for the club in the league. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mexican army kills drug lord Oseguera 'El Mencho'
Nemesio Oseguera, known as El Mencho, headed the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, one of Mexico's most violent drug trafficking organizations. The United States had offered a $15 million bounty for his capture.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Body diversity returns to London fashion week as wider industry heads ultra-thin
Karoline Vitto, Phoebe English and Sinead Gorey include wide range of body shapes on catwalksBody diversity has made a comeback at London fashion week despite a wider shift towards ultra-thinness in the fashion industry.Emerging designers including Karoline Vitto, Phoebe English and Sinead Gorey included a wide range of body shapes on catwalks over the past four days. Sizes have ranged from a UK size 10-16, a category referred to as mid-size in the industry, to plus-size, also known as curve models, which measures from a UK size 18 upwards. Sample size, often referred to as straight models, ranges from a UK 4-8. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Wunmi Mosaku wins best supporting actress for Sinners – follow live!
Sean Penn takes best supporting actor for One Battle After Another, and Sinners’ Ryan Coogler wins best original screenplay. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Washington and Tehran to hold more nuclear talks as protests reignite in Iran
Fresh Geneva negotiations suggest Trump’s team believes the Iranian government is making serious proposalsIran and the US are expected to meet for a further round of talks in Geneva this week in a sign that Donald Trump’s team believes Tehran is making serious proposals to dilute its stockpile of highly enriched uranium and show it is not seeking a nuclear weapon.As fears loomed of renewed conflict after Washington carried out a major redeployment of military assets to the region, the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said he thought there was still a good chance of finding a diplomatic solution. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William says he's 'not in a calm state' as he arrives at the BAFTAs amid Andrew arrest drama: Prince of Wales says he's not in right frame of mind to watch weepy contender Hamnet - as Kate reveals it left her in floods of tears
Their glamorous appearance signalled a determination to put the Royal Family's current difficulties to one side.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Closing ceremony under way after Norway top medal table – live
Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNorway beats US to top medal table | email GrahamWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William says he's 'not in a calm state' to watch Hamnet after months of turmoil around his wife's cancer, the release of the Epstein files and his Uncle Andrew's arrest last week - as Princess Kate reveals it left her in tears
Their glamorous appearance signalled a determination to put the Royal Family's current difficulties to one side.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 winners: Hamnet is awarded Outstanding British Film - but star Paul Mescal misses out on Supporting Actor nod
Hamnet was among the big winners at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards on Sunday night, despite star Paul Mescal missing out on his honour.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican security forces reportedly kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers – the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho” – has reportedly been killed by his country’s security forces.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco, Mexican newspapers reported, citing government sources. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
European football: Barça retake top spot, Parma stun Milan to deal title blow
Fermín López caps 3-0 win over LevanteMariano Troilo heads in late as Parma beat Milan 1-0Barcelona returned to the top of La Liga with a 3-0 victory over relegation-threatened Levante as Marc Bernal, Frenkie de Jong and substitute Fermín López struck at Camp Nou.Last season’s champions moved to 61 points from 25 games, one ahead of Real Madrid after their rivals’ defeat by Osasuna on Saturday. Barça had slipped to second following last week’s 2-1 loss to Girona but rarely looked troubled by a Levante side second from bottom on 18 points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eze and Gyökeres at the double boost Arsenal title bid with Spurs rout
Arsenal could feel the breath of Manchester City on their necks and the questions mounting; the anxiety all around them. The draw at Wolves on Wednesday had been a disaster and, with only two Premier League wins in seven, everybody seemed to want to say the same thing. Mikel Arteta and his players were cracking up in their pursuit of the title.This was the soothing tonic they craved, a comfortable and confident dismissal of a Tottenham team desperate to feel a new manager bounce under Igor Tudor. Spurs did show personality to find a Randal Kolo Muani goal for 1-1 in the 34th minute; it was the striker’s first for the club in the league. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: Wunmi Mosaku wins best supporting actress for Sinners – follow live!
Sean Penn takes best supporting actor for One Battle After Another. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losersFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Prince William pays tribute to army medic found dead in barracks
Investigation under way regarding death of Cpl Lucy Wilde, 25, who prince said ‘served with courage and distinction’Prince William has paid tribute to a young army medic found dead in her barracks who “served with courage and distinction”.Cpl Lucy Wilde, 25, who posted videos on TikTok documenting her daily life in the army, was found dead in her barracks in Warminster, Wiltshire, on 5 February. An investigation is under way, the Ministry of Defence said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nigel Farage accused of ‘Maga stunts’ for saying he was denied access to Chagos Islands
Reform UK leader flew to the Maldives for a day despite not having permit to visit nearby archipelagoNigel Farage has been accused of “performing Maga stunts” after claiming the British government stopped him from travelling to the Chagos Islands on a humanitarian mission.The Reform UK leader said he had flown to the Maldives to join a delegation bringing aid to four Chagossians who are trying to establish a settlement on one of the archipelago’s islands to protest against Britain’s plans to transfer control of the territory to Mauritius. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mexico's most wanted drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho", is head of one of Mexico's most powerful drug cartels.

Mail Online
Open 
Timothée Chalamet proudly shows off his £100k watch to Hollywood pals as he takes his seat at the BAFTA Film Awards
The actor, who is up for a Leading Actor gong for Marty Supreme, was seen flaunting his flashing jewellery attendees - setting tongues wagging over whether it was a gift from Kylie Jenner.

Mail Online
Open 
Timothee Chalamet spends the BAFTAs texting on his phone as he is sent a meme of himself after host Alan Cumming instructed the audience to 'turn off all electronic devices'
Timothee Chalamet spent the BAFTAs texting on his phone after host Alan Cumming instructed the audience to 'turn off all electronic devices'. 

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA nominee Kate Hudson oozes Hollywood glamour in a scarlet Prada gown as she turns heads on the red carpet
Kate Hudson had all eyes on her as she stepped out at the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 in an elegant red silky gown.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA host Alan Cumming thanks audience for Tourette's understanding as I Swear's John Davidson lets out involuntary shouts during ceremony
I Swear details the life of campaigner John, now 54, who was diagnosed with Tourette Syndrome at a time when little was known about the condition.

Mail Online
Open 
Braless Jenna Coleman makes rare red carpet appearance in a racy sheer Giorgio Armani Privé gown as she attends the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026
The actress, 39, went braless for the star-studded awards ceremony as she stepped out in a Giorgio Armani Privé couture.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Heist' at Forest boosts Liverpool's top-four hopes
Liverpool's late 1-0 win at Nottingham Forest puts the Reds firmly in the Champions League hunt after a "robbery" of a victory at the City Ground.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mexico's most wanted man 'El Mencho' killed in military operation
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho", is head of one of Mexico's most powerful drug cartels.

Mail Online
Open 
Who is Austin Tucker Martin? The 21-year-old killed after entering Mar-a-Lago with a shotgun and gas can
Austin Tucker Martin, 21, was shot by US Secret Service after entering President Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate with a shot gun.

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles sends his 'heartfelt congratulations' to Olympic Winter Games winners from Team GB and across the Commonwealth
The King has sent his 'heartfelt congratulations' to Olympic Winter Games winners from Team GB and across the Commonwealth.  

Mail Online
Open 
How Arsenal thrashed Tottenham - with help from five-goal Eberechi Eze and inspired Viktor Gyokeres: All the goals, big moments and talking points
They arrived for a combined £131.5million last summer and neither has been a real hit - but Eberechi Eze and Viktor Gyokeres were outstanding here.

TechRadar News
Open 
OpenAI's first ChatGPT gadget could turn out to be a smart speaker with a camera attached

TechRadar News
Open 
My Moleskine wasn’t enough to save my mental health but this app was

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple prepares new MacBooks, iPhone 17e and more for early March rollout
Apple is gearing up to unveil five new devices in early March, including a low-cost MacBook and refreshed Macs, iPhone and iPad models, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.
The post Apple prepares new MacBooks, iPhone 17e and more for early March rollout appeared first on Digital Trends.

Adam Curry
Open 
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1845 #@pocketnoagenda
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1845 #@pocketnoagenda

Slashdot
Open 
AI Now Helps Manage 16% of America's Apartments
Imagine a 280-unit apartment complex offering no on-site leasing office with a human agent for questions. "Instead, the entire process has been outsourced to AI..." reports SFGate, "from touring to signing the lease to completing management tasks once you actually move in."

Now imagine it's far more than just one apartment complex...

At two other Jack London Square apartment buildings, my initial interactions were also with a robot. At the Allegro, my fiance and I entered the leasing office for our tour and asked for "Grace P," the leasing agent who had emailed us. "Oh, that's just our AI assistant," the woman at the front desk told us... At Aqua Via, another towering apartment complex across the street, I emailed back and forth with a very helpful and polite "Sofia M." My pal Sofia seemed so human-like in her responses that I did not realize she was AI until I looked a little closer at a text she'd sent me. "Msgs may be AI or human generated...." [S]he continued to text me for weeks after I'd moved on, trying to win me back. When I looked at the fine print, I realized both of these complexes were using EliseAI, a leading AI housing startup that claims to be involved in managing 1 in 6 apartments in the U.S...

[50 corporate landlords have funded a VC named RET Ventures to invest in and deploy rental-automating AI, and SFGate's reporter spoke to partner Christopher Yip.] According to Yip, AI is common in large apartment complexes not just in the tech-centric Bay Area, but across the entire country. It all kicked off at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he said, when contactless, self-guided apartment tours and completely virtual tours where people rented apartments sight unseen became commonplace. Technology's infiltration into the renting process has only grown deeper in the years since, Yip said, mirroring how pervasive AI has become in many other facets of our lives. "From an industry perspective, it's really about meeting the renter where they are," Yip said. He pointed to how many renters now prefer to interact through text and email, and want to tour apartments at their convenience - say, at 7 p.m. after work, when a typical leasing office might be closed.

The latest updates in technology not only allow you to take a self-guided tour with AI unlocking the door for you, but also to ask AI questions by conversing with voice AI as you wander through the kitchen and bedroom at your leisure. And while a human leasing agent might ghost you for days or weeks at a time, AI responds almost instantly - EliseAI typically responds within 30 seconds, [said Fran Loftus, chief experience officer at EliseAI]... [I]n some scenarios, the goal does seem to be to eliminate humans entirely. "We do have long-term plans of building fully autonomous buildings," Loftus said.... "We think there's a time and a place for that, depending on the type of property. But really right now, it's about helping with this crazy turnover in this industry."
The reporter says they missed the human touch, since "The second AI was involved, the interaction felt cold. When a human couldn't even be bothered to show up to give me a tour, my trust evaporated."

But they conclude that in the years ahead, human landlords offering tours "will probably go the way of landlines and VCRs."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
Retro camera shootout: Camp Snap Pro vs. Flashback One35 V2
There's been a surge of interest over the last few years in inexpensive digital cameras. Younger folks are snapping up old point-and-shoots because they view the aesthetic as more authentic and more appealing than smartphone images. Companies are even rereleasing old tech at new prices. And there are cameras like the original Camp Snap: a […]

The Aviationist
Open 
Apache Helicopters Get New “Drone-Killer” 30mm Proximity-Fused Ammunition
Live-fire trials of the AH-64 with XM1225 APEX ammunition come as both U.S. and Russian attack helicopters experiment with proximity-fused cannon rounds to defeat small UAVs. The U.S. Army conducted the first successful live fire test of the 30×113 mm XM1225 Aviation Proximity Explosive (APEX) ammunition, employed by an AH-64 Apache attack helicopter in an […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mexico's most wanted man 'El Mencho' reported killed
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho", is head of one of Mexico's most powerful drug cartels.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway (population: 5.7m) beats US (342m) to top Winter Olympics medal table
Country wins most golds (18) in Winter Games historyUSA, GB and Australia also set team recordsNorwegians put emphasis on participation Norway has once again topped the Winter Olympics medal table, surpassing countries with far larger populations.The Scandinavian country won more gold medals (18) and more total medals (41) than the US, who came second in both categories (12 golds and 33 total medals). Norway’s 18 golds were the most by a country in Winter Olympics history, while their cross-country skiing hero Johannes Høsflot Klæbo accounted for six golds on his own, more than the all but seven other countries at this year’s Games. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Alan Cumming takes to the stage as the BBC coverage of the biggest night of the year in British cinema begins. Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz, gossip, winners and losers Follow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
21-Year-Old Male Identified As Shotgun-Wielding Mar-a-Lago Intruder
21-Year-Old Male Identified As Shotgun-Wielding Mar-a-Lago Intruder

Update (1230ET):

AP News reports that the 21-year-old male, armed with a shotgun and a gas canister, who was shot and killed by law enforcement at Mar-a-Lago early Sunday morning after breaching the outer layer of the security perimeter, has been identified as Austin Tucker Martin.


🚨 BREAKING: Mar-a-Lago intruder IDENTIFIED as 21-year-old, Austin Tucker Martin, who breached the secure perimeter and was shot dead, reports Fox’s @pdoocy.
Tucker was reported missing by his parents and was LAST SEEN on Feburay 21st at 7:51pm. pic.twitter.com/xQv0kcAhJ4
— TV News Now (@TVNewsNow) February 22, 2026
Laura Loomer adds more color. 


NEW:
It appears a man named Austin Tucker Martin was also reported missing by his family in North Carolina yesterday according to posts I found on Facebook. His aunt said on Facebook his family contacted the FBI to report him missing….
Is this the same Austin Tucker Martin who… pic.twitter.com/16rzoBm26Z
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) February 22, 2026
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo that the Democratic Party is "normalizing violence" and that "it has got to stop." 


🚨 BREAKING: Sec. Scott Bessent says it perfectly on the Left after a shotgun-wielding maniac tries STORMING Mar-a-Lago
"It is this kind of VENOM! They are NORMALIZING this violence!"
"Two would-be assassins dead. One in jail for life. This VENOM coming from the other side!"… pic.twitter.com/Hfw7KESgs4
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) February 22, 2026
As the day progresses, officials are likely to release more details about Martin.

*   *   * 

U.S. Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi reported on X that a young male was shot and killed after breaching the security perimeter at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, the private resort owned by President Donald Trump.

Guglielmi said the incident unfolded around 1:30 a.m. ET, when the man, in his early 20s, was shot by Secret Service agents following an unauthorized entry into the secure perimeter at Mar-a-Lago.

"The individual was observed by the north gate of the Mar-a-Lago property carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can," the spokesman said.



Guglielmi continued:


U.S. Secret Service agents and a PBSO deputy confronted the individual, and shots were fired by law enforcement during the encounter. No U.S. Secret Service or PBSO personnel were injured. No Secret Service protectees were present at the location at the time of the incident.


He said the individual, whose identity is being withheld pending notification of next of kin, was pronounced dead at the scene.


An armed man was shot & killed by U.S. Secret Service agents & @PBCountySheriff after unlawfully entering the secure perimeter at Mar-a-Lago early this morning. A press briefing with additional details will be held at 9:00 a.m with @FBI and Palm Beach County. pic.twitter.com/jAXhdb1xEL
— Anthony Guglielmi (@AJGuglielmi) February 22, 2026
Earlier, Palm Beach County Sheriff Rick Bradshaw told reporters at a press conference that the young man was "ordered to drop the two pieces of equipment he had with him. At that time, he put down the gas can and raised the shotgun to a shooting position."

Bradshaw said two agents and the deputy "fired their weapons to neutralize the threat."


Sheriff Bradshaw provides details after a man who was carrying a gascan and a shotgun was shot and killed at Mar-a-Lago. pic.twitter.com/lw4kGVLNHb
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) February 22, 2026
He noted that the suspect was from North Carolina and had been reported missing by his family a few days earlier. A preliminary investigation shows he may have acquired a shotgun during his travels, as officers found the box for the gun in his vehicle.

Bradshaw said investigators are compiling a psychological profile of the deceased individual and investigating the motive. When asked whether the individual was known to law enforcement, Bradshaw replied, "Not right now."

The incident was a few miles from his West Palm Beach golf club, where unhinged leftist Ryan Routh attempted to assassinate Trump during the 2024 election. Routh was recently sentenced to life behind bars.

*Developing... 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 12:44

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Approves DC Emergency Declaration For Potomac Sewage Spill
Trump Approves DC Emergency Declaration For Potomac Sewage Spill

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

President Donald Trump approved an emergency declaration Saturday for the District of Columbia following a massive raw sewage spill into the Potomac River, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announced.
Water samples are taken from the Potomac River in Glen Echo, Md., on Jan. 23, 2026. Nathan Ellgren/AP

The White House named the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as the lead federal agency in response to at least 240 million gallons of wastewater discharged from the Potomac Interceptor sewage line into the waterway last month. Trump blamed local leaders for not responding adequately to the crisis, while governors blamed the federal government.

There is no impact to the drinking water provided to the Washington, D.C., metro area, according to an EPA news release.

However, water samples collected from the Potomac River have returned high levels of E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus, the bacteria that causes staph infections, according to University of Maryland researchers.

“The Potomac Interceptor collapse and overflow is a sewage crisis of historic proportions,” EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in the news release.

At Trump’s direction, both the EPA and FEMA will collaborate with local and state partners on the Potomac River spill.

Zeldin additionally appointed Assistant Administrator for Water Jessica Kramer as the senior response officer for the emergency.

“We will work thoroughly and efficiently to support the long-term health of the Potomac, the region’s water supply, and local residents and communities,” Kramer said in the EPA news release.

Initially, state and local leaders did not request federal assistance.

But Trump, blaming “incompetent” local and state management for the spill, directed on Feb. 16 federal emergency teams to respond to the crisis anyway, stating he does not want “the river in the heart of Washington into a disaster zone.”

“There is a massive Ecological Disaster unfolding in the Potomac River as a result of the Gross Mismanagement of Local Democrat Leaders, particularly, Governor Wes Moore, of Maryland,” the president posted on Truth Social.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore’s spokesperson told The Epoch Times via email that the president has his facts wrong and that the federal government is responsible for the Potomac Interceptor.

“For the last four weeks, the Trump Administration has failed to act, shirking its responsibility and putting people’s health at risk,” the spokesperson said.

The EPA is the primary regulator, alongside state partners who regulate state waterways and wetlands, while pipe operator DC Water—an independent public authority of the District of Columbia—oversees repairs, cleanup, and gives operational updates to state and federal partners.

Two days after Trump directed federal emergency teams to respond, District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser declared a local public emergency and requested help from the White House.

Bowser, who has maintained that drinking water in the D.C. area is safe, said in a letter to the president she intends to seek a full reimbursement from the federal government for the response and repair costs.

Following Bowser’s request, Trump called on the governors of Maryland and Virginia to do the same.

“If they can’t do the job, all they have to do is call, be polite and respectful,” Trump said in a Feb. 19 Truth Social post. “ACT FAST. I am awaiting your call.”

The EPA said it will work with partners to ensure the clean-up is complete before the festivities begin for the America250 celebrations that set to begin in D.C. on July 4.

The spill began on Jan. 19 after a section of the Potomac Interceptor sewer line collapsed in Maryland. The disaster became one of the largest spills in U.S. history.

The section of the Potomac Interceptor that failed was a 60-year-old, 72-inch concrete pipeline along the Clara Barton Parkway in Montgomery County, Maryland. The sewer line moves up to 60 million gallons of raw sewage from parts of Virginia and Maryland to DC Water’s Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant.

On Jan. 25, DC Water redirected the spill back into an undamaged portion of the Potomac Interceptor to be transported for treatment and prevent further contamination off the river.

“We will work transparently, collaboratively, and efficiently to fulfill President Trump’s desire to quickly end this disaster ... and prevent it from ever being repeated,” Zeldin said in a post on X.

DC Water is handling repairs to the pipe, which are projected to be completed by mid-March, the EPA said.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 13:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
TSA Suddenly Suspends PreCheck, Global Entry As DHS Shutdown Continues
TSA Suddenly Suspends PreCheck, Global Entry As DHS Shutdown Continues

Update (1200ET): It appears the potential blowback from shutting PreCheck and Global Entry was just too much to bear as Jake Sherman reports the Trump admin has reverted back to normal on PreCheck but has adjusted its policy in response to the govt shutdown.


"At this time, TSA PreCheck remains operational with no change for the traveling public.

As staffing constraints arise, TSA will evaluate on a case by case basis and adjust operations accordingly.

Courtesy escorts, such as those for Members of Congress, have been suspended to allow officers to focus on the mission of securing America’s skies."


All of which left us wondering - Why do members of Congress get a courtesy escort?

*  *  *

American air travelers were set up for quite a rude Sunday shock, as the Department of Homeland Security suddenly decided to suspend two optional programs that promise fliers speedier passage through TSA security checkpoints in exchange for money. The move, first reported by the Washington Post on Saturday night and still unannounced by the TSA on its website or X account in the early Sunday morning hours, is supposedly necessitated by the ongoing shutdown of DHS.   

According to the Post, the TSA PreCheck and Global Entry programs will be temporarily suspended effective 6am ET on Sunday. The government's failure to provide advance notice will put unknowing travelers at risk of missing flights, as many will have no idea that they should have adjusted their plans to allow additional time to wait in security lines.
As if a major blizzard weren't enough, TSA sprang a PreCheck shutdown on travelers with no advance warning (file photo - Getty via Politico)

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, already enmeshed in controversy and questions about her leadership of the department, told the Post that the shutdown was forcing TSA to make "tough but necessary workforce and resource decisions,” with priority given to "general traveling populations." Never mind that PreCheck enrollees typically pay $85 for five years of access to a speedier security process, or that Global Entry sets travelers back $120 for five years. The latter program includes PreCheck benefits and also provides expedited customs processes when returning from abroad.

About a third of US passengers use PreCheck -- some of them at no cost, such as military service members, Department of Defense civilian employees, and people enrolled in some credit card reward programs. However, the closure of PreCheck will also affect those who aren't in the program, since the regular lines are set to grow 50% larger on Sunday.  

Compounding the potential aggravation, Noem's ambush on PreCheck and Global Entry travelers coincides with the pending arrival of a blizzard that's set to hammer parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast United States on Sunday and overnight.  Some forecasts predict upwards of one or two feet of snow being dumped on major cities like Philadelphia, New York and Boston, paralyzing major airports. Airlines have already proactively cancelled thousands of flights.  


Why the eff did we pay for TSA PreCheck if these MFers can't keep it going???
— John Laxa (@damomoo) February 22, 2026
It's hard to gauge the extent to which this move is truly required, but we're compelled to note that there's a history of presidential administrations deliberately imposing inconveniences on the American people and attributing them to their opponents' failure to fund government agencies. In the most absurd example, the Obama administration said a lack of funding compelled it to spend money putting barricades and guards around statues and open-air sites that aren't typically manned by federal employees. 

On Saturday, Noem blamed Democrats for the no-notice PreCheck and Global Entry suspensions: 


“This is the third time that Democrat politicians have shut down this department during the 119th Congress. Shutdowns have serious real world consequences, not just for the men and women of DHS and their families who go without a paycheck, but it [sic] endangers national security.”


Democrats on the House Homeland Security committee countered with their own spin: 


TRUMP’S DHS IS PUNISHING TRAVELERS⁰⁰TSA PreCheck and Global Entry reduce lines and ease the burden on DHS staff ⁰⁰But Kristi Noem and her “confidant” Corey Lewandowski are kneecapping the programs that make travel smoother and secure⁰⁰They’re ruining your travel on purpose https://t.co/kBtiM4Urn9
— Homeland Dems (@HomelandDems) February 22, 2026
The DHS shutdown started on Valentine's Day, and came after Democrats refused to vote for the department's funding unless the measure also imposes new requirements and limitations on offices enforcing immigration law. Demands have included a ban on agents wearing masks, requirements to have body cameras, refraining from immigration arrests without first obtaining judicial warrants, and ending roving patrols. 

At the moment, there's little reason to think the DHS shutdown will end anytime soon. The ICE controversies have emerged as a major leftist rallying point heading into party primaries and the fall midterms, which means Democrats are under huge pressure from their partisans to "resist." Republicans feel they've already ceded ground, agreeing to some provisions, but drawing a line against the warrant, unmasking and roving-patrol demands. "Their whole game here is political theater. This is about them wanting to keep it shut down through the State of the Union,” said Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin last week. 

Democrats' demands came after the ICE shooting deaths of aggressive anti-ICE activists in Minnesota, in two separate incidents. “Funding for ICE and the Department of Homeland Security should not move forward in the absence of dramatic changes that are bold, meaningful, and transformational,” said House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries earlier this month.

In the first incident, Renee Good, who'd used her vehicle to impede ICE officers' travel, ignored officers' orders, and then drove her SUV in dangerous proximity to a dismounted ICE agent:


BREAKING: Alpha News has obtained cellphone footage showing perspective of federal agent at center of ICE-involved shooting in Minneapolis pic.twitter.com/p2wks0zew0
— Alpha News (@AlphaNews) January 9, 2026
In the second Minnesota incident, Alex Pretti was being apprehended by ICE agents when one of them apparently had an unintended discharge of the pistol he drew from Pretti's holster -- causing panicked fellow officers to shoot Pretti to death. 


Pretti's gun 'ACCIDENTALLY' shoots as it's grabbed by Ice PANICKING agents to kill him — ex-Pentagon gun expert footage pic.twitter.com/LcksqZDvyY
— RT (@RT_com) January 26, 2026
The PreCheck and Global Entry shutdown would seem to carry significant political risk for Republicans in general and Noem in particular. Noem is already on shaky ground, having been faulted for making rushed, fact-challenged statements following the ICE shooting incidents, and with the Wall Street Journal reporting that her DHS tenure has been marked by internal chaos and resentments over Noem's alleged prioritization of her own self-promotion. The latter phenomenon has seen Noem flit from photo op to photo op, donning a variety of outfits and earning the nickname "ICE Barbie."   

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 13:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mexican Forces Kill CJNG Kingpin, Sparks Cartel Chaos Across Guadalajara
Mexican Forces Kill CJNG Kingpin, Sparks Cartel Chaos Across Guadalajara

According to The Wall Street Journal, Mexican security forces killed Nemesio "Mencho" Oseguera, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and assessed as one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders; footage on social media shows utter chaos unfolding across Guadalajara and other CJNG strongholds after Mencho's killing.

WSJ cited a senior Mexican official earlier Sunday who confirmed Oseguera was killed during a military operation against CJNG.

Additional color on CJNG from the outlet:


The cartel also controls vast fuel smuggling schemes and other underworld rackets across Mexico and the U.S., authorities said.

. . .

Oseguera was known for sophisticated paramilitary tactics and the deployment of hundreds of well-equipped and well-trained gunmen. He controlled vast swathes of territory, especially in his home state of Jalisco. He has been expanding his influence and was locked in a bloody struggle for control of Michoacán state in western Mexico.


Following the death of CJNG's leader, local media and X users have posted footage of chaos unfolding across the Guadalajara area, including reports of chaos at Guadalajara Airport and narco blockades spanning Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán, and Autlán.

Let's begin with the chaos at Guadalajara Airport:


Another video pic.twitter.com/0OXofzHrKB
— Faytuks Network (@FaytuksNetwork) February 22, 2026

LIVE All flights to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico are diverting or returning due to smoke in the city following security incidents @wingbits pic.twitter.com/7xBFMEOXMr
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) February 22, 2026
CJNG blockades across CJNG territories:


Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, en el Salto, López Mateos Sur, macro periférico. Toda la ciudad hecha un caos. pic.twitter.com/7NufE0Cjqc
— Jorge García Orozco (@jorgegogdl) February 22, 2026

Narco bloqueos en Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlajomulco, Tapalpa, Puerto Vallarta, Ciudad Guzmán y Autlán. Dominios del CJNG.#GuacamayaLeaks pic.twitter.com/PQHks2LGlR
— Guacamaya Leaks (@GuacamayanLeaks) February 22, 2026

⭕️ Reportan bloqueos del crimen organizado en tres estados con fuerte presencia del CJNG
🔹De manera simultánea, se registraron incendios de vehículos e invasiones a la vía pública en Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, la carretera Guadalajara-Colima, Uruapan (Michoacán) y Reynosa… pic.twitter.com/4MeQOpCDIV
— Código Magenta (@CodigoMagentaMx) February 22, 2026
Footage from Puerto Vallarta. 


#PuertoVallarta en estos momentos.#Vallarta #PV #Mexico #Jalisco
Fotografía de Dron DS. pic.twitter.com/1WpTRNFBho
— Nat (@Nurive87) February 22, 2026

Ahorita en Puerto Vallarta.
No hay presencia de autoridad alguna, hora y media y nada. pic.twitter.com/wMCbsulL10
— Ricardo Badillo G (@Ricardo39687260) February 22, 2026

🚨🇲🇽 | #URGENTE Se registran balaceras en Puerto Vallarta atribuidas a un presunto enfrentamiento entre fuerzas federales y terroristas en medio de información que circula afirmando que Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", líder del CJNG, fue abatido. pic.twitter.com/bQCiRBUpVP
— La Derecha Diario México (@DerechaDiarioMX) February 22, 2026
Additional footage. 


🚨 Atención en #Tapalpa: Un operativo federal desató balaceras en el municipio, principalmente en Tapalpa Country Club. Se reportan helicópteros sobrevolando la zona y bloqueos en los accesos desde Tlajomulco.
📹 @JCMunguiaA92 pic.twitter.com/ZzeRMcBQ0C
— Telediario Guadalajara (@TelediarioGDL) February 22, 2026
Guadalajara is a World Cup Host City... 


Jalisco is one of the Last Strongholds of the Mexican Opposition and a Center of Power for Several Criminal Groups pic.twitter.com/OkCirVsL0O
— ✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦ (@PamphletsY) February 22, 2026
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has told all U.S. citizens in Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), parts of Michoacán State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo León State to "shelter in place" amid "ongoing security operations in multiple states and related road blockages and criminal activity."


Locations: Jalisco State (including Puerto Vallarta, Chapala, and Guadalajara), Tamaulipas State (including Reynosa and other municipalities), areas of Michoacan State, Guerrero State, and Nuevo Leon State
Event: Due to ongoing security operations in multiple states and… pic.twitter.com/71gKVQ9ec1
— Embajada de EE.UU. en México (@USEmbassyMEX) February 22, 2026
*Developing...

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 13:45

The Hill
Open 
Why Stephen A. Smith could be the next president 
Stephen A. Smith's potential presidential run could bring a much-needed authentic voice to the Democratic Party, offering a powerful story of overcoming poverty and a directness that could resonate with a disillusioned electorate.

Cruising the Cut
Open 
Vlog 391: Bilge Water
After interminable weeks of rain, I thought I'd better pop over to my project boat, Twiggy, and just see how it's surviving at the boatyard. Also managed to do a tiny bit of work.

The Right Scoop
Open 
DUDE BREAKING: Mamdani asked about his demand for ID in order to be snow shoveler in NYC
The commie mayor of NYC, Zohran Mamdani, was asked about his demand that people show ID in order to be paid as a snow shoveler in New York City. First, here’s the . . .

Telegraph
Open 
France continue bulldozing procession towards Six Nations Grand Slam
France continue bulldozing procession towards Six Nations Grand Slam

Telegraph
Open 
Everything that could go wrong for Liverpool has – finally something goes right
Everything that could go wrong for Liverpool has – finally something goes right

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
William in tribute to TikTok medic found dead at barracks
The Prince of Wales has told of his “immense sadness” after 25-year-old Lucy Wilde's death.

Mail Online
Open 
One Battle After Another wins multiple BAFTAs including Sean Penn for best supporting actor in huge Oscars boost: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US tariff policy ‘hasn’t changed’ despite supreme court ruling, trade chief says
Jamieson Greer also said US won’t pull out of deals with UK, EU and others after court declared Trump tariffs illegalTop US trade negotiator Jamieson Greer insisted on Sunday that US policy on tariffs “hasn’t changed”, two days after the supreme court declared many of Donald Trump’s tariffs illegal.The ruling issued on Friday by the highest US court was a sharp rebuke to the Republican president that toppled a key pillar of his aggressive economic agenda – even as it prompted Trump to announce a new global tariff using different statutes, albeit temporary. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Prince William pays tribute to army medic found dead in barracks
Investigation under way in to death of Cpl Lucy Wilde, 25, who prince said ‘served with courage and distinction’Prince William has paid tribute to a young army medic found dead in her barracks who “served with courage and distinction”.Cpl Lucy Wilde, 25, who posted videos on TikTok documenting her daily life in the army, was found dead in her barracks in Warminster, Wiltshire, on 5 February. An investigation is under way, the Ministry of Defence said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nigel Farage accused of ‘Maga stunts’ for saying he was denied access to Chagos Islands
The Reform UK leader flew to the Maldives for a day despite not having permit to visit nearby archipelagoNigel Farage has been accused of “performing Maga stunts” after claiming the British government stopped him from travelling to the Chagos Islands on a humanitarian mission.The Reform UK leader said he had flown to the Maldives to join a delegation bringing aid to four Chagossians who are trying to establish a settlement on one of the archipelago’s islands to protest against Britain’s plans to transfer control of the territory to Mauritius. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service fatally shoot armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted a white male in his early 20s carrying shotgun and gasoline can early Sunday The US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham 1-4 Arsenal: Premier League – live reaction
Viktor Gyökeres and Eberechi Eze both scored twice in the derby to send Arsenal five points clear at the top⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielIt was quite the finish at the City Ground:“Vitor Pereira’s just been sacked...” chortles Dave Estherby. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service fatally shoot armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted a white male, who has not been identified, carrying shotgun and gasoline canThe US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
I've met the man of my dreams... if he discovers my dirty little secret, he'll be disgusted: DEAR JANE
I have been dating the man of my dreams, but there's one thing in the back of my mind that I just can't shake.

Mail Online
Open 
Virginia Giuffre's lawyer says she was 'failed' by the CPS and Scotland Yard when it declined to bring a case against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor 10 years ago
David Boies, who represented Virginia Giuffre, said that the decision by the CPS and the Metropolitan Police in 2016 was 'clearly erroneous'.

Russia Today News
Open 
UK gov response to Israeli football fan ban ‘inflamed tensions’ – report

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Greenland says 'no thanks' to Trump's 'great hospital boat'
The US president said a vessel was "on the way" to Greenland, with the move coming amid a rift between the US and Europe over control of the island. Greenland and Denmark hit back, saying no medical help is needed.

Mail Online
Open 
Tide turns for little abandoned monkey Punch who had no one to love but his stuffed toy... as he's finally accepted into family
Punch the baby monkey was once a loner, with no one to love but his stuffed toy. Now, he's found his forever friend and has been accepted into the troop.

Mail Online
Open 
Hailey Bieber makes a whopping $20K donation to Eric Dane's GoFundMe for daughters after his death at 53
Hailey Bieber has stepped forward with a major contribution following Eric Dane's death, donating $20,000 to a GoFundMe established to support the late actor's family.

Mail Online
Open 
Girl, seven, and woman, 43, are killed in crash near tunnel in Surrey
The single-vehicle collision has prompted a police appeal for information after a red Ford Fiesta, which was carrying the two victims, 'left the carriageway'.

Mail Online
Open 
Leonardo DiCaprio brings glamorous mother Irmelin Indenbirken, 82, as his date to the 2026 BAFTA Awards as he goes head-to-head with Timothée Chalamet for Best Actor
The 51-year-old, who is nominated for Best Actor for his role in One Battle After Another, cut a suave figure in classic black tuxedo.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New border rules for British dual nationals need to be quickly shut down, say Lib Dems
Letter to Shabana Mahmood describes controls that could block British dual citizens’ entry to UK as ‘unacceptable’The Liberal Democrats have called on the home secretary to “move at speed” to delay the rollout of new border controls that could result in British dual nationals being blocked from entering the country.A letter sent by the party to Shabana Mahmood echoes one sent by the former Conservative cabinet minister David Davis on Friday asking for a grace period to be implemented urgently after one of his constituents living in the Netherlands told how she could no longer visit her dying mother in a care home in Yorkshire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Prominent Brits are facing a reckoning over Epstein. In the US, not so much | Arwa Mahdawi
After Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest, officials said ‘nobody is above the law’. Sadly that doesn’t seem trueSchadenfreude isn’t a particularly noble sentiment. But who cares, eh? These days bad things never seem to happen to bad people; accountability is fleetingly rare. So I think we should all take a moment to really appreciate how glorious the arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on suspicion of misconduct in public office on Thursday was. Not only was the disgraced royal dragged in for questioning like a mere commoner; the arrest happened on his 66th birthday. Instead of birthday cake, he got his just deserts. And, to top things off, the occasion was immortalized with a photo – an instant classic – of Andrew leaving the police station looking shell shocked and decrepit.Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China’s Eileen Gu soars to ski halfpipe gold but controversy surrounds Zoe Atkin’s bronze
Gu and Li Fanghui take Winter Olympic gold and silverAtkin’s bronze matches that of sister Izzy in 2018Say what you like about Eileen Gu. Plenty have since she switched allegiances from the US to China in 2019. But the most compelling athlete at these Winter Olympic Games sure knows how to deliver. On the slopes. In front of the world’s media. And especially in the blazing heat of competition.On the final run of a women’s halfpipe final that many in Livigno reckoned was the greatest in history, Gu stepped up again, sliding down a 22-foot wall of ice before twisting and spinning her body high into the brightest of blue skies to become these Games’ alpha female yet again – just as in Beijing four years ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham 1-4 Arsenal: Premier League – live reaction
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielIt was quite the finish at the City Ground:“Vitor Pereira’s just been sacked...” chortles Dave Estherby. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Senior Alba members offer to help party contest Scottish election
It comes after leader Kenny MacAskill told members that the pro-independence party was in a "perilous financial position".

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Best Bafta Awards pictures as stars gather for ceremony
Chalamet and partner Kylie Jenner are among the stars attending the star-studded ceremony in London.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran: Trump 'curious' as to why Tehran hasn't 'capitulated'
Iran has not backed down in the face of the increasing US military presence in the Middle East, much to the frustration of President Trump. Meanwhile, there have been further student protests in Iran.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Winter Olympics: Closing ceremony live
After gold medals, a banned Ukrainian racer and plenty of memorable performances, the 2026 Winter Olympics come to a close. Follow the closing ceremony live with DW.

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku breaks down in tears as she takes home the first British win at the 2026 BAFTAs as she is crowned Best Supporting Actress
Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku was the first British star to take home a gong at the British Academy Film Awards at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
European football: Barça retake top spot, Atalanta fight back to beat Napoli
Fermín López caps 3-0 win over LevanteAtalanta strike late to beat Napoli 2-1Barcelona returned to the top of La Liga with a 3-0 victory over relegation-threatened Levante as Marc Bernal, Frenkie de Jong and substitute Fermín López struck at Camp Nou.Last season’s champions moved to 61 points from 25 games, one ahead of Real Madrid after their rivals’ defeat by Osasuna on Saturday. Barça had slipped to second following last week’s 2-1 loss to Girona but rarely looked troubled by a Levante side second from bottom on 18 points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England to conduct ‘uncomfortable’ review of Six Nations defeat by Ireland
George Ford: ‘We want to get to root of the problems’Second straight loss destroyed championship hopesGeorge Ford has vowed that England will conduct a “properly honest” and “uncomfortable” review of their Six Nations humiliation against Ireland on Saturday.The hosts collapsed spectacularly in the face of an Irish onslaught at Twickenham, falling 22-0 behind after half an hour, with Ford’s surprising inaccuracy at fly-half exemplifying an error-strewn team display. The Sale No 10 missed two kicks for touch which proved terminal to England’s hopes of applying pressure in the decisive early stages. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bielle-Biarrey and France power past Italy to keep Six Nations grand slam hopes alive
France 33-8 ItalyWinger scores in eighth consecutive matchFrance pulled clear at the top of the Six Nations table and kept their grand slam ambitions on track with a hard-fought victory against Italy on Sunday.The Azzurri had unfinished business in Lille. It was two years ago in the northern city that Les Bleus, still in the midst of a post-World Cup hangover, miraculously escaped with a draw after being outplayed by the visitors. For the French, that quasi-defeat prompted a complete rejuvenation of the team which yielded immediate results. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
DiCaprio and Del Toro prepare for another awards battle, as nominees walk the red carpet and relationships get hard launched – here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz and gossipFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US will not back out of its tariff deals with UK and others, says Trump trade representative
Promise comes as minister admits to ‘uncertainty’ about new 15% levy on imports from around the world Graeme Wearden: Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cutsThe US will not back out of tariff deals it has already sealed with countries around the world, including the UK, the EU, Japan, Switzerland and others, Donald Trump’s trade representative Jamieson Greer said on Sunday.The US supreme court ruled on Friday that many of the tariffs imposed by the US president were illegal, leading Trump to announce a new 15% global tariff on all imports the next day. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner skips the BAFTAs red carpet to join Timothée Chalamet inside as he hopes to land Best Actor and continue award show streak
They cemented themselves as the ultimate power couple at the Critics Choice Awards and Golden Globes last month. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tories would scrap ‘debt trap’ of high interest student loans, says Kemi Badenoch
Education secretary Bridget Phillipson suggests priority is grants for poorer students rather than cutting interestKemi Badenoch has said the Conservatives would scrap the “unfair debt trap” of high interest rates on student loans, piling pressure on Labour ministers to tackle the growing outrage over the high costs.The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, admitted the system of plan 2 loans had “problems” but suggested the government’s priority would be maintenance grants for poorer students, rather than tackling the high interest rates. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mexican security forces reportedly kill drug cartel boss ‘El Mencho’
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of Jalisco New Generation Cartel, was one of world’s most wanted drug traffickersOne of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers – the Mexican cartel boss known as “El Mencho” – has reportedly been killed by his country’s security forces.The drug lord, whose real name is Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, was killed on Sunday in the western state of Jalisco, Mexican newspapers reported, citing government sources. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Don’t defend the academics who schmoozed with Jeffrey Epstein | Letter
Kate Soper responds to an article by Christopher Marquis which discussed why so many university teachers were named in the Epstein filesI hope Prof Marquis understands how revealing of himself he is in his presumptions about Jeffrey Epstein’s putative attraction for academics (Why are so many academics in the Epstein files? It’s not just about money, 20 February). Most academics, I suspect, would have felt queasy about having anything to do with Epstein, and if they had been invited to fly private in his “Lolita Express”, would certainly not have accepted. (Some of us try not to fly at all for environmental reasons.) And so far from feeling ground down by the “constant and myriad indignities” of life in the academy, many university teachers are well aware of the privileges of their position relative to the lack of autonomy and dreariness of so many other kinds of work.The professor also has it back to front when he invites us to “look beyond sex and money” in order to understand Epstein’s power over the gullible. Most of us, academics or otherwise, can see perfectly well that there was nothing but sex and money involved.Kate SoperProfessor emerita, London Metropolitan University Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Employers should contribute to universities | Letters
Johnny Rich proposes a sustainable funding model for higher education. Plus letters from Henry Malt and David GleaveOn the subject of student debts (Student debt is a generational injustice. Why are we squeezing graduates harder than the super-rich?, 16 February), Gaby Hinsliff writes: “If the government has better options, then let’s hear them sooner rather than later.” Any better option must address the problem that the courses that universities offer – brilliant though they mostly are – aren’t what the economy needs and so aren’t maximising returns.Universities are funded to offer the courses students want to study, not what society and employers value most. Understandably, young people pursue choices based on their ambitions rather than the national interest. This creates an oversupply in forensic science, for instance, and skills shortages in engineering. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Falling measles vaccination rates can have terrifying consequences for families | Letter
Karen Ford’s granddaughter became seriously ill, highlighting just how important it is for communities to have herd immunityYour report on the response to the measles outbreak in north London highlights the profound consequences of falling immunisation uptake (‘A lot of vaccine hesitancy’: how north London council is responding to measles outbreak, 16 February). Behind the statistics are real and frightening experiences for families like ours.My granddaughter, not yet eligible for the vaccine, was admitted to hospital in late November with respiratory syncytial virus and bronchiolitis. Shortly after being discharged, she developed pneumonia, later followed by a rash: measles. She became seriously ill and needed urgent readmission. Sitting for hours holding her small body, unsure how the illness would progress, is something our family will never forget. She was so weak she could barely cry. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour must take drastic action to regain its standing | Letters
Readers respond to an article by Larry Elliott which argued that all is not lost for the beleaguered party The plans set out by Larry Elliott certainly suggest a way forward for the Starmer government (If Keir Starmer is ousted, Labour could still win the next election. Here’s how that would work, 19 February). But politics and political approval also involve a balance sheet in which there has to be some recognition of the negative ways in which support had been lost. For many liberals, “old” Labour voters and sections of the left, Keir Starmer lost credibility on three issues: the relatively trivial one of “freebies”, and the much more substantive ones of benefit cuts for the most vulnerable and policies concerning Gaza.All the political choices taken in these contexts ignored values and ideals with long histories, not least of democratic commitment to the mitigation of the abuse of power and the needs of the most powerless. Policies about various locations for domestic investment might be welcome, but the question remains of how to define policies that, rather than ignoring what has been lost, recognise the importance of those values that have, for many of us, simply been ignored. That they continue to be ignored is a matter of shame.Mary EvansPatrixbourne, Kent Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Girma winner sinks Manchester United to send Chelsea into Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals
A 99th-minute winner from Naomi Girma sent holders Chelsea through to the Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals as they saw off a stubborn Manchester United 2-1. In a competitive encounter at Kingsmeadow, Sonia Bompastor’s side needed extra time to keep their Cup defence alive after Simi Awujo had cancelled out Sam Kerr’s opener in normal time.“I am really pleased because this competition is really special for us,” Bompastor said. “We want to go as far as possible. It was a tight game because Man United are a great team. I am really pleased with the result and the performance.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France 33-8 Italy: Six Nations rugby union – as it happened
France score five tries to one to blow Italy away and take comfortable lead at the top of the Six Nations table.Bad news for the mercurial 10. Although it’s hardly a downgrade as Ramos, who has found himself at first receiver this campaign, slots in at 10. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
DiCaprio and Del Toro prepare for another awards battle backstage, as nominees walk the red carpet and relationships get hard launched – here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz and gossipFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lobbyist in Labour Together scandal has been investigating Guardian reporter, say reports
Tom Harper reportedly made inquiries as recently as last week about Henry Dyer, who has been reporting on rowA lobbyist who examined journalists on behalf of an influential thinktank has now been accused of recently investigating a Guardian reporter.Tom Harper, a senior director at the US public affairs company Apco, was the author of a 58-page report examining the journalists behind a 2023 Sunday Times story about undisclosed donations to Labour Together, the thinktank that was instrumental in Keir Starmer’s Labour leadership victory. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
I can't go to the Six Nations this year, but this $2.50 per month solution means I'll be watching on the go

Full Disclosure
Open 
[KIS-2026-04] SmarterMail <= 9518 (MailboxId) Reflected Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerability
Posted by Egidio Romano on Feb 22----------------------------------------------------------------------------
SmarterMail &lt;= 9518 (MailboxId) Reflected Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerability
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

[-] Software Link:

https://www.smartertools.com/smartermail/business-email-server

[-] Affected Versions:

Build 9518 and prior builds.

[-] Vulnerability Description:

User input passed through the...

Full Disclosure
Open 
SEC Consult SA-20260218-0 :: Multiple Critical Vulnerabilities in NesterSoft WorkTime (on-prem/cloud)
Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Feb 22SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory &lt; 20260218-0 &gt;
=======================================================================
title: Multiple Critical Vulnerabilities
product: NesterSoft WorkTime (on-prem/cloud)
vulnerable version: &lt;= 11.8.8
fixed version: No patch available, vendor unresponsive.
CVE number: CVE-2025-15563, CVE-2025-15562, CVE-2025-15561...

Slashdot
Open 
Amazon Disputes Report an AWS Service Was Taken Down By Its AI Coding Bot
Friday Amazon published a blog post "to address the inaccuracies" in a Financial Times report that the company's own AI tool Kiro caused two outages in an AWS service in December.

Amazon writes that the "brief" and "extremely limited" service interruption "was the result of user error - specifically misconfigured access controls - not AI as the story claims."


And "The Financial Times' claim that a second event impacted AWS is entirely false."


The disruption was an extremely limited event last December affecting a single service (AWS Cost Explorer - which helps customers visualize, understand, and manage AWS costs and usage over time) in one of our 39 Geographic Regions around the world. It did not impact compute, storage, database, AI technologies, or any other of the hundreds of services that we run. The issue stemmed from a misconfigured role - the same issue that could occur with any developer tool (AI powered or not) or manual action.

We did not receive any customer inquiries regarding the interruption. We implemented numerous safeguards to prevent this from happening again - not because the event had a big impact (it didn't), but because we insist on learning from our operational experience to improve our security and resilience. Additional safeguards include mandatory peer review for production access. While operational incidents involving misconfigured access controls can occur with any developer tool - AI-powered or not - we think it is important to learn from these experiences.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Buyers can get BIG discounts on ex-rentals as landlords flood the market ahead of strict new rules: Here's what to look for...
Landlords are deluging the market with properties as they desperately try to sell up before yet more regulation and higher taxes come into force in coming months.

Sky News Home
Open 
BAFTAs red carpet: All the fashion from British and Hollywood stars
As well as the film prizes, red carpet fashion is also a huge part of any awards ceremony.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Amb. Huckabee Claims Israel Has 'Biblical Right' To Conquer Whole Middle East
Amb. Huckabee Claims Israel Has 'Biblical Right' To Conquer Whole Middle East

In a jaw-dropping exchange with Tucker Carlson, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee openly framed Israel's territorial claims in biblical terms - suggesting the Jewish state has a divine mandate over virtually the entire region.

Asked whether a passage from the Book of Genesis could be read as granting Israel the right to claim all the land between Egypt's Nile River and Syria's Euphrates, Huckabee didn't hedge. He bluntly and without apology said it would be "fine" if Israel and its military took over the whole Middle East. Full interview can be accessed here:


The Mike Huckabee interview, and the truth about America’s deeply unhealthy relationship with Israel.
(0:00) Why We Were Interrogated in Israel
(25:38) Why Did Huckabee Meet With American Traitor Jonathan Pollard?
(34:26) Has Huckabee Advocated to Extradite Sex Offenders Who… pic.twitter.com/SDIf9TzdiR
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) February 21, 2026
"It would be fine if they took it all," Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist Minister and previously the governor of Arkansas made clear. This led to a wide ranging conversation and back and forth over whether the modern nation-state of Israel, officially founded as a sovereign government on May 14, 1948, is synonymous with the Israel written about in the Old Testament, stretching back thousands of years.

Here's how that contentious segment of the interview unfolded, according to a transcript and commentary: 


Huckabee was asked in an interview with US conservative commentator Tucker Carlson about his understanding of a biblical verse suggesting that land including parts of Egypt, Syria and Iraq had been divinely promised to the Jewish people.

Carlson said that according to the Old Testament, the boundaries would be “basically the entire Middle East.”

He continued: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“Not sure we’d go that far,” Huckabee said in reply. “It would be a big piece of land.”

Carlson then pressed him: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“It would be fine if they took it all,” Huckabee responded, before adding, “I don’t think that’s what we’re talking about here today.”

Carlson asked: “You think it would be fine if the state of Israel took over all of Jordan?”


That's when Amb. Huckabee must have realized he was entering some hot diplomatic water, which would be sure to outrage Washington's Arab allies in the region.

"They’re not trying to take over Jordan. They're not trying to take over Syria. They’re not trying to take over Iraq or anywhere else, but they do want to protect their people," Huckabee responded. We should note here that the Israeli army has indeed invaded southern Syria and is occupying swathes of territory which lie a mere dozen or so miles from Damascus.


TUCKER: “How much does it matter what Americans think?”
AMB. HUCKABEE: “It matters every bit.”
TUCKER: “80% oppose war with Iran.”
AMB. HUCKABEE: “We don’t live in a world where polls dictate policy.”
TUCKER: “Oh, I thought you said it matters what Americans think.”
This is… pic.twitter.com/LFiEk32Mna
— African (@ali_naka) February 21, 2026
"I think you’re missing something because they’re not asking to go back to take all of that, but they are asking to at least take the land that they now occupy, they now live in, they now own legitimately, and it is a safe haven for them," Huckabee added.

Huckabee on Saturday, the day after the Carlson interview aired, issued a lengthy clarification of his comments, accusing the former Fox show host of twisting his words and engaging in bad faith arguments and attacks.


Tucker and I had a very twisty and frankly confusing discussion about the meaning of Zionism.
Now, I have no idea if Tucker was trying to be difficult or we were just talking past each other, but he started out the discussion on Zionism by saying he wanted to ask me in my…
— Ambassador Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) February 21, 2026
There are many parts of the rare interview which will be sure to spark lasting debate. Supporters of Huckabee tend to cast any and all criticisms of Israeli policy as 'anti-Semitic' - while critics of Tel Aviv point out that being against political Zionism does not equate to being anti-Jewish in any way.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 22:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Potentially Worst Blizzard In Decade" Set To Hammer Mid-Atlantic And Northeast
"Potentially Worst Blizzard In Decade" Set To Hammer Mid-Atlantic And Northeast

A potentially historic winter storm is set to slam the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast beginning Sunday, bringing heavy snow, damaging winds, and coastal flooding.

As of Sunday morning, 35 million people are under Blizzard Warning alerts from the Mid-Atlantic through New England, according to a post on X from the National Weather Service Prediction Center.



Meteorologists are already labeling the nor'easter as potentially historic and warn it could be the most intense blizzard to hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast in a decade.


"IT" HAS THAT LOOK!!!!
Simulation satellite shows the PERFECT phase of this storm later today. A total occluded eye structure vertically stacked will support one HELL of a snow band ripping snow at 4-5" per hour for hours. If this band is fully into NYC we are going to 18+ inches… pic.twitter.com/k20obmsxAJ
— Mike Masco (@MikeMasco) February 22, 2026

⚠️We are continuing to track what is looking to be a historic winter storm for the Northeastern US. Heavy Rates, high gusts, and better consensus within models. This is not a storm to underestimate for SUN PM - MON!
We will be doing a client live for the area at 7PM-ET! If you… pic.twitter.com/81AWSqqoAO
— BAM Weather (@bam_weather) February 21, 2026

Potentially the worst blizzard in a decade is forecast to strike the northeast on Sunday into Monday. A historic snowstorm is forecast to bury Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston with potentially up to two feet of snow. Powerful 60-70 MPH wind gusts could cause widespread… pic.twitter.com/wlfWDKJ7mF
— Dylan Federico (@DylanFedericoWX) February 21, 2026

The 21z RAP is just a few inches short of producing the biggest snowfall of ALL TIME in the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Area.
The record is 27.2" in March 2017#wxtwitter #wxX #NEPA #BlizzardOf2026 pic.twitter.com/DzqIa9MFTq
— Mark Margavage (@MeteoMark) February 21, 2026
Snowfall forecasts are already pointing to a high-impact setup along large stretches of the I-95 corridor, from the Washington, D.C., area to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston, where significant accumulations are possible.



In the Tri-State region, some forecasts suggest localized totals could reach upwards of 2 feet, likely sparking major travel disruptions from the I-95 corridor to air travel.



"DHS suspends TSA PreCheck & Global Entry over shutdown. Millions who paid for faster security now stuck in regular lines—while a historic blizzard cancels 7,000+ flights in the Northeast," Fox News reporter Lucas Tomlinson wrote on X.



Related:

Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card
The storm's setup is similar to the 2016 blizzard that blanketed Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and New York City with up to 2 feet of snow in some areas.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 08:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Could The War In Ukraine Go Nuclear?
Could The War In Ukraine Go Nuclear?

Authored by J.B. Shurk via American Thinker,

Too many influential voices are contemplating how to ‘win’ a nuclear war...



With all eyes on the U.S. military buildup around Iran right now, the Russia-Ukraine War has been temporarily upstaged.  It will not play second fiddle for long.  The recent trilateral talks in Geneva involving the Russian Federation, Ukraine, and the United States have been unable to resolve a principal issue of disagreement: Ukraine’s martial-law-president Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s refusal to cede any land and Russia’s insistence that the Donbas region — specifically the four eastern territories that have already held a referendum in support of becoming part of the Russian Federation — be acknowledged as sovereign Russian territory.

As the war heads into its fifth year, dangers mount for Europe.  While President Trump wants to end the bloodshed before the violent conflict transforms into something even more catastrophic, too many parties seem committed to ratcheting up the butcher’s bill a while longer.  Unfortunately, there are numerous reasons for prolonging the war that have nothing to do with protecting civilian lives or securing Ukrainian territory.

There is the political reality that a growing embezzlement scandal is taking down high-ranking Ukrainian officials with close relationships to Zelenskyy and the prospect that general peace would mean not only an end to the hold-over-president’s power but also an end to his legal immunity.  There is the dogged determination of the European Commission and certain European nations — particularly the United Kingdom and its Ukraine-obsessed MI6 — to drag the fighting out as long as possible as part of a larger effort to weaken President Vladimir Putin’s control over the Russian Federation.  There is the long-term European Union goal of absorbing Ukraine into the continental federation and eventually welcoming it into NATO — or at least to use the present war as an excuse for positioning European troops close enough to Ukraine’s current battle lines to trigger a U.S. military response once the lives of NATO-allied soldiers are threatened.  There is the dire financial need for the European Central Bank and discrete national Treasuries to use the war as a publicly digestible excuse for fabricating new war bonds, cutting welfare programs, further integrating Europe’s separate national economies, subsidizing Europe’s defense industries, and printing enormous sums of money.  There is the relentless goal of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (selected by the elite members of the European Council and elected not by the European people but rather the European Parliament) to use the War in Ukraine as a justification for expanded powers for her office and the formation of a European-wide military under her putative authority.

For many reasons that have nothing to do with saving lives or resisting invasion, Europe seems committed to prolonging war and forestalling peace.

At the same time, there is a growing sentiment among Russians that a larger war in Europe has become inevitable.  While European political leaders have spent more than a decade publicly framing (1) Russia’s annexation of Crimea, (2) its military assistance to Russian separatist groups in the Donbas region, and (3) its “special military operation” in Ukraine as completely unprovoked instances of “Russian aggression,” most Russian citizens view them as legitimate responses to (1) the U.S.- and E.U.-led coup d’état of Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych in 2014 (an event that the West euphemistically calls the “Maidan Revolution” or “Revolution of Dignity”), (2) the Ukrainian military’s attacks on ethnic Russians, and (3) NATO’s decades-long advance right up to the Russian Federation’s borders.

If European and American leaders intended to weaken President Putin’s domestic support so severely that he would be removed, betrayed, or killed, those efforts have failed.  Instead, a rally-around-the-flag patriotism for “Mother Russia” has swept across the world’s largest nation state.  As European sports leagues banned Russian athletes from competing under their own flag, anger in Russia grew.  As Russians living abroad found their bank accounts frozen for the actions of their government, anger in Russia grew.  As Western news corporations increasingly dismissed politically inconvenient stories as “Russian disinformation,” anger in Russia grew.  Whereas once the prospect of Russian integration with continental Europe seemed likely, Russia now looks East and toward a future with other Asian powers.

A prospect even more unsettling than the current War in Ukraine now takes shape: the quickening drumbeat toward nuclear confrontation.  What U.S. and former Soviet Union leaders spent half a century working to avoid is now discussed too openly for comfort.  American senators, such as Lindsey Graham, have occasionally suggested that effective nuclear deterrence requires U.S. willingness to use the nuclear weapons in its arsenal.  France’s President Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Chancellor Fiedrich Merz have held not-so-secret talks on creating a European-managed “continental nuclear shield.”  Turkish President Recep Erdogan wants nuclear weapons of his own.  Polish President Karol Nawrocki says that his country needs nukes in order to defend against the “Russian threat.”  Meanwhile, one of the most influential intellectuals in the Russian Federation believes that President Putin must be willing to utilize “limited but decisive nuclear strikes using operational-strategic weapons” should European Union powers refuse to retreat.

Russian political scientist Sergey Karaganov says that the E.U. is playing with nuclear fire and must be taught a lesson.  Karaganov is no ordinary academic.  He holds a reputation in Russia similar to Henry Kissinger’s in the United States.  Karaganov is a founding member of Moscow’s prestigious Valdai Discussion Club, the honorary chairman of Russia’s Council on Foreign and Defense Policy, a supervisor at the School of International Economics and Foreign Affairs at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics, and a personal confidant of both Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and President Putin.  When Professor Karaganov suggests that the time is approaching when his country must contemplate using nuclear weapons against strategically important areas of Europe, people should listen.

In a lengthy and polemical essay for the foreign-policy journal Russia in Global Affairs, Karaganov argues that Europe’s political “elites” are pushing the continent toward a nuclear confrontation.  He says the War in Ukraine has “dragged on longer than necessary” because of a “lack of determination to employ active nuclear deterrence.”  He argues that nuclear weapons represent the “only mechanism capable of resolving” the “European problem,” a problem that he describes as, “an existential threat to our country.”  Furthermore, “Targets should include places where elites gather, including in nuclear states.  Governments must feel personal risk.”

Professor Karaganov then takes the Russian people through a sympathetic history lesson.  He claims to have had a conversation with a group of European leaders back in 2013 during which he warned that “dragging Ukraine into the E.U. and NATO would lead to war and mass casualties.”  He says they “looked down at their shoes” and mumbled about “democracy,” “human rights,” and “containing Russia.”  Karaganov argues that years of Russian “appeasement” has come at the “terrible cost” of tens of thousands of “brave soldiers” who “lost their lives” in Ukraine.  Describing Russia’s fallen warriors as heroes whose sacrifice cannot be forgotten, he insists that Russia not make the same mistakes of the last two decades.

Striking Ukrainian targets, Karaganov argues, is not a “strategic solution” because “E.U. elites” represent the real threat.  “The conflict will continue until its true source is addressed: Western Europe’s degenerated ruling classes, intellectually, morally, and materially exhausted, who cling to power by fueling war.”  He insists that Russia must “break” Europe’s “will” to keep fighting.  He argues that effective nuclear deterrence is the only way to prevent a larger U.S.-Russia war.  Furthermore, he believes that France and the United Kingdom must be deprived of nuclear weapons because “they have forfeited the moral right to possess them.  Any Western European move toward nuclear proliferation must be treated as grounds for preemptive action.”

Too many influential voices are contemplating how to “win” a nuclear war.  Say a prayer for peace.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 10:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
CNN Slams Keir Starmer's "Atrocious" Ratings, 'Makes Trump Look Like Abraham Lincoln'
CNN Slams Keir Starmer's "Atrocious" Ratings, 'Makes Trump Look Like Abraham Lincoln'

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Keir Starmer’s approval ratings have plunged to historic lows, with even CNN calling them “absolutely ATROCIOUS” and noting that President Trump appears “downright like Abraham Lincoln” by comparison. This brutal takedown highlights how Starmer’s globalist policies are alienating Brits across the board.



As the Labour leader clings to power, his war on free speech and commitment to protecting illegal immigration is fueling a backlash that could spell the end for his regime. With polls showing just 20% approval, Starmer’s grip on Number 10 looks increasingly tenuous.

The Overton News clip, which has gone viral on X, captures CNN’s scathing assessment of Starmer’s popularity nosedive.


CNN just DOG WALKED British Prime Minister Keir Starmer over his “ATROCIOUS” approval numbers.
They even admitted that President Trump looks like Abraham Lincoln in comparison.
CNN: “These numbers are absolutely ATROCIOUS!”
“I mean, you never see numbers like this in the… pic.twitter.com/dS5I9FmeCm
— Overton (@overton_news) February 19, 2026
In the segment, analyst Harry Enten declares, “These numbers are absolutely ATROCIOUS! I mean, you never see numbers like this in the United States of America.”

Focusing on the dire stats, Enten points out, “Britons who like Keir Starmer, look at this — overall it’s just 1 in 5! It’s just 1 in 5, 20%!”

Even within his own ranks, support is crumbling:


“His OWN party, Labour, he’s just at 52% there.”


The commentary escalates, revealing, “I’ve even seen numbers with satisfaction in the TEENS — and this is actually HIGHER than the lowest.”

The most striking line compares Starmer unfavorably to Trump:

“You know, we always talk about Donald Trump being unpopular in this country — but Donald Trump looks downright like Abraham Lincoln compared to Keir Starmer’s numbers at this point!”

The latest YouGov survey from February 2026 shows Starmer’s net favourability at -47, with only 22% viewing him positively against 69% unfavorably. That’s an improvement from January’s -57, but still abysmal for a sitting PM.

Other trackers paint an even grimmer picture. Ipsos reported satisfaction in the teens late last year, aligning with CNN’s observations. Opinium’s February poll pegs his net approval at -44, with over half the public calling for his resignation.



Starmer’s woes stem from policies that prioritize globalist agendas over British interests. Mass immigration continues unchecked, straining public services while borders remain porous. Economic missteps, like burdensome regulations on businesses, echo the failures of socialist experiments.

Recall our earlier coverage where a former aide to Starmer revealed how a “stakeholder state” – an unelected network of insiders, NGOs, and civil servants – effectively controls the UK government.

Paul Ovenden described this “political perma-class” as diverting power from voters to elite priorities, wasting resources on fringe issues while ignoring secure borders and sovereignty.



This shadowy influence explains Starmer’s disconnect from the public, leading to approval ratings that rival the worst in postwar history. Historical comparisons show that every UK PM with similar low ratings either lost big or resigned before the next election.

Adding fuel to the fire is Starmer’s aggressive stance against free expression. Threats to ban platforms like X over AI-generated content have drawn international condemnation.

As we reported previously, the US under Trump vowed to deploy its “full arsenal of tools” against such censorship, equating the UK to regimes like Iran. Under-Secretary Sarah B. Rogers warned that nothing is off the table to defend free speech, including facilitating uncensored access via Starlink.



This transatlantic tension underscores how Starmer’s surveillance-state ambitions, like cradle-to-grave digital IDs, threaten core freedoms. Brits are waking up to the hypocrisy: cracking down on online speech while turning a blind eye to real threats like grooming gangs.



Bloomberg notes Starmer’s ratings bounced slightly after a leadership scare but remain deeply negative compared to rivals like Kemi Badenoch (-23) and Nigel Farage (-37). Reform UK, with its America First-style populism, has surged ahead, capitalizing on Labour’s failures.

Even among Labour members, Starmer ranks near the bottom in internal favorability, with a net +5. A gender divide shows women more supportive, but overall, the party is fracturing.

Starmer’s trajectory mirrors the downfall of other left-wing leaders who embraced globalism over national sovereignty. As approval lingers in the doldrums, calls for his ouster grow louder.

The message is clear: Brits demand leaders who put their country first, not puppets of unelected elites. If Starmer doesn’t suddenly reverse course on open borders, economic strangulation, and speech suppression, his tenure could end much sooner than expected.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 11:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Devastating" Discovery: New Docs Confirm JPMorgan De-Banked Trump Shortly After Jan 6th Capitol Chaos
"Devastating" Discovery: New Docs Confirm JPMorgan De-Banked Trump Shortly After Jan 6th Capitol Chaos

New court documents released Friday show JPMorgan Chase told President Donald Trump a month after the January 2021 breach of the U.S. Capitol that the bank was closing his accounts.

The disclosure was made amid a $5 billion lawsuit Trump filed against JPMorgan and its CEO Jamie Dimon.

JPMorgan, the nation’s largest bank, said for the first time late Friday that it cut off more than 50 Trump accounts in February 2021, shortly after Mr. Trump’s first term ended.

The accounts included those for Trump hotels, housing developments and retail shops in Illinois, Florida and New York, as well as Mr. Trump’s personal private banking relationship that handled his inheritance from his father, according to letters filed to the court.

JPMorgan did not specify in those letters a specific reason for the mass account closings.



In one unsigned note to Mr. Trump, dated Feb. 19, 2021, the bank wrote that he would need to “find a more suitable institution with which to conduct business.”

The letter closed with, “Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter” - a phrase that President Trump often uses.

As NYTimes reports, the President has maintained for years that his bank account closures were politically motivated, and a spokesperson for his legal team said the newest court documents are “a devastating concession that proves President Trump’s entire claim.”

“[JPMorgan] admitted to unlawfully and intentionally de-banking President Trump, his family, and ​his businesses, causing overwhelming financial harm,” the spokesperson said.

“President Trump is standing up for all those wrongly debanked by JPMorgan Chase and its cohorts, and will see this case to a just and proper conclusion.” the attorneys added. 

Mr. Trump’s lawsuit, which named Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chief executive, as a defendant, contended that the bank put Mr. Trump on a blacklist because it “needed to distance itself from President Trump and his conservative political views.”

That echoed earlier complaints from Mr. Trump that Capital One similarly closed his accounts and that Bank of America refused to accept billions of dollars in deposits after the Jan. 6 riots.

The bank told The Epoch Times over email it will seek to dismiss the claims.

“Plaintiffs’ threadbare allegations do not allege sufficient facts to plead a claim,” the institution said.

JPMorgan told The Epoch Times last month that the case “has no merit.”

“[JPMorgan Chase] does not close accounts for political or religious reasons,” JPMorgan previously said.

“We do close accounts because they create legal or regulatory risk for the company.”

“We regret having to do so, but often rules and regulatory expectations lead us to do so.”

These comments were made last month, days after Trump announced on social media his intention to sue the bank.

Since then, Trump’s lawyers have alleged in court documents that JPMorgan closed the president’s accounts because of its “‘woke’ beliefs that it needed to distance itself from President Trump and his conservative political views.”

“In essence, [JPMorgan Chase] debanked Plaintiffs’ Accounts because it believed that the political tide at the moment favored doing so,” the lawsuit states.

JPMorgan added it supports the Trump administration’s efforts to prevent the weaponization of the banking sector. 

There is still much legal wrangling to come. JPMorgan this past week asked that the case be moved from Florida state court, where Mr. Trump has had some success in litigation, to a federal court in New York.

 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 12:30

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11057 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Acomb (MYACO) (New)
Our Engineers will be carrying out a planned maintenance at Acomb (MYACO).
Services are not expected to be disrupted, but should be considered at risk during the maintenance window

Start: Tue, 3rd Mar 2026 01:00

End: Tue, 3rd Mar 2026 06:00

Edited: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 17:41

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The uncertainties facing businesses and consumers after Trump's tariff changes
Businesses say questions remain after US President Donald Trump announced he will impose global tariffs of 15%.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Armed man killed after entering secure perimeter of Trump's residence, Secret Service says
The suspect was carrying a shotgun and fuel can when he was killed, officers said. Trump was in Washington DC at the time.

Mail Online
Open 
Kirsten Dunst can't keep her hands off her BAFTA nominated husband Jesse Plemons as they hit the red carpet after hitting out at his Oscars snub
Kirsten Dunst couldn't keep her hands off her nominated husband Jesse Plemons at the 2026 BAFTAs at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday evening. 

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku takes home the first British win at the 2026 BAFTAs as she is crowned Best Supporting Actress
Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku was the first British star to take home a gong at the British Academy Film Awards at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Gracie Abrams packs on the PDA with Paul Mescal as fans go wild for their red carpet debut at the BAFTAs and declare 'total power couple vibes'
Posing up a storm on the red carpet at London's Royal Festival Hall, the singer-songwriter wowed in a backless black patterned dress as she gave the Irish actor a kiss on the cheek.

Mail Online
Open 
Emma Stone stuns in a racy black Louis Vuitton gown as she arrives at the BAFTAs following her Leading Actress nomination
The actress, 37, who is up for a Best Actress gong for her performance in Bugonia, opted for a daring look by flashing a hint of sideboob in a cut-out black dress.

Gizmodo
Open 
You Have to Watch This ‘Mortal Kombat’ Themed Olympics Performance
Georgia's figure skating team used their Pairs performance to shout out the fighting franchise and yes, use the 'Mortal Kombat' theme.

The Hill
Open 
Newsom says his family will determine whether he runs for president
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), whose name has often been floated as a 2028 presidential contender, said his family will determine whether he runs for the White House. “My son, Romeo, was very powerful, texted me a few months ago, and there was some headline that suggested that I made some decision, and he goes,...

The Hill
Open 
Efforts to fight online financial scams are missing the mark
I question whether targeting these massive online platforms alone is the right approach in combating today’s rapidly evolving fraud tactics.

The Hill
Open 
Bhattacharya’s growing power in Trump’s HHS worries health experts
Public health experts and former federal staffers are uneasy over National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Jay Bhattacharya’s rising influence over U.S. health policy as he temporarily takes on the added role of leading the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Trump administration announced the leadership shake-up this week, with former interim CDC...

The Hill
Open 
Texas GOP Senate candidate: ‘It's time for the next generation of American first patriots to lead’
Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) on Sunday said its time for the next generation of “American patriots” to lead on a national level as he vies to oust Sen. John Cornyn in a crowded Texas GOP primary. “I'm a West Point graduate. I'm a former Apache pilot. Flew 55 combat air missions in Baghdad. And the...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple is Testing These iPhone 18 Pro and Foldable iPhone Colors
The special new color that Apple is considering for the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max this year is red, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.





Specifically, he said that Apple is testing a "deep red" finish for the two devices.



If this rumor materializes, it would be the first time that the Pro and Pro Max models ever come in red, and the iPhone 18 Pro models would be the first iPhone models to be available in red since the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus in (PRODUCT)RED. However, it sounds like it would be more of a burgundy finish than a bright red.



While it was previously rumored that Apple was also considering purple and brown finishes for the iPhone 18 Pro models, Gurman said he believes that those color options are "just variants of the same red idea — given that the tones are fairly similar." In other words, it sounds like those two color options will not actually be offered.



As for the foldable iPhone, Gurman said Apple plans to "stay away from fun colors" and stick to more traditional space gray/black and silver/white finishes.



Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 18 Pro and foldable iPhone models in September.



Related Roundup: iPhone 18Tags: Foldable iPhone, Mark GurmanRelated Forum: iPhoneThis article, 'Apple is Testing These iPhone 18 Pro and Foldable iPhone Colors' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Reportedly Plans to Unveil at Least Five New Products Next Week
In his Power On newsletter today, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said Apple will have a three-day stretch of product announcements from Monday, March 2 through Wednesday, March 4. In total, he expects Apple to introduce "at least five products."





A week ago, Apple invited selected journalists and content creators to an "Apple Experience" in New York, London, and Shanghai on Wednesday, March 4 at 9 a.m. Eastern Time. At these in-person gatherings, the expectation is that attendees will receive hands-on time with the new products that Apple announces next week.



Given this launch is described as an "Apple Experience," it appears there will not be a traditional Apple Event live stream. Instead, the new products are expected to be unveiled in a series of press releases on the Apple Newsroom website.



A new lower-cost MacBook will "very likely" be one of the new products introduced next week, according to Gurman. Rumored features include a 12.9-inch display, a version of the iPhone 16 Pro's A18 Pro chip, and a variety of fun color options.



Gurman expects the iPhone 17e to debut by the first week of March. The device is expected to have four key upgrades over the iPhone 16e, including an A19 chip, MagSafe, Apple's C1X modem for faster 5G, and Apple's N1 chip for Wi-Fi 7.



Other potential products coming next week include an iPad Air with the M4 chip, an iPad 12 with the A18 chip, a MacBook Air with the M5 chip, and MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips. Two new Studio Displays are reportedly in the works too, but Gurman said it might be "overkill" for those to arrive next week.



In any case, it sounds like Apple's next products are just days away. This launch comes after Apple released a second-generation AirTag last month.



Tag: Mark GurmanThis article, 'Apple Reportedly Plans to Unveil at Least Five New Products Next Week' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
France come through stern Italy test to stay on course for Grand Slam
France come through stern Italy test to stay on course for Grand Slam

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Premiership: Rangers and Celtic lose ground on Hearts amid late drama
Rangers draw despite late comeback at LivingstonHibs’ Kai Andrews strikes in 87th minute to stun CelticCeltic and Rangers both lost ground on Hearts in the Scottish Premiership title race, losing and drawing respectively amid dramatic scenes with late goals and dismissals on Sunday.Rangers fought back furiously from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 with 10-man Livingston in West Lothian but dropped two valuable points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
William and Catherine show up for the biggest night of the year in British cinema, alongside nominees including Timothée Chalamet and Jessie Buckley – here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of all the glitz and gossipFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Mexican drug lord 'El Mencho' killed in military operation, official says
Mexican drug lord "El Mencho" has been killed in a military operation, an official has said.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 winners: Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku is awarded Best Supporting Actress while Paul Mescal misses out as star-studded ceremony kicks off
Sinners star Wunmi Mosaku was among the early winners as the British Academy Film Awards kicked off at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Buyers can get BIG discounts on ex-rentals as landlords flood the market ahead of strict new rules: Here's what to look for
Landlords are deluging the market with properties as they desperately try to sell up before yet more regulation and higher taxes come into force in coming months.

BBC World News
Open 
Bones of St Francis of Assisi go on public display in Italy
The remains of Italy's patron saint have only been seen in public once before - for one day in 1978.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2026 worst dressed: Teyana Taylor channels a gothic vampire as she joins Kirsten Dunst and Pegah Pourmand leading the stars failing to impress
Household names gathered at the Royal Festival Hall in central London on Sunday evening for a night filled with celebration and joy.

Mail Online
Open 
Sean Penn and Wunmi Mosaku crowned BAFTA winners as star-studded ceremony gets underway: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Why 2026 marks a Winter Olympic turning point for Team GB
Three golds, a record-equalling medal haul - the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics has been one to remember for Team GB.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTAs 2025 worst dressed: Teyana Taylor channels a gothic vampire as she joins Kirsten Dunst and Pegah Pourmand leading the stars failing to impress
Household names gathered at the Royal Festival Hall in central London on Sunday evening for a night filled with celebration and joy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US north-east braces for heavy snow and ferocious winds amid blizzard warnings
East coast scrambles to prepare for storm forecast to bring major disruption to more than 35 million peopleBlizzard conditions were forecast to bring major disruption across the north-eastern United States on Sunday and well into Monday, with a dangerous combination of heavy, wet snow and ferocious winds gusting up to 70mph.Residents along the east coast scrambled to prepare for the late-winter storm that spurred blizzard warnings from Maryland to Massachusetts, affecting more than 35 million people. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the funding crisis at the National Gallery: the public should not pay the price | Editorial
Financial difficulties at one of the UK’s most prestigious institutions are a sign of the times. But maintaining free access to great art must be a priority“The National Gallery is doing a great job isn’t it?” David Hockney reflected in 2024. “Everything in the collection is good, every single picture is good.” Judging by recent performance, the artist would seem to be right. The gallery’s blockbuster Van Gogh exhibition closed in January last year after a record-breaking 335,000 visitors. Its 200th anniversary celebrations, including the opening of the newly designed Sainsbury Wing and rehang, attracted a 60% rise in visitors since May.But barely 10 months later, the art world is digesting the stark news that the National Gallery will face a deficit of £8.2m in the coming year. Proposed cuts could include fewer free exhibitions, higher ticket prices, less international borrowing and job losses. Two huge cash donations of £150m each are ringfenced to build an ambitious new wing for contemporary art, not for daily running costs.
The National’s predicament is a grim reflection of the perilous state of the country’s cultural sector as a whole. Last year the Tate lost 7% of its workforce, and staff took strike action over “endemic low pay”; jobs have been also lost at London’s opulent Royal Academy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on Scottish Labour: Keir Starmer needs Anas Sarwar’s act of betrayal to pay off | Editorial
The leader of Scottish Labour will use its spring conference to demonstrate that he is his own man. Ironically, the prime minister’s survival may depend on his successAt Scottish Labour’s spring conference last year, Sir Keir Starmer bullishly addressed mounting discontent at his government’s performance, telling his audience: “I always said it would take time to turn this ship around.” On Friday, ahead of the Holyrood election in May, Anas Sarwar’s party will assemble again in Paisley. Sir Keir – whose time Mr Sarwar now considers up – is not expected to be on the speaking roster.The Scottish Labour leader’s call for Sir Keir’s resignation this month was instantly interpreted through the prism of a (stillborn) Westminster coup. In truth, it was more an act of self-isolation stemming from exasperation. As they attempt to challenge the hegemony of the Scottish National party (SNP), unionist parties in Scotland must constantly look over their shoulders and worry about what London is doing. But at the time of the general election, no one could have anticipated the chaotic sequence of unpopular policies and U-turns – now compounded by the Mandelson scandal – which appears to have quashed hopes of a Scottish Labour renaissance at Holyrood. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sheffield Wednesday endure historic relegation from Championship after derby defeat
Sheffield Wednesday’s three-year stay in the Championship was ended in a cruel final twist of fate by their city rivals Sheffield United after a derby defeat at Bramall Lane.It takes some doing to be relegated while the snowdrops are still out but for a red hand to operate the trap door only added insult to injury as Wednesday’s miserable mathematical fate was confirmed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France 33-8 Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live reaction
France score five tries to one to blow Italy away and take comfortable lead at the top of the Six Nations table.Bad news for the mercurial 10. Although it’s hardly a downgrade as Ramos, who has found himself at first receiver this campaign, slots in at 10. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lindsey Vonn hits back at ‘haters’ who questioned her place at Winter Olympics
American fractured tibia in downhill last weekSkier is recovering from injuries in USLindsey Vonn has hit back at the “haters” who were critical of her decision to take part at this year’s Winter Olympics.The American crashed out early in her run during the women’s downhill competition during the opening weekend of this month’s Games. She suffered a complex tibia fracture and underwent multiple surgeries in Italy before being flown back to the US for further treatment earlier this week. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China’s Eileen Gu soars to ski halfpipe gold but controversy surrounds Zoe Atkin’s bronze
Gu and Li Fanghui take Winter Olympic gold and silverAtkin’s bronze matches that of sister Izzy in 2018Say what you like about Eileen Gu. Plenty have since she switched allegiances from the US to China in 2019. But the Winter Olympics’ most compelling athlete sure knows how to deliver. On the slopes. In front of the world’s media. And especially in the blazing heat of competition.On the final run of a women’s halfpipe final that many in Livigno reckoned was the greatest in history, Gu stepped up again. sliding down a 22-foot wall of ice before twisting and spinning her body high into the brightest of blue skies to become these Games’ Alpha Female yet again - just as in Beijing four years ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
William and Catherine walk the red carpet, alongside nominees including Timothée Chalamet and Jessie Buckley – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the glitz and gossip Follow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Three dead and four injured after multi-car collision in County Armagh
Two men aged 31 and 48 and woman, 23, pronounced dead at scene of crash involving three vehicles near MoyThree people died and four others have been injured in a multi-car collision in County Armagh.Emergency services dispatched three rapid response paramedics, seven emergency crews and one hazardous area response team after the crash was reported on the Armagh Road near the village of Moy on Saturday night. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lobbyist hired by thinktank accused of investigating Guardian reporter
Author of report for Labour Together on Sunday Times journalists allegedly examined investigations correspondentA lobbyist who examined journalists on behalf of an influential thinktank has now been accused of recently investigating a Guardian reporter.Tom Harper, a senior director at the US public affairs company Apco, was the author of a 58-page report examining the journalists behind a 2023 Sunday Times story about undisclosed donations to Labour Together, the thinktank that was instrumental in Keir Starmer’s Labour leadership victory. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
France maintain Grand Slam dream with Italy win
France record a bonus-point win against a spirited Italy in Lille to maintain their bid for a Six Nations Grand Slam and back-to-back titles.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Teenage passenger who died after car crash named
Police are appealing for witnesses following the death of 19-year-old Ashton Tomes in Holmfirth.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ghana takes transatlantic slavery case to UN
Ghana's President Mahama has received the African Union's backing in pushing the United Nations to recognize transatlantic slavery as the 'gravest crime against humanity.' But will the motion pass?

Sky News Home
Open 
Iran's regime may be ready to strike a deal with Trump
Student-led protests have taken place in Iran this weekend, coinciding with the start of the new university term and the 40th day of mourning for many of the thousands of people killed by security forces in early January.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'I belong to Saudi Arabia' - Ronaldo committed to Al-Nassr
Cristiano Ronaldo says he is happy at Al-Nassr following doubts over his future at the Saudi Arabian club.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Gordon Brown turns detective over Andrew
Gordon Brown has reportedly demanded a police investigation into the use of RAF bases.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Has Donald Trump lost his most powerful tariff weapon?
The US Supreme Court decision on tariffs has upended the central plank of President Donald Trump's economic and foreign policy. Will this lead to a change of course, or will Trump double down?

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner skips the BAFTAs red carpet to join Timothee Chalamet inside as he hopes to land Best Actor and continue award show streak
They cemented themselves as the ultimate power couple at the Critics Choice Awards and Golden Globes last month. 

BBC World News
Open 
Greenland says 'no thanks' to Trump US hospital boat
Greenland's PM reminded Trump of its free healthcare, after Trump said he was sending a boat to aid people who were allegedly "not being taken care of".

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
South Africa seal statement win against India
South Africa underline their credentials as serious challengers for the T20 World Cup with victory against co-hosts and defending champions India.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
European Commission urges US to honor trade deal
The EU's executive insisted that "a deal is a deal" after US President Donald Trump said he was raising a global 10% tariff to 15% in response to the US Supreme Court blocking many of his emergency tariffs.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian poses in sexy black underwear for her multi-billion-dollar brand SKIMS
Kim Kardashian took to Instagram on Saturday to tantalize her 353 million followers as she posed in black lingerie. She plugged her SKIMS range as she modeled its Everyday Cotton collection.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm a 71-year-old fashion expert - here's my ultimate guide to anti-ageing denim: From the £40 M&S leg-lengthening flares to the only cut of white jeans you can get away with!
I embrace the versatility of this durable, stylish cloth with skirts, jumpsuits, jeans, and dresses - and I wholeheartedly reject any idea that there's an age cut-off for any of them.

Mail Online
Open 
Daisy is getting her university tuition for FREE: Here's how she did it - and how you could too
Like many parents, when our older daughter Daisy decided to go to university to study nursing last year we were concerned the payments she would make on student loans would blight her finances for life.

Mail Online
Open 
It IS possible to get out of debt in mid-life: Here's the seven ways I cleared the £16k of 'middle class' debt I built up buying designer handbags and holidays
I have a confession: I am a personal finance expert and I'm currently £44,000 in debt - and not for the first time either. It doesn't look great and being a divorced mum makes it harder to get out of.

Mail Online
Open 
How YOU can build a £10,000 nest egg without tightening your belt - with the new trend for micro-investing
It's the investing trend that became popular with younger generations and is now intriguing millions online. 'Micro-investing' is helping growing numbers to save substantial sums.

Mail Online
Open 
Clashes erupt at mass student demonstrations in Iran - as Trump ramps up US presence
Students at the Sharif University of Technology in Tehran were seen clashing with pro-government protesters, during a a protest against the regime of Ayatollah Khamenei.

Mail Online
Open 
Want 25 per cent off your next home? Buy an ex-rental... Landlords are flooding the market ahead of strict new rules arriving this year
Landlords are deluging the market with properties as they desperately try to sell up before yet more regulation and higher taxes come into force in coming months.

Mail Online
Open 
Worst dressed stars at 2026 BAFTAs: Teyana Taylor channels a gothic vampire as she joins Kirsten Dunst and Pegah Pourmand leading the stars failing to impress
Household names gathered at the Royal Festival Hall in central London on Sunday evening for a night filled with celebration and joy.

Mail Online
Open 
Kylie Jenner skips the BAFTAs red carpet to join Timothee Chalamet inside as he hopes to land Best Actor and continue award show streak
The actor, 30, who is nominated for Best Actor for his role in Marty Supreme, cut a suave figure as he walked the red carpet tailored black suit.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US will not back out of its tariff deals with UK and others, says Trump trade representative
Promise comes as minister admits to ‘uncertainty’ about new 15% levy on imports from around the world Graeme Wearden: Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cutsThe US will not back out of tariff deals it has already sealed with countries around the world, including the UK, the EU, Japan, Switzerland and others, Donald Trump’s trade representative Jamieson Greer said on Sunday.The US supreme court ruled on Friday that many of the tariffs imposed by the US president were illegal, leading Trump to announce a new 15% global tariff on all imports the next day. But Greer told CBS’s Face the Nation that the new levy was separate from agreements struck in the last nine months with about 20 countries around the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s Epstein links not ruled out as police searches continue
Calls mount for Mountbatten-Windsor to be dropped from royal line of successionPolice searches of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s former home on the Windsor estate in Berkshire continued on Sunday as a government minister did not rule out having a judge-led inquiry into the former prince’s links with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, representing the government, did not rule out such an inquiry but said it was premature because of the police investigation. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Patrick Dempsey is supported by beloved daughter Talula, 24, at 2026 BAFTAs just days after tragic death of his Grey's Anatomy co-star Eric Dane
Patrick Dempsey attended the BAFTAs at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday, just days after the tragic death of his Grey's Anatomy co-star Eric Dane aged 53.

Mail Online
Open 
Leonardo DiCaprio leads Hollywood stars on BAFTA red carpet ahead of star-studded ceremony: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

TechRadar News
Open 
'I do think we always have to think about, maybe even worry a little bit about, Chinese subsidies': Microsoft President says US firms should get ready for more competition from China

TechRadar News
Open 
A portable computer in a suitcase: Toshiba's 1982 T100 was nothing like any computer ever launched till then and it even came with a modem and a mechanical keyboard

RevK
Open 
Openreach director

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Gold sheds its safe-haven status. Is it just another momentum play now?
Gold has been on a spectacular, record-breaking bull run for much of the past three years — but some of the shine may be coming off the yellow metal, judging by its moves over the past week.

Slashdot
Open 
Man Accidentally Gains Control of 7,000 Robot Vacuums
A software engineer tried steering his robot vacuum with a videogame controller, reports Popular Science - but ended up with "a sneak peak into thousands of people's homes."


While building his own remote-control app, Sammy Azdoufal reportedly used an AI coding assistant to help reverse-engineer how the robot communicated with DJI's remote cloud servers. But he soon discovered that the same credentials that allowed him to see and control his own device also provided access to live camera feeds, microphone audio, maps, and status data from nearly 7,000 other vacuums across 24 countries.

The backend security bug effectively exposed an army of internet-connected robots that, in the wrong hands, could have turned into surveillance tools, all without their owners ever knowing. Luckily, Azdoufal chose not to exploit that. Instead, he shared his findings with The Verge, which quickly contacted DJI to report the flaw... He also claims he could compile 2D floor plans of the homes the robots were operating in. A quick look at the robots' IP addresses also revealed their approximate locations.

DJI told Popular Science the issue was addressed "through two updates, with an initial patch deployed on February 8 and a follow-up update completed on February 10."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane shared touching words about wife Rebecca Gayheart in final interview before his death
Eric Dane spoke highly of his wife Rebecca Gayheart in his touching Netflix special, Famous Last Words: Eric Dane.

Mail Online
Open 
Russell Crowe delights fans as they discover Hollywood star's secret TikTok account where he shares his 'obsession' for luxury watches: 'From Gladiator to watch vlogger is the character arc nobody saw coming!'
The Oscar winner, 61, recently took to the site to display some of the many luxury and exclusive timepieces in his extensive collection, leaving viewers gobsmacked as they recognised the star.

Mail Online
Open 
One Battle After Another's Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti walk the BAFTAs red carpet as their movie is tipped to win big
One Battle After Another earned an incredible 14 nominations at this year's EE BAFTA Film Awards, including one for lead star Leonardo DiCaprio.

Mail Online
Open 
Paul Mescal cosies up to his two leading ladies: Actor looks loved-up with girlfriend Gracie Abrams before posing with Hamnet co-star Jessie Buckley at the Baftas
Paul Mescal cosied up to his two leading ladies at the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 held at The Royal Festival Hall in London on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Aimee Lou Wood is the epitome of elegance in a stunning pink gown as she make a rare red carpet appearance with boyfriend Adam Long at the star-studded BAFTAs
The White Lotus star, 32, looked sensational in a perfectly tailored pink floral gown which featured a boned corset and quirky straps.

Mail Online
Open 
Nottingham Forest vs Liverpool - Premier League RECAP: Latest score, team news and updates as Reds look to chase down top four spot plus updates from two others games
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog from Sunday's 2pm Premier League games featuring Nottingham Forest vs Liverpool, Crystal Palace vs Wolves and Sunderland vs Fulham. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will Jacks stars for England as Sri Lanka flail with bat in T20 World Cup
Super 8s: England, 146-9, beat Sri Lanka, 95, by 51 runsHarry Brook hails ‘awesome performance’ in Super 8 win Over the first hour of this match the grass banks on either side of the wicket filled both in numbers and in belief. Dot balls set off boisterous celebrations, wickets provoked delirium. An increasingly joyous crowd whooped as England’s batters trooped dolefully to and from the middle. Mexican waves rippled around a stadium already, and prematurely as it turned out, in full celebration.England were restricted to just 146 for nine, an innings that revealed few demons in the pitch – for all that it had spent much of the previous few days sweating under covers – but several in their heads. Again they faltered against spin. Jos Buttler remains in dismal form. Tom Banton was run out seeking a make-believe single, victim of scrambled decision making. Jacob Bethell, rather than giving himself a few moments to get the measure of Maheesh Theekshana, attacked the spinner’s first ball of the game and sent a leading edge to short third. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Girma winner sinks Manchester United to send Chelsea into Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals
A 99th-minute winner from Naomi Girma sent Chelsea through to the quarter-finals of the Women’s FA Cup as they saw off a stubborn Manchester United 2-1. In a competitive encounter at Kingsmeadow, Sonia Bompastor’s side needed extra time to keep their cup defence alive after Simi Awujo had cancelled out Sam Kerr’s opener in normal time.This encounter felt like it came at a critical moment in Chelsea’s season after an uncharacteristic wobble in recent weeks had all but ended their hopes of defending their league title. Securing their third win in a row, however, will have been the perfect tonic to boost morale ahead of a month during which they will face the same opponents in the League Cup final before coming up against Arsenal in a mouthwatering Champions League quarter-final. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France 33-8 Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live reaction
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) in Lille. Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Daniel.Bad news for the mercurial 10. Although it’s hardly a downgrade as Ramos, who has found himself at first receiver this campaign, slots in at 10. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Norway top medal table and Gu soars to gold as closing ceremony nears – live
Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNorway beats US to top medal table | email GrahamWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Three dead and four injured after County Armagh multi-car collision
Condolences given to families of two men and 23-year-old woman killed near Moy on Saturday nightThree people died and four others were injured in a multi-car collision in County Armagh on Saturday night.Emergency services dispatched three rapid response paramedics, seven emergency crews and one hazardous area response team after the Armagh Road crash was reported near Moy, in south-east County Tyrone. Continue reading...

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Dan Langille: Upgrading PostgreSQL in place on FreeBSD
I&#8217;ve updated one of my PostgreSQL instances to PostgreSQL 18, it&#8217;s time to update the others. This time, I&#8217;m going to try pg_update. My usual approach is pg_dump and pg_restore.
As this is my first attempt doing this, I&#8217;m posting this mostly for future reference when I try this again. There will be another blog post when I try this again. Which should be soon. This paragraph will link to that post when it is available.
In this post:

FreeBSD 15.0
PostgreSQL 16.12 (pg03)
PostgreSQL 18.2 (pg02)

The names in (brackets) are the names of the jail in question.
If you&#8217;re upgrading in place, and not copying data around like me, skip down until you see Saving the old binaries.
I&#8217;m reading http://www.unibia.com/unibianet/freebsd/upgrading-between-major-versions-postgresql-freebsd and thinking this might work well for me.
The overview of upgrade-in-place
The PostgreSQL upgrade-in-place needs these main parts:

The old binaries (e.g. postgresql16-server-16.12.pkg)
The new binaries (postgresql18-server-18.2.pkg)
The old data (/var/db/postgres/data16)

Keep that in mind as I go through this. We can&#8217;t install both packages at once, so we&#8217;ll untar the old package into a safe location.
How you get that package: up to you. Try /var/cache/pkg, or the FreeBSD package servers, or (while you still have the old package), run pkg create postgresql16-server (for example).
My data
Ignore this section if you have the data. For me, I&#8217;m testing this process, and I&#8217;m documenting this part here.
This is how the data is laid out. My idea: snapshot line 7 and use it in line 12.

&#x5b;18:23 r730-01 dvl ~] % zfs list | grep pg
data02/jails/pg01 34.9G 175G 10.8G /jails/pg01
data02/jails/pg02 12.7G 175G 11.6G /jails/pg02
data02/jails/pg03 11.5G 175G 10.8G /jails/pg03
data03/pg01 75.7G 5.47T 96K none
data03/pg01/freshports.dvl 37.1G 5.47T 27.6G /jails/pg01/var/db/postgres.freshports.dvl
data03/pg01/postgres 38.7G 5.47T 28.1G /jails/pg01/var/db/postgres
data03/pg02 78.5G 5.47T 88K none
data03/pg02/postgres 78.5G 5.47T 51.8G /jails/pg02/var/db/postgres
data03/pg02/rsyncer 1.02M 5.47T 144K /jails/pg02/usr/home/rsyncer/backups
data03/pg03 769G 5.47T 88K none
data03/pg03/postgres 570G 5.47T 448G /jails/pg03/var/db/postgres
data03/pg03/rsyncer 199G 5.47T 33.2G /jails/pg03/usr/home/rsyncer/backups
data03/poudriere/ports/pgeu_system 1.06G 5.47T 1.06G /usr/local/poudriere/ports/pgeu_system

The database is on a separate filesystem from the jail. Why? For situations just like this.
Note: I&#8217;m snapshotting a live-in-use database. That&#8217;s not always ideal. However, for this trial proof-of-concept, I&#8217;m content to accept that.
Clone, copy, and disable
As with the previous section, you can skip this one if you&#8217;re not mucking around copying data from instance to another.

[18:23 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo zfs snapshot data03/pg03/postgres@for.copy.1
[18:34 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo service jail stop pg02
Stopping jails: pg02.

[18:36 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo zfs rename data03/pg02/postgres data03/pg02/postgres.original
[18:36 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo zfs set canmount=off data03/pg02/postgres.original
[18:36 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo zfs clone data03/pg03/postgres@for.copy.1 data03/pg02/postgres
[18:43 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo zfs set mountpoint=/jails/pg02/var/db/postgres data03/pg02/postgres

[18:37 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudoedit /jails/pg02/etc/rc.conf

That sudoedit is me setting postgresql_enable=&#8221;NO&#8221; in /etc/rc.conf so it doesn&#8217;t start up with the new data, just yet.
Then I started the jail back up:

[18:44 r730-01 dvl ~] % sudo service jail start pg02
Starting jails: pg02.

And logging in, it looks right:

[18:44 pg02 dvl ~] % ls -l /var/db/postgres
total 9
drwx------ 19 postgres postgres 26 2026.02.13 18:23 data16/

Work not shown here
I&#8217;m not showing how to obtain the packages for the old binaries.
The host contains the old and new packages (not necessarily installed; I refer there to the .pkg files).
The host has already been updated to PostgreSQL 18 (the destination) from PostgreSQL 16. The initdb has not been done yet.
Saving the old binaries
My goal is to make this process data driven: Just update the vars and go.
In this section, I extract the old packages into the OLDBIN directory.

[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % OLDBIN=~/tmp/pg-upgrade
[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % mkdir $OLDBIN
[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION=16
[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % NEW_POSTGRES_VERSION=18
[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % OLDPKG_S=postgresql16-server-16.12.pkg
[20:26 pg02 dvl ~/tmp] % OLDPKG_C=postgresql16-contrib-16.12_1.pkg
[20:27 pg02 dvl /var/db/pkg] % cd /var/cache/pkg
[20:27 pg02 dvl /var/cache/pkg] % tar xf $OLDPKG_S -C $OLDBIN
tar: Removing leading '/' from member names
[20:27 pg02 dvl /var/cache/pkg] % tar xf $OLDPKG_C -C $OLDBIN
tar: Removing leading '/' from member names
[20:27 pg02 dvl /var/cache/pkg] % cd $OLDBIN
[20:27 pg02 dvl ~/tmp/pg-upgrade] % usr/local/bin/pg_upgrade -V
pg_upgrade (PostgreSQL) 16.12
[20:27 pg02 dvl ~/tmp/pg-upgrade] %

initdb
This section does the initdb, creating the PostgreSQL 18 cluster.

[20:15 pg02 dvl ~] % ls -l /var/db/postgres
total 9
drwx------ 19 postgres postgres 26 2026.02.13 18:23 data16/
[20:15 pg02 dvl ~] % sudo service postgresql oneinitdb
initdb postgresql
The files belonging to this database system will be owned by user "postgres".
This user must also own the server process.

The database cluster will be initialized with this locale configuration:
locale provider: libc
LC_COLLATE: C
LC_CTYPE: C.UTF-8
LC_MESSAGES: C.UTF-8
LC_MONETARY: C.UTF-8
LC_NUMERIC: C.UTF-8
LC_TIME: C.UTF-8
The default text search configuration will be set to "english".

Data page checksums are enabled.

creating directory /var/db/postgres/data18 ... ok
creating subdirectories ... ok
selecting dynamic shared memory implementation ... posix
selecting default "max_connections" ... 100
selecting default "shared_buffers" ... 128MB
selecting default time zone ... UTC
creating configuration files ... ok
running bootstrap script ... ok
performing post-bootstrap initialization ... ok
syncing data to disk ... ok

initdb: warning: enabling "trust" authentication for local connections
initdb: hint: You can change this by editing pg_hba.conf or using the option -A, or --auth-local and --auth-host, the next time you run initdb.

Success. You can now start the database server using:

/usr/local/bin/pg_ctl -D /var/db/postgres/data18 -l logfile start

[20:15 pg02 dvl ~] % ls -l /var/db/postgres
total 17
drwx------ 19 postgres postgres 26 2026.02.13 18:23 data16/
drwx------ 19 postgres postgres 24 2026.02.21 20:15 data18/

Shown above, the old and new data directories.
Not shown here
What&#8217;s not shown next is making sure the new configuration is what you want (i.e. postgresql.conf for example)
The Upgrade
With everything now in place, I become root in the pg02 jail.

[root@pg02 ~]# su -l postgres

This part is formatted for easy copy/paste:

OLDBIN=/usr/home/dvl/tmp/pg-upgrade
OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION=16
NEW_POSTGRES_VERSION=18
pg_upgrade -b ${OLDBIN}/usr/local/bin/ -d /var/db/postgres/data${OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ \
-B /usr/local/bin/ -D /var/db/postgres/data${NEW_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ -U postgres

The first time I ran this, I got:

$ pg_upgrade -b ${OLDBIN}/usr/local/bin/ -d /var/db/postgres/data${OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ -B /usr/local/bin/ -D /var/db/postgres/data${NEW_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ -U postgres
Performing Consistency Checks
-----------------------------
Checking cluster versions ok

old cluster does not use data checksums but the new one does
Failure, exiting

This next step is a fun trial, however, since this host is running ZFS, I&#8217;m convinced checksums at the application level make no sense if the filesystem is already doing it. Tangent: I think this postgresql_initdb_flags=&#8221;&#8211;encoding=utf-8 &#8211;lc-collate=C &#8211;no-data-checksums&#8221; added to /etc/rc.conf will suffice (based on the rc.d script and initdb). That will be tested in my next post.
At this point, I should have done another initdb, disabling checksums.
But. I. Did. Not.
OK, let&#8217;s try this (re pg_checksums), because I&#8217;ve never done it before.

$ ${OLDBIN}/usr/local/bin/pg_checksums -e -D /var/db/postgres/data${OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION}/
Checksum operation completed
Files scanned: 8344
Blocks scanned: 69123852
Files written: 7092
Blocks written: 69122772
pg_checksums: syncing data directory
pg_checksums: updating control file
Checksums enabled in cluster

Good. Now on to the main show. Notice lines 29-30.

$ ${OLDBIN}/usr/local/bin/pg_checksums -e -D /var/db/postgres/data${OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION}/
Checksum operation completed
Files scanned: 8344
Blocks scanned: 69123852
Files written: 7092
Blocks written: 69122772
pg_checksums: syncing data directory
pg_checksums: updating control file
Checksums enabled in cluster
$ time pg_upgrade -b ${OLDBIN}/usr/local/bin/ -d /var/db/postgres/data${OLD_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ \
-B /usr/local/bin/ -D /var/db/postgres/data${NEW_POSTGRES_VERSION}/ -U postgres
Performing Consistency Checks
-----------------------------
Checking cluster versions ok
Checking database connection settings ok
Checking database user is the install user ok
Checking for prepared transactions ok
Checking for contrib/isn with bigint-passing mismatch ok
Checking data type usage ok
Checking for not-null constraint inconsistencies ok
Creating dump of global objects ok
Creating dump of database schemas
ok
Checking for presence of required libraries ok
Checking database user is the install user ok
Checking for prepared transactions ok
Checking for new cluster tablespace directories ok

If pg_upgrade fails after this point, you must re-initdb the
new cluster before continuing.

Performing Upgrade
------------------
Setting locale and encoding for new cluster ok
Analyzing all rows in the new cluster ok
Freezing all rows in the new cluster ok
Deleting files from new pg_xact ok
Copying old pg_xact to new server ok
Setting oldest XID for new cluster ok
Setting next transaction ID and epoch for new cluster ok
Deleting files from new pg_multixact/offsets ok
Copying old pg_multixact/offsets to new server ok
Deleting files from new pg_multixact/members ok
Copying old pg_multixact/members to new server ok
Setting next multixact ID and offset for new cluster ok
Resetting WAL archives ok
Setting frozenxid and minmxid counters in new cluster ok
Restoring global objects in the new cluster ok
Restoring database schemas in the new cluster
ok
Copying user relation files
ok
Setting next OID for new cluster ok
Sync data directory to disk ok
Creating script to delete old cluster ok
Checking for extension updates notice

Your installation contains extensions that should be updated
with the ALTER EXTENSION command. The file
update_extensions.sql
when executed by psql by the database superuser will update
these extensions.

Upgrade Complete
----------------
Some statistics are not transferred by pg_upgrade.
Once you start the new server, consider running these two commands:
/usr/local/bin/vacuumdb -U postgres --all --analyze-in-stages --missing-stats-only
/usr/local/bin/vacuumdb -U postgres --all --analyze-only
Running this script will delete the old cluster&#039;s data files:
./delete_old_cluster.sh
6199.21 real 2.83 user 1289.06 sys
$

That&#8217;s about 93 minutes. Not bad for the dataset size (78.5G) and given the host is writing and reading to the same ZFS dataset.
I&#8217;ll do those above recommended actions two sections down.
Dataset size
Here&#8217;s a list of snapshots taken on that new dataset. It&#8217;s not surprising that the size in increases as the new data arrives.

[0:42 r730-01 dvl ~] % zfs list -r -t snapshot data03/pg02/postgres
NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_18:45:08_daily 0B - 448G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_18:45:08_hourly 0B - 448G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_19:00:06_daily 0B - 448G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_19:00:06_hourly 0B - 448G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_20:00:05_hourly 0B - 448G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_21:01:53_hourly 944K - 419G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_22:01:40_hourly 936K - 367G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-21_23:00:01_hourly 1.20M - 355G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_00:01:05_daily 184K - 389G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_00:01:05_hourly 176K - 389G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_01:03:33_hourly 856K - 602G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_02:00:08_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_03:00:00_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_04:00:01_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_05:00:05_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_06:00:02_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_07:00:05_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_08:00:07_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_09:00:04_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_10:00:05_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_11:00:03_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_12:00:04_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_13:00:01_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_13:30:00_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_13:45:08_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_14:00:06_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_14:00:06_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_14:15:09_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_14:30:01_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_14:45:11_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_15:00:06_hourly 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_15:00:06_frequently 0B - 709G -

Recommended actions
In this section, I run the commands suggested by the pg_update output.

[root@pg02 ~]# service postgresql start
start postgresql
[root@pg02 ~]# /usr/local/bin/vacuumdb -U postgres --all --analyze-in-stages --missing-stats-only
vacuumdb: processing database "bacula": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "empty": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "fpphorum": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "freebsddiary.org": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dev": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dvl": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.stage": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.test": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "gitea": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "nagiostest": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "postgres": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "samdrucker": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "template1": Generating minimal optimizer statistics (1 target)
vacuumdb: processing database "bacula": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "empty": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "fpphorum": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "freebsddiary.org": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dev": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dvl": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.stage": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.test": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "gitea": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "nagiostest": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "postgres": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "samdrucker": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "template1": Generating medium optimizer statistics (10 targets)
vacuumdb: processing database "bacula": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "empty": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "fpphorum": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "freebsddiary.org": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dev": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.dvl": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.stage": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "freshports.test": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "gitea": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "nagiostest": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "postgres": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "samdrucker": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics
vacuumdb: processing database "template1": Generating default (full) optimizer statistics

[root@pg02 ~]# /usr/local/bin/vacuumdb -U postgres --all --analyze-only
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "bacula"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "empty"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "fpphorum"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "freebsddiary.org"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "freshports.dev"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "freshports.dvl"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "freshports.stage"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "freshports.test"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "gitea"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "nagiostest"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "postgres"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "samdrucker"
vacuumdb: vacuuming database "template1"
[root@pg02 ~]#

[root@pg02 ~]# sudo su -l postgres
$ ls -l
total 18
drwx------ 19 postgres postgres 25 Feb 21 23:51 data16
drwx------ 20 postgres postgres 27 Feb 22 15:28 data18
-rwx------ 1 postgres postgres 44 Feb 22 01:34 delete_old_cluster.sh
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres 247 Feb 22 01:35 update_extensions.sql
$ ./delete_old_cluster.sh
$ ls -l
total 10
drwx------ 20 postgres postgres 27 Feb 22 15:28 data18
-rwx------ 1 postgres postgres 44 Feb 22 01:34 delete_old_cluster.sh
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres 247 Feb 22 01:35 update_extensions.sql
$

And more snapshots
After the above processing, the newest snapshots look like this.

data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_15:15:09_frequently 0B - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_15:30:01_frequently 82.4M - 709G -
data03/pg02/postgres@autosnap_2026-02-22_15:45:11_frequently 761M - 355G -

Which makes sense. Those numbers represent deleted data.
What&#8217;s next
I declare a decent first attempt. I&#8217;m going to try this approach one more time, and if all goes well, target the main server directly instead of taking a copy.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Air France Boeing 777 Makes Emergency Landing in Martinique
An Air France Boeing 777-300ER operating flight AF895 from Fort de France to Paris Charles de Gaulle returned to Martinique on 21 February 2026 following an engine surge shortly after takeoff.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Boeing Sells 40 787 Dreamliners: Who Are Sun PhuQuoc Airways?
Boeing has secured a major commercial win in Southeast Asia with Sun PhuQuoc Airways confirming an order for up to forty 787 Dreamliner aircraft, marking the largest Boeing widebody commitment in Vietnamese aviation history.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
LATAM Boeing 787 Seat Upset Over Tasman Sea: Authorities Release Full Report
The final report into the LATAM Boeing 787 seat upset accident over the Tasman Sea is one of those investigations that exposes a quiet vulnerability in modern flight operations, a vulnerability hidden not in engines or avionics but in a place so mundane that it rarely earns a second thought, the Captain’s seat.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Celebration in Sao Paulo As Azul Exits Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
Sao Paulo-based Azul has formally completed its financial restructuring process in the United States, marking a decisive turning point for Brazil’s largest airline by number of cities served.

The Hill
Open 
Get excited for tax season: Historic refunds are on their way
JPMorgan estimates that more than 100 million Americans will receive a tax refund, with the average refund totaling $3,743. 

The Hill
Open 
What are the 'Freedom Trucks' touring the US, and where are they heading next?
A fleet of trucks are traveling the country in honor of America's 250th anniversary.

The Hill
Open 
US trade rep: Trump administration 'found ways to really reconstruct' its tariff agenda after SCOTUS ruling
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday said the Trump administration “found ways to really reconstruct” its policies on tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down the use of an emergency statute for current levies. Greer said the president addressed this in his press conference on Friday. “And he said that since we were looking...

The Hill
Open 
Greer on tariff refunds : ‘We need the court to tell us what to do’
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday said the Trump administration would need guidance from the courts on how to handle tariff refunds after the Supreme Court struck down duties authorized under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. “Well, we need the court to tell us what to do. They’ve created a situation where they...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Report: Apple is Testing These iPhone 18 Pro and Foldable iPhone Colors
The special new color that Apple is considering for the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max this year is red, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.





Specifically, he said that Apple is testing a "deep red" finish for the two devices.



If this rumor materializes, it would be the first time that the Pro and Pro Max models ever come in red, and the iPhone 18 Pro models would be the first iPhone models to be available in red since the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus in (PRODUCT)RED. However, it sounds like it would be more of a burgundy finish than a bright red.



While it was previously rumored that Apple was also considering purple and brown finishes for the iPhone 18 Pro models, Gurman said he believes that those color options are "just variants of the same red idea — given that the tones are fairly similar." In other words, it sounds like those two color options will not actually be offered.



As for the foldable iPhone, Gurman said Apple plans to "stay away from fun colors" and stick to more traditional space gray/black and silver/white finishes.



Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 18 Pro and foldable iPhone models in September.



Related Roundup: iPhone 18Tags: Foldable iPhone, Mark GurmanRelated Forum: iPhoneThis article, 'Report: Apple is Testing These iPhone 18 Pro and Foldable iPhone Colors' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

CNET News
Open 
Trump Phone Reportedly Costs More, Looks Different, Isn't Made in America
A model unit of the T1 seen by The Verge shows specs and pricing that don't match what's advertised on the Trump Mobile website.

CNET News
Open 
Astronauts Will Be Allowed to Use the Latest Smartphones During Space Missions
Astronauts could be using smartphones to capture lunar selfies and more.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: The lasting impressions
Milan Cortina will be remembered for the performances of a Norwegian superstar and a Ukrainian skeleton racer's "helmet of remembrance."

Mail Online
Open 
Adolescence star Erin Doherty catches the eye in a dramatic navy dress as she arrives at the BAFTAs red carpet
The Adolescence star, 33, turned heads in a dramatic navy gown as she posed up a storm on the red carpet.

Mail Online
Open 
Love Island stars and influencers rub shoulders with Hollywood A-listers on the BAFTAs red carpet
 It is no longer just the A-list that attend the prestigious awards ceremonies after being nominated for their film success from the past year.

Mail Online
Open 
Worst dressed stars at 2026 BAFTAs: Teyana Taylor, Maya Rudolph and Pegah Pourmand are among the celebs failing to impress
Household names gathered at the Royal Festival Hall in central London on Sunday evening for a night filled with celebration and joy.

Mail Online
Open 
Corner shop is shut down after hygiene inspectors uncover 'worst mice infestation ever seen'
Crisp packets ripped into and eaten by the rodents were for sale on the shelves of a Premier Express in Portsmouth, Hampshire.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Iwobi seals Fulham’s victory at Sunderland after Raúl Jimenéz double
Raúl Jimenéz will turn 35 in May yet Fulham’s Mexican striker remains as vital to Marco Silva’s team as ever.It is now approaching six years since his career was placed in serious jeopardy by a skull fracture but Jimenéz exhibited precious few signs of wear and tear as his latest two goals, a second-half header and a penalty, sunk Sunderland. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service shot and killed armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted white male, who has not been identified, carrying a shotgun and a gasoline canThe US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

Telegraph
Open 
Mac Allister snatches stoppage-time winner for Liverpool at Forest after VAR drama
Mac Allister snatches stoppage-time winner for Liverpool at Forest after VAR drama

Telegraph
Open 
Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on verge of T20 World Cup semi-finals
Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on verge of T20 World Cup semi-finals

Sky News Home
Open 
Sky News Explains YouTube series relaunches - How Trump reinvented ICE
Sky News is relaunching its YouTube series Explains.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
England's 'Jack of all trades' delivers for Brook again
Will Jacks, labeled England's 'Jack of all trades' by Harry Brook, delivers again at the T20 World Cup to keep the winter of a lifetime rolling on.

Mail Online
Open 
The show must go on! William and Kate dazzle as they arrive at the BAFTAs a world away from Andrew scandal with the Princess in a recycled dress from 2019
Prince William and Princess Catherine have arrived at the BAFTAs just days after Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Iwobi seals Fulham’s victory at Sunderland after Raúl Jiménez double
Raúl Jiménez will turn 35 in May yet Fulham’s Mexican striker remains as vital to Marco Silva’s team as ever.It is now approaching six years since his career was placed in serious jeopardy by a skull fracture but Jiménez exhibited precious few signs of wear and tear as his latest two goals, a second-half header and a penalty, sunk Sunderland. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Girma winner sinks Manchester United to put Chelsea in FA Cup quarter-finals
A 99th-minute winner from Naomi Girma sent Chelsea through to the quarter-finals of the Adobe Women’s FA Cup as they saw off a stubborn Manchester United 2-1. In a competitive encounter at Kingsmeadow, Sonia Bompastor’s side needed extra time to keep their cup defence alive after Simi Awujo had cancelled out Sam Kerr’s opener in normal time.This encounter felt like it came at a critical moment in Chelsea’s season after an uncharacteristic wobble in recent weeks had all but ended their hopes of defending their league title. Securing their third win in a row, however, will have been the perfect tonic to boost morale ahead of a month during which they will face the same opponents in the League Cup final before coming up against Arsenal in a mouthwatering Champions League quarter-final. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Guessand strikes late as Palace grab crucial victory over 10-man Wolves
“Opportunities missed. Board inept. Fans disrespected. Glasner finished,” read the banner unfurled by the Crystal Palace supporters behind Dean Henderson’s goal after barely 30 seconds of their meeting with bottom side Wolves. If it was meant to inspire a first league victory here since 1 November then it somehow had the desired effect.Having huffed and puffed against a side playing with 10 men for half an hour after Ladislav Krejci was shown a second yellow card for stupidly kicking the ball away, it looked like being another miserable afternoon for Oliver Glasner. But when Evann Guessand’s winner went in during the final minute of normal time, there was an explosion of joy as some of the frustrations of the previous few weeks suddenly melted away. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mac Allister’s last-gasp winner gives Liverpool points at Nottingham Forest
As this game ticked into the 97th minute, Liverpool snatched victory as Alexis Mac Allister feasted on a loose ball in the Nottingham Forest penalty area. Just before stoppage time, Arne Slot was apoplectic as Mac Allister saw an effort disallowed for handball, though in reality the Forest defender Ola Aina had smashed his clearance into the Liverpool midfielder’s back and it flew in past Stefan Ortega, who initially saved Hugo Ekitiké’s header. Mac Allister’s goal flattened Forest in Vítor Pereira’s first league game in charge and got Liverpool out of jail.Slot’s side were abysmal in the first half, registering two shots, one of which was blocked and the other off target, while they had just three touches in the opposition box. Mac Allister ultimately made his count at the death as Liverpool moved level with Chelsea, who were held on Saturday, and Manchester United, who are not in action until Monday’s trip to Everton. Liverpool were stodgy for long periods but did improve and at the end they snaffled a precious three points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightFollow all the winners live hereThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service shot and killed armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Authorities say agents confronted a white male, who has not been identified, carrying shotgun and gasoline canThe US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the oceanfront resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Met officers working for Andrew told to guard Epstein's home, emails show
The Met says it has not identified any wrongdoing by its protection officers "at this time".

Mail Online
Open 
Timothée Chalamet walks BAFTAs red carpet solo with no sign of girlfriend  Kylie Jenner as he hopes to land Best Actor and continue award show streak
The actor, 30, who is nominated for Best Actor for his role in Marty Supreme, cut a suave figure as he walked the red carpet tailored black suit.

Mail Online
Open 
Red alert on 'School Wars' TikTok trend which organises brawls between rivals and even has scoring system for punches landed on other children
Posts splitting London schools into 'red and blue sides' - inspired by the notorious LA Bloods and Crips gangs - encouraging children to attack rivals have been circulating on social media.

Mail Online
Open 
Multiple dead after truck EXPLODES on Chilean highway and releases deadly gas
Devastating video showed the moments after a gas tanker overturned and erupted into massive flames. The highway is seen being completely engulfed by a gas cloud in just 30 seconds.

Mail Online
Open 
The show must go on! William and Kate dazzle as they arrive at the BAFTAs a world away from Andrew scandal
Prince William and Princess Catherine have arrived at the BAFTAs just days after Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mac Allister’s last-gasp winner gives Liverpool points at Nottingham Forest
As this game ticked into the 97th minute, Liverpool snatched victory as Alexis Mac Allister feasted on a loose ball in the Nottingham Forest penalty area. Just before stoppage time, Arne Slot was apoplectic as Mac Allister saw an effort disallowed for handball, though in reality the Forest defender Ola Aina had smashed his clearance into the Liverpool midfielder’s back and it flew in past Stefan Ortega, who initially saved Hugo Ekitiké’s header. Mac Allister’s goal flattened Forest in Vítor Pereira’a first league game in charge and got Liverpool out of jail.Slot’s side were abysmal in the first half, registering two shots, one of which was blocked and the other off target, while they had just three touches in the opposition box. Mac Allister ultimately made his count at the death as Liverpool moved level with Chelsea, who were held on Saturday, and Manchester United, who are not in action until Monday’s trip to Everton. Liverpool were stodgy for long periods but did improve and at the end they snaffled a precious three points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
USA stun Canada in overtime to win first Olympic men’s ice hockey gold since 1980
US win third Olympic gold, first since Miracle on IceJack Hughes’ golden goal ends 46-year wait in MilanThe United States claimed their third Olympic men’s hockey title – and first since the Miracle on Ice team of 1980 – with a thrilling 2-1 overtime win over Canada in Sunday’s gold medal game at the Milano Cortina Games. In the third Olympic final meeting between the border rivals and the first since Sidney Crosby’s epochal golden goal in 2010, the Americans seized their moment to end a 46-year wait and dethrone the sport’s most decorated nation on its grandest stage.Canada had been chasing a record-extending 10th gold medal in men’s ice hockey, but it was the United States who delivered when it mattered most through Jack Hughes’ winner less than two minutes into the extra period and a superhuman effort from goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, capping an unbeaten run through the first Olympic tournament to feature National Hockey League players in 12 years. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Secret Service shoots man dead at Trump's Mar-a-Lago
Authorities said the man breached a secure perimeter around the president's private residence and was carrying a shotgun and a fuel can.

Mail Online
Open 
Virginia Giuffre's lawyer says she was 'failed' by the CPS when it declined to bring a case against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor 10 years ago
David Boies, who represented Virginia Giuffre, said that the decision by the CPS and the Metropolitan Police in 2016 was 'clearly erroneous'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tom Gould on Wuthering Heights – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sacconi Quartet review – new Freya Waley-Cohen work reveals ensemble at their finest
Wigmore Hall, LondonMarking 25 years since their formation, Dances, Songs &amp; Hymns for Friendship was informed by the composer’s observations of the four musicians in and out of rehearsalFounded at the Royal College of Music in 2001, the Sacconi Quartet celebrated their silver jubilee by looking forward as well as back. If Haydn and Beethoven represented the bedrock upon which their musical sensibilities were grounded, it was a newly commissioned work by Freya Waley-Cohen that revealed them at their finest.Impeccably crafted and full of rhythmic and harmonic invention, Dances, Songs &amp; Hymns for Friendship is a six-movement string quartet informed by the composer’s observations of the four musicians both in and out of rehearsal – she even watched them making tea! It opened with Spin, in which bold unison passages dissolved into fragmentary solos. Waley-Cohen’s musical fingerprints here were spicy, but rarely ventured beyond a world that Bartók, for example, would have recognised. It suited the Sacconi’s tightness of ensemble and muscular tone, especially in the lower instruments. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mac Allister’s last-gasp winner gives Liverpool points at Nottingham Forest
As this game ticked into the 97th minute, Liverpool snatched victory as Alexis Mac Allister feasted on a loose ball in the Nottingham Forest penalty area. Just before stoppage time, Arne Slot was apopoletic as Mac Allister saw an effort disallowed for handball, though in reality the Forest defender Ola Aina had smashed his clearance into the Liverpool midfielder’s back and it flew in past Stefan Ortega, who initially saved Hugo Ekitiké’s header. Mac Allister’s goal flattened Forest in Vítor Pereira’a first league game in charge and got Liverpool out of jail.Slot’s side were abysmal in the first half, registering two shots, one of which was blocked and the other off target, while they had just three touches in the opposition box. Mac Allister ultimately made his count at the death as Liverpool moved level with Chelsea, who were held on Saturday, and Manchester United, who are not in action until Monday’s trip to Everton. Liverpool were stodgy for long periods but did improve and at the end they snaffled a precious three points. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China’s Eileen Gu soars to ski halfpipe gold as Zoe Atkin claims GB’s fifth medal of Games
Gu and Li Fanghui take Winter Olympic gold and silverZoe Atkin’s bronze matches that of sister Izzy in 2018Zoe Atkin won women’s freestyle skiing halfpipe bronze to claim Great Britain’s fifth medal of their record-breaking Winter Olympics as China’s Eileen Gu soared to win her first gold of the Games.Atkin qualified for the final in first place and led after the first run, in which the single best score from three runs counts in the standings. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My fortnight in a posture corrector: can this simple device help reduce back pain?
These harnesses are increasingly popular, but experts are divided on how useful they are. I decided to give one a tryWhen I sat at my desk this morning, I couldn’t slouch over the keyboard like I usually do. As much as I tried to hunch over, my back was held straight, shoulders pulled back. My trick? I was wearing a corset-like device with straps over my shoulders that forced me into an upright position.Posture correctors claim to provide instant improvement in posture and relieve the back, shoulder and chest pain often associated with poor posture, if worn long term. The one I have on, Vicorrect (£29.99), is one of many on the market – Lidl’s budget posture trainer (£7.99) is now sold out; Taylor Swift has been spotted wearing a sports-bra version by Forme (£140). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lib Dems call on home secretary to delay new dual national border rules
Letter to Shabana Mahmood describes controls that could block British dual citizens’ entry to UK as ‘unacceptable’The Liberal Democrats have called on the home secretary to “move at speed” to delay the rollout of new border controls that could result in British dual nationals being blocked from entering the country.A letter sent by the party to Shabana Mahmood echoes one sent by the former Conservative cabinet minister David Davis on Friday asking for a grace period to be implemented urgently after one of his constituents living in the Netherlands told how she could no longer visit her dying mother in a care home in Yorkshire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia fires scores of missiles at Ukraine as Hungary threatens to block EU sanctions
‘Moscow continues to invest in strikes more than diplomacy,’ says Zelenskyy, as logistics and energy facilities targetedRussia has fired scores of missiles and drones at targets across Ukraine, flattening a residential house in the capital, two days before the fourth anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion.Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the Kremlin had launched 297 drones and nearly 50 missiles on Sunday, in the latest in a wave of overnight strikes. He said “a significant proportion” had been shot down as he called on allies to strengthen the country’s air defences against enemy attacks. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Leonardo DiCaprio and Timothee Chalamet among BAFTA stars to hit red carpet ahead of star-studded ceremony: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

Sky News Home
Open 
The pressure is building on government to reform student loan repayments
It's a debate that's gaining momentum, and ministers could score some political points among millions of graduates in England if they choose to reform the student loans system.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Hairy Biker widow says 'live the life they can't'
Ann Cleeves and Lili Myers talk about coming to terms with the loss and dealing with grief.

Mail Online
Open 
Virginia Giuffre's lawyer says she was 'failed' by the CPS when it declined to bring a case against Andrew Mountbatten Windsor 10 years ago
David Boies, who represented Virginia Giuffre, said that the decision by the CPS and the Metropolitan Police in 2016 was 'clearly erroneous'.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer's job 'on the line' as Gorton & Denton by-election enters frantic final days... with Greens attacking Labour over Gaza
The contest in Gorton & Denton is entering its last few days with the Greens seemingly trying to 'weaponise' the Gaza issue.

Mail Online
Open 
Newlywed police officer killed in Lviv 'terror attack' after Ukraine explosions
Viktoria Shpylka, 23, died in the attack - which also left three people in critical condition and at least 22 others injured - earlier today.

Mail Online
Open 
Maura Higgins turns heads in a dramatic form-fitting red satin dress and sheer gloves as she arrives at the BAFTAs after making her acting debut
Maura Higgins was among the arrivals at the EE BAFTA Film Awards on Sunday afternoon after making waves in Hollywood after her Traitors US appearance.

Mail Online
Open 
Sophie Habboo stuns in a strapless lace gown alongside dapper husband Jamie Laing at the BAFTAs as couple make their first red carpet appearance  since welcoming baby son Ziggy
The couple, who became parents for the first time in December, were dressed to the nines as they put on a loved-up display while hosting the ceremony's red carpet coverage.

Mail Online
Open 
Three dead and four hurt in late night three-car-crash in Northern Ireland
Emergency services rushed to the scene on the Armagh Road in Co Tyrone near Moy at about 10.20pm on Saturday night, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said.

Mail Online
Open 
USA beat Canada in overtime thriller to win Winter Olympics hockey gold with Jack Hughes the hero
Jack Hughes scored the golden goal for the United States in a sensational overtime victory against Canada to clinch gold at the Winter Olympics in Italy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rebecca Hendin on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor slipping out of public life – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest 0-1 Liverpool: Premier League – as it happened
Alexis Mac Allister scored in injury time, after having a previous goal ruled out, to snatch a Liverpool winEric Peterson gets in touch: “I wouldn’t mind Wayne Rooney pulling on an old Everton kit and getting on some podcast to remind Arne Slot, “Easy there, sport. You say that the only thing you and Jurgen Klopp have in common is that you both won the league. That’s not true. You both won the league with Jurgen’s team. Whether you can build a champion of your own is a different question.”Arne Slot just spoke to Sky, starting with Dominik Szoboszlai at full-back: “He needs to be because that’s what we need. We have our issues, especially in defence. Missing our 2 fullbacks, but Dominic has done that job really well. Last week, Curtis Jones, did his job really well. So that’s the good thing about midfielders, they are usually able to play in more positions than only in the midfields. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Norway top medal table and Gu soars to gold as closing ceremony nears – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingUSA v Canada ice hockey final – live | email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Hundreds queue for surprise Foo Fighters gig tickets
Fans scrambled after the band announced tickets for a Manchester show could only be bought in person.

BBC UK News
Open 
Girl, 7, and woman killed in crash near tunnel
Police appeal for witnesses after the crash on the Hampshire side of the Hindhead Tunnel on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A patriotic act’: the Ukrainians having babies and raising children in wartime
Birthrates have fallen since Russia’s invasion but some have held on to hope and are bringing up children despite risksFour years ago Russian troops were a few kilometres away from Leleka maternity hospital, beyond a pine forest and a lake. Vladimir Putin’s plan to conquer Ukraine – wrapping it into a new Russian empire – began just down the road. His forces were meant to seize Kyiv and topple Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s pro-western government.To the Kremlin’s surprise, Ukraine fought back. A Russian armoured column was destroyed in nearby Bucha. For five weeks a battle raged. Maternity staff treated wounded Ukrainian soldiers. Then, in March 2022, Russian troops pulled out of the Kyiv region. They left behind the bodies of hundreds of civilians they had killed, including fleeing families gunned down in their cars. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Huckabee’s Israel land remarks condemned as ‘dangerous and inflammatory’
Arab and Islamic governments issue statement denouncing comments made on Tucker Carlson podcastGovernments from across the Islamic world have condemned remarks by the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, suggesting it would “be fine” for Israel to claim a broad swath of the Middle East.Huckabee, an evangelical Christian pastor and former Arkansas governor, has long been an outspoken supporter of Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest 0-1 Liverpool: Premier League – live
Alexis Mac Allister scored in injury time, after having a previous goal ruled out, to snatch a Liverpool winEric Peterson gets in touch: “I wouldn’t mind Wayne Rooney pulling on an old Everton kit and getting on some podcast to remind Arne Slot, “Easy there, sport. You say that the only thing you and Jurgen Klopp have in common is that you both won the league. That’s not true. You both won the league with Jurgen’s team. Whether you can build a champion of your own is a different question.”Arne Slot just spoke to Sky, starting with Dominik Szoboszlai at full-back: “He needs to be because that’s what we need. We have our issues, especially in defence. Missing our 2 fullbacks, but Dominic has done that job really well. Last week, Curtis Jones, did his job really well. So that’s the good thing about midfielders, they are usually able to play in more positions than only in the midfields. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightThe Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, who is hotly tipped to win best leading actress at this evening’s ceremony, has just arrived and is wearing a striking blue velvet dress. The Irish actor recently started working with the Hollywood stylist Danielle Goldberg. Goldberg also works with Ayo Edebiri and Greta Lee, and over the past couple of months she has been honing Buckley’s red carpet approach. They have been sticking to a pared-back colour palette, including black-and-white looks from McQueen and Valentino. This evening’s marine-blue look is a surprise, but we do love a celebrity who keeps us on our toes.On the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final: USA beat Canada in overtime to end 46-year wait for gold – as it happened
Team USA are the men’s Olympic champions for the first time since 1980 after Jack Hughes scored a dramatic winnerMedal table | Full game report | Results | BriefingAway we go …What else has happened at the Games today? And what were some of the highlights of the past two weeks and change? Check our multisport coverage: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tributes paid to two young men who died on Eryri mountains hike
Eddie Hill, 20, and Jayden Long, 19, found dead on Yr Wyddfa in north Wales after a huge search operationTributes have been paid to two young men who died on a hiking expedition on Yr Wyddfa, also known as Snowdon, in north Wales.Eddie Hill, 20, and Jayden Long, 19, both from Norfolk, were found dead in Eryri national park on Thursday after a huge search operation in severe winter conditions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inquiry into Andrew’s Epstein links not ruled out as police searches continue
Calls mount for Mountbatten-Windsor to be dropped from royal line of successionPolice searches of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s former home on the Windsor estate continued on Sunday as a government minister did not rule out having a judge-led inquiry into the former prince’s links with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, representing the government, did not rule out such an inquiry but said it was premature because of the police investigation. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
BAFTAs red carpet: All the fashion as Hollywood stars arrive for ceremony
As well as the film prizes, red carpet fashion is also a huge part of any awards ceremony.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
USA win men's Olympic ice hockey gold for first time in 46 years
United States win the men's Olympic ice hockey gold medal for the first time in 46 years by beating neighbours Canada in overtime.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Winter Olympics Closing Ceremony 2026: FREE live streams, schedule, preview

TechRadar News
Open 
Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition’s Switch 2 upgrade is wonderful, and could hint at Monolith Soft’s future on the console

Digital Trends
Open 
You Asked: From blinding brightness to fading OLEDs
On today’s episode of You Asked, we cover what to do about an 83-inch TV that’s too bright, whether it’s time to upgrade a 10-year-old TV, and whether a calibration can extend the life of your OLED. Is an 83-inch TV too bright? @msbgone asks: I went with an 83-inch TV, and it’s so bright [&#8230;]
The post You Asked: From blinding brightness to fading OLEDs appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
Optimize your AI experience with specially made prompts
TL;DR:&#160;Create detailed prompts customized for all the major LLMs with the AI Prompt Engineer,&#160;PromptBuilder&#160;for $199 (MSRP $3,564).
AI is supposed to promote efficiency, but it can be frustrating when your prompts aren't yielding what you're looking for. To get what you need out of large language models like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, there's a one-stop shop in&#160;PromptBuilder. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Optimize your AI experience with specially made prompts appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
F-35 Software Could Be Jailbreaked Like an IPhone: Dutch Defense Minister
Lockheed Martin's F-35 combat aircraft is a supersonic stealth "strike fighter." But this week the military news site TWZ reports that the fighter's "computer brain," including "its cloud-based components, could be cracked to accept third-party software updates, just like 'jailbreaking' a cellphone, according to the Dutch State Secretary for Defense."

TWZ notes that the Dutch defense secretary made the remarks during an episode of BNR Nieuwsradio's "Boekestijn en de Wijk" podcast, according to a machine translation:

Gijs Tuinman, who has been State Secretary for Defense in the Netherlands since 2024, does not appear to have offered any further details about what the jailbreaking process might entail. What, if any, cyber vulnerabilities this might indicate is also unclear. It is possible that he may have been speaking more notionally or figuratively about action that could be taken in the future, if necessary...

The ALIS/ODIN network is designed to handle much more than just software updates and logistical data. It is also the port used to upload mission data packages containing highly sensitive planning information, including details about enemy air defenses and other intelligence, onto F-35s before missions and to download intelligence and other data after a sortie. To date, Israel is the only country known to have successfully negotiated a deal giving it the right to install domestically-developed software onto its F-35Is, as well as otherwise operate its jets outside of the ALIS/ODIN network.

The comments "underscore larger issues surrounding the F-35 program, especially for foreign operators," the article points out. But at the same time F-35's have a sophisticated mission-planning data package. "So while jailbreaking F-35's onboard computers, as well as other aspects of the ALIS/ODIN network, may technically be feasible, there are immediate questions about the ability to independently recreate the critical mission planning and other support it provides. This is also just one aspect of what is necessary to keep the jets flying, let alone operationally relevant."

"TWZ previously explored many of these same issues in detail last year, amid a flurry of reports about the possibility that F-35s have some type of discreet 'kill switch' built in that U.S. authorities could use to remotely disable the jets. Rumors of this capability are not new and remain completely unsubstantiated."


At that time, we stressed that a 'kill switch' would not even be necessary to hobble F-35s in foreign service. At present, the jets are heavily dependent on U.S.-centric maintenance and logistics chains that are subject to American export controls and agreements with manufacturer Lockheed Martin. Just reliably sourcing spare parts has been a huge challenge for the U.S. military itself... F-35s would be quickly grounded without this sustainment support. [A cutoff in spare parts and support"would leave jailbroken jets quickly bricked on the ground," the article notes later.] Altogether, any kind of jailbreaking of the F-35's systems would come with a serious risk of legal action by Lockheed Martin and additional friction with the U.S. government.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Koreantoast for sharing the article.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham v Arsenal: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielIt was quite the finish at the City Ground:“Vitor Pereira’s just been sacked...” chortles Dave Estherby. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea 2-1 Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live reaction
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca here5 min: Lauren James progresses with the ball before slipping in Thompson. Thompson plays it on to Johanna Rytting Kaneryd but she can’t get a shot away.4 min: Chelsea are dominating possession in the opening stages. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest 0-1 Liverpool: Premier League – live reaction
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnEric Peterson gets in touch: “I wouldn’t mind Wayne Rooney pulling on an old Everton kit and getting on some podcast to remind Arne Slot, “Easy there, sport. You say that the only thing you and Jurgen Klopp have in common is that you both won the league. That’s not true. You both won the league with Jurgen’s team. Whether you can build a champion of your own is a different question.”Arne Slot just spoke to Sky, starting with Dominik Szoboszlai at full-back: “He needs to be because that’s what we need. We have our issues, especially in defence. Missing our 2 fullbacks, but Dominic has done that job really well. Last week, Curtis Jones, did his job really well. So that’s the good thing about midfielders, they are usually able to play in more positions than only in the midfields. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightOn the red carpet, Glenn Close is telling Dazed magazine that the line “I’m not going to be ignored, Dan” from her role in Fatal Attraction is still stuck in her head. Close, who is presenting an award later, definitely isn’t being overlooked in this beautiful black coat with shimmering silver embroidery detailing. The 78-year-old has hot-footed it from the Erdem show at London fashion week, where she sat front row next to Helen Mirren.We haven’t seen Stormzy on a red carpet in a little while. His last big appearance was at the 2025 Met Gala, where he wore an unbuttoned white dress shirt over a vest from Haider Ackermann’s debut collection for Tom Ford. Today, the rapper has gone for a traditional tuxedo and accessorised it with a little red rose brooch in place of a corsage. The look is smart, chic and shows why a tux is an all-time classic. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final: USA beat Canada in overtime to end 46-year wait for gold – live reaction
Team USA are the men’s Olympic champions for the first time since 1980 after Jack Hughes scored a dramatic winnerEmail Beau or drop him a line on BlueSkyMedal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingAway we go …What else has happened at the Games today? And what were some of the highlights of the past two weeks and change? Check our multisport coverage: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lib Dems call on home secretary to delay new dual national border rules
Letter to Shabana Mahmood describes controls that could block British dual citizens’ entry to UK as ‘unacceptable’The Liberal Democrats have called on the home secretary to “move at speed” to delay the rollout of new border controls that could result in British dual nationals being blocked from entering the country.A letter sent by the party to Shabana Mahmood echoes one sent by the former Conservative cabinet minister David Davis on Friday asking for a grace period to be implemented urgently after one of his constituents told how she could no longer visit her dying mother in a care home in Yorkshire. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Trump says Netflix will ‘pay the consequences’ if it doesn’t fire Susan Rice
Donald Trump threatened that there would be "consequences" for Netflix if it didn't fire board member Susan Rice. Rice served in both the Obama and Biden administrations, and recently appeared on Preet Bharara's podcast, where she said corporations that "take a knee to Trump" are going to be "caught with more than their pants down. [&#8230;]

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"We'll Be Monitoring This Case": US State Dept Condemns Far-Left Activists Killing Of French Conservative
"We'll Be Monitoring This Case": US State Dept Condemns Far-Left Activists Killing Of French Conservative

Authored by Thomas Brooke via Remix News,

The U.S. government has weighed in on the killing of French conservative student Quentin Deranque by far-left militant activists, warning that “violent radical leftism is on the rise,” and demanding that those responsible be brought to justice.



In a statement posted on X, the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Counterterrorism said, “Reports, corroborated by the French Minister of the Interior, that Quentin Deranque was killed by left-wing militants, should concern us all. Violent radical leftism is on the rise, and its role in Quentin Deranque’s death demonstrates the threat it poses to public safety. We will continue to monitor the situation and expect to see the perpetrators of violence brought to justice.”

Under Secretary of State Sarah B. Rogers also addressed the case, warning about the consequences of pandering to political extremism.


Democracy rests on a basic bargain: you get to bring any viewpoint to the public square, and nobody gets to kill you for it.
This is why we treat political violence — terrorism — so harshly. Once you decide to kill people for their opinions instead of persuade them, you’ve… https://t.co/Ue6XWFWAFC
— Under Secretary of State Sarah B. Rogers (@UnderSecPD) February 20, 2026
“Democracy rests on a basic bargain: you get to bring any viewpoint to the public square, and nobody gets to kill you for it,” she wrote.

“This is why we treat political violence — terrorism — so harshly. Once you decide to kill people for their opinions instead of persuading them, you’ve opted out of civilization. We will continue to watch this case,” she added.

Deranque, 23, was fatally beaten in Lyon following clashes linked to a far-left demonstration.

French prosecutors have confirmed that 11 individuals have been arrested in connection with the attack.

Those detained include two parliamentary staff members affiliated with the hard-left La France Insoumise (LFI) party led by Jean-Luc Mélenchon, and a former intern of LFI MP Raphaël Arnault.

One of the parliamentary assistants, Jacques-Élie Favrot, has now been indicted for intentional murder, serious violence, and criminal association, and his role and the roles of others in the far-left party La France Insoumise are leading to calls for a political “firewall,” usually reserved for the right, to be applied to the left in France.

News of the killing has reverberated across Europe, sparking protests, as well as a diplomatic spat between Paris and Rome.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni publicly expressed solidarity following Deranque’s death, warning that “polarizing ideologies” and a climate of hatred were contributing to growing militancy across the continent.

Her remarks prompted a sharp response from French President Emmanuel Macron, who rebuked foreign leaders for commenting on French domestic affairs.

Macron said he was “always struck by the fact that nationalists, who do not want to be disturbed in their own country, are the first to comment on what happens elsewhere,” in comments that were widely interpreted as directed at Meloni.

Meloni hit back on Thursday evening in an interview with Sky TG24, lamenting the fact that Macron “did not understand” the difference between interference and expressing solidarity and concern.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 09:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Non-Woke Game Of Thrones Spinoff Explodes In Popularity
Non-Woke Game Of Thrones Spinoff Explodes In Popularity

It is true that woke content in entertainment media has been in steady decline.  Some production studios continue to fight against reality in a vain effort to force their insane ideology on the public, but compared to five or ten years ago, far left-activism in film and TV is crumbling.

The number of film productions are plummeting.  New movies and shows are becoming thinner in budget and frequency.  Hollywood is gasping for oxygen.  Many people consider this a good thing, and it is.  Hollywood deserves to die.  That said, there's almost nothing available to replace it, and this is becoming a problem. 

Storytelling is integral to the human condition; it's how we pass on ideas, principles and history.  Hollywood has devolved to the point that they no longer know how to do this.  Wokeness is all they understand and without it they are lost.



Only a few years ago it would have been a miracle to find a streaming series with a nearly all white cast set in a European-style environment featuring a straight white male hero with a heart of gold and a dream of serving as a protector of the innocent.  It would have been even more of a miracle to find a show in which good people with pure intentions are exemplified as the ideal.  And, for that show to also be a Game of Thrones spinoff would require divine intervention.

Today, it would seem that miracles are now possible.

The recent release of HBO's "A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms" set in the world of Game Of Thrones has caused a stir - The good kind of stir.  Audiences initially approached the series with extreme caution, given the incredible woke failure the original GOT series turned out to be, not to mention the insipid gayness of House Of The Dragon.  However, the complete absence of woke propaganda in the series has come as a pleasant shock to audiences and the show is exploding in popularity.



The first season is not officially ended and there is, of course, always the chance that writers will attempt to ambush the audience after luring them into a false comfort.  But this does not seem to be the case with KSK.

Our main character, Duncan the Tall (played by Irish actor and rugby player Peter Claffey) is an endearing hero in a way that we have not seen in film or TV for a very long time.  His sidekick "Egg", played by 11-year-old Dexter Sol Ansell, is one of the best child actors to grace a series since the first season of Stranger Things (another show that fell part under the low IQ weight of woke ideology).  The duo is incredible to watch and their friendship feels real. 

The underlying theme, though, is the real draw. 

Chivalry and honor codes are center stage here.  No hint of feminism.  No hint of progressive moral relativism.  No moronic preaching about racism.  It's hard to believe, but the focus of this series is the necessity and value of good men.

Fans have taken to social media to rave about the production, citing the refreshing depiction of western culture in fantasy.  It's a genre that was supported by white nerds well before it was considered "cool", and it's nice that they're being welcomed back here.   

A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms is now bring in around 13 million viewers within the first three days of the premier of each new episode.  Compare this to the majority of woke series, which receive an average of 2 million to 5 million viewers per episode, usually in a pattern of steep decline.  Streaming services like Disney or Paramount tend to refuse to release full official data on such content because it performs so badly.    

It should not be surprising that entertainment media draws a much larger crowd when it avoids political preaching, especially when the content is set in a fantastical world where modern politics would not exist.  The inability of Hollywood to accept defeat and move on with more relatable content is leading to their complete destruction.  Maybe with the success of A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms they might finally learn something.  

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 09:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card
Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card

With 2-3 feet of snow predicted to hit New York City and New Jersey, NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani has called on New York residents to volunteer as emergency snow shovelers. 

"You too can become an emergency snow shoveler. Just show up at your local sanitation garage between 8am and 1pm tomorrow with your paperwork," he said during a Saturday press conference before the city's first blizzard warning in nine years. 


🚨 NEW: Zohran Mamdani Calls on New Yorkers to Shovel Snow During Tomorrow’s Blizzard
“You too can become an emergency snow shoveler. Just show up at your local sanitation garage between 8am and 1pm tomorrow with your paperwork.” pic.twitter.com/ZifhOhPbGt
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) February 21, 2026

Except, the Mamdani administration is actively committing a hate crime - by requiring volunteers bring 'Two small photos, two original forms of ID, plus copies, and a Social Security card' - the thing Democrats say is "Jim Crow 2.0" when it comes to voting in elections. 



The oppressive nature of Mamdani's hate crime against aspiring-yet-disenfranchised New York City snow shovelers did not go unnoticed. 


Oh, this is beautiful! If you want to volunteer to shovel snow in NYC, you have to 3 forms of ID!!
You. Cannot. Make. This. Shit.Up! 🤣 https://t.co/5qizGdIMlx
— Buzz Patterson (@BuzzPatterson) February 21, 2026

The best part is that this requires two forms of ID and a social security card https://t.co/Dvwl79Z8PY
— Ian Miller (@ianmSC) February 21, 2026

Also funny, when the snow melted last week it revealed that the sidewalk near Brooklyn's Sunset Park was covered in shit-cicles from all the dog poo that owners couldn't be bothered to pick up themselves. 

Why can't leftists keep their cities clean?

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 10:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Shotgun-Wielding Man Killed By Law Enforcement After Breaching Mar-a-Lago's Security Perimeter
Shotgun-Wielding Man Killed By Law Enforcement After Breaching Mar-a-Lago's Security Perimeter

U.S. Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi reported on X that a young male was shot and killed after breaching the security perimeter at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, the private resort owned by President Donald Trump.

Guglielmi said the incident unfolded around 1:30 a.m. ET, when the man, in his early 20s, was shot by Secret Service agents following an unauthorized entry into the secure perimeter at Mar-a-Lago.

"The individual was observed by the north gate of the Mar-a-Lago property carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can," the spokesman said.



Guglielmi continued:


U.S. Secret Service agents and a PBSO deputy confronted the individual, and shots were fired by law enforcement during the encounter. No U.S. Secret Service or PBSO personnel were injured. No Secret Service protectees were present at the location at the time of the incident.


He said the individual, whose identity is being withheld pending notification of next of kin, was pronounced dead at the scene.


An armed man was shot & killed by U.S. Secret Service agents & @PBCountySheriff after unlawfully entering the secure perimeter at Mar-a-Lago early this morning. A press briefing with additional details will be held at 9:00 a.m with @FBI and Palm Beach County. pic.twitter.com/jAXhdb1xEL
— Anthony Guglielmi (@AJGuglielmi) February 22, 2026
Earlier, Palm Beach County Sheriff Rick Bradshaw told reporters at a press conference that the young man was "ordered to drop the two pieces of equipment he had with him. At that time, he put down the gas can and raised the shotgun to a shooting position."

Bradshaw said two agents and the deputy "fired their weapons to neutralize the threat."


Sheriff Bradshaw provides details after a man who was carrying a gascan and a shotgun was shot and killed at Mar-a-Lago. pic.twitter.com/lw4kGVLNHb
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) February 22, 2026
He noted that the suspect was from North Carolina and had been reported missing by his family a few days earlier. A preliminary investigation shows he may have acquired a shotgun during his travels, as officers found the box for the gun in his vehicle.

Bradshaw said investigators are compiling a psychological profile of the deceased individual and investigating the motive. When asked whether the individual was known to law enforcement, Bradshaw replied, "Not right now."

The incident was a few miles from his West Palm Beach golf club, where unhinged leftist Ryan Routh attempted to assassinate Trump during the 2024 election. Routh was recently sentenced to life behind bars.

*Developing... 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 10:15

Mail Online
Open 
Runner listening to music on his headphones died after being hit on level crossing by a train, inquest hears
Sam Dudley, 29, was out jogging in the small town of Formby, Merseyside, on the morning of August 24 last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman, 97, was found dead on the floor of her home after being told she would have to wait ten days for an ambulance for a suspected hip break, coroner hears
Babette Burge was found on the floor of her home in Newport, Isle of Wight, by a carer on October 19, 2025.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Hudson stuns in an elegant red satin gown while Jessie Buckley catches the eye in electric blue as they join Emma Stone and Maura Higgins on the star-studded red carpet at the BAFTAs 2026
The stars were out in force for the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 held at The Royal Festival Hall in London on Sunday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham v Arsenal: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielSky reckon Spurs are going 4-1-2-3, with Sarr on the wing; that sounds odd, but then so does Palhinha at centre-back. Otherwise, Dominic Solanke, who had some kind of throat situation, is left out in favour of Randal Kolo Muani, who Tudor had at Juve, and who’s managed three goals in 27 appearances so far this season, all of them in Europe.Back to Tudor’s first Tottenham team, loads of players are missing, injured – Destiny Udogie, Kevin Danso, Lucas Bergvall, Ben Davies, Rodrigo Bentancur, Mohammed Kudus, James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski and Pedro Porro – in that context, Thomas Frank can consider himself extremely unlucky. Even with everyone available, it’s a poor side, but without all those mentioned, how is he supposed to do anything? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightWe haven’t seen Stormzy on a red carpet in a little while. His last big appearance was at the 2025 Met Gala, where he wore an unbuttoned white dress shirt over a vest from Haider Ackermann’s debut collection for Tom Ford. Today, the rapper has gone for a traditional tuxedo and accessorised it with a little red rose brooch in place of a corsage. The look is smart, chic and shows why a tux is an all-time classic.Kerry Washington, who is presenting an award later, has chosen a trailing gown from Prada for the occasion. The navy dress features some gorgeous floral applique detailing around the bustier. We wouldn’t like to be tackling any steps with a train that long, especially in front of an audience but, then again, we are not Hollywood stars. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Secret Service shot and killed armed man who breached Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence
Agents confronted white male, who has not been identified, carrying a shotgun and a gasoline can, authorities sayThe US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the ocean resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump.Additional reporting by the Associated Press Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Prince William in tribute to medic found dead at barracks
The Prince of Wales has told of his “immense sadness” after 25-year-old Lucy Wilde's death.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Face/Off 2’ Director Adam Wingard is Now/Gone
Does a new director for the 'Face/Off' sequel mean Wingard and co-writer Simon Barrett's idea for it is also DOA?

The Hill
Open 
Man fatally shot by law enforcement at Trump's Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach
A man was shot and killed by law enforcement personnel at President Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., early Sunday morning. Secret Service chief of communications Anthony Guglielmi said the man, in early 20s, was killed after "unlawfully entering the secure perimeter" at the resort around 1:30 a.m. local time Sunday. Two Secret Service...

The Hill
Open 
How the free market can free NASA from the Space Launch System
The two biggest commercial space companies are stepping up. 

The Hill
Open 
Will I be taxed on my canceled student loan debt?
For many who had the good fortune of having their loans canceled in 2025, they may be wondering what that means for their tax return.

The Hill
Open 
Bessent dodges questions about tariff refunds
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday dodged questions about refunds after the Supreme Court struck a vast majority of President Trump’s tariffs down. “I do want to start with the big question, will you refund the roughly $134 billion in revenue taken by these emergency tariffs?” CNN’s Dana Bash asked Bessent on “State of the...

CNET News
Open 
I 3D Printed Dyson Vacuum Tools and Other Cool Home Accessories
I've been using 3D printing to make useful tools and accessories around my home for years, including for my Dyson vacuums. Here's how.

CNET News
Open 
'Bridgerton' Season 4, Part 2: Release Date and Time on Netflix
The wait for new episodes is almost over.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
William in tribute to Tik Tok medic found dead at barracks
The Prince of Wales has told of his “immense sadness” after 25-year-old Lucy Wilde's death.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Hudson stuns in an elegant red satin gown while Emma Stone flashes sideboob in a daring black dress as they join Rose Byrne and Maura Higgins on the star-studded red carpet at the BAFTAs 2026
The stars were out in force for the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 held at The Royal Festival Hall in London on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Armed man is shot and killed by Secret Service after entering Mar-a-Lago in middle of the night
Austin Tucker Martin, 21, was holding a shotgun and a fuel can as he tried to enter Trump's Palm Beach residence, the Secret Service said.

Sky News Home
Open 
Three dead and four others injured in crash
Three people have died and four others were injured in a three-car crash in Co Tyrone.

BBC UK News
Open 
River diesel spill 'clearing' but water still not safe - watchdog
Volunteers have handed out about 40,000 bottles of water since the spillage, which a local petrol station blamed on an attempted fuel theft.

Telegraph
Open 
Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on brink of T20 World Cup semi-finals
Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on brink of T20 World Cup semi-finals

Sky News Home
Open 
Three dead and four others injured in crash
Three people have died and four others have been injured in a three-car crash in Co Tyrone.

BBC UK News
Open 
William in tribute to medic found dead at barracks
The Prince of Wales has told of his “immense sadness” after 25-year-old Lucy Wilde's death.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
A Ukrainian soldier’s story: Fading hope on the front line after four years of fighting
Former DW correspondent Kostiantyn Honcharov joined the Ukrainian army in 2022. He describes the grim front-line situation after four years of fighting.

Mail Online
Open 
How to do a cheap weekend ski trip - what I've learnt from 20 years of escaping to the mountains
By adopting the tricks of the committed frugal skier's trade, you can get the cost down to levels that compare favourably with a city break.

Mail Online
Open 
Lily James is the epitome of chic in a figure-hugging striped dress as she joins Keira Knightley, Bel Powley and Dame Helen Mirren at star-studded Erdem show amid LFW
The Cinderella actress, 36, was the epitome of chic in a striped wrap dress which hugged her gorgeous figure and teased a glimpse of her long legs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Huckabee’s Israel land remarks condemned as ‘dangerous and inflammatory’
Arab and Islamic governments issue joint statement denouncing comments made on Tucker Carlson podcastGovernments from across the Islamic world have condemned remarks by the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, suggesting it would “be fine” for Israel to claim a broad swath of the Middle East.Huckabee, an evangelical Christian pastor and former Arkansas governor, has long been an outspoken supporter of Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories. In an interview with the conservative US commentator Tucker Carlson published on Friday, the ambassador pointed to verses in the Bible that some Jews and evangelical Christians interpret as signifying the divine right of Jews to claim the land from the Nile to the Euphrates. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham v Arsenal: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielBack to Tudor’s first Tottenham team, loads of players are missing, injured – Destiny Udogie, Kevin Danso, Lucas Bergvall, Ben Davies, Rodrigo Bentancur, Mohammed Kudus, James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski and Pedro Porro – in that context, Thomas Frank can consider himself extremely unlucky. Even with everyone available, it’s a poor side, but without all those mentioned, how is he supposed to do anything?And yet it’s also fair to say that his way of playing did not look like one that could be upscaled for a team wanting to dominate, and when you lose the crowd as he did, justifiably so, there’s no coming back. I’ve not a clue who Spurs go to next, though: where on earth do you find a manager players will join for, who plays attractive football that enabled them to compete against better funded, more enticing rivals? Mauricio Pochettino is the only person to do it post-David Pleat in 1986-87, so perhaps they’ll get him after the World Cup, but does he have the same in him again, the English game having progressed without him and Harry Kane now in Munich? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Baftas 2026: the red carpet, the ceremony, the winners – follow live!
Eyes and teeth darlings, it’s the biggest night of the year in British cinema – here’s a minute-by-minute update of all the gowns, gossip and glitz of the nightKerry Washington, who is presenting an award later, has chosen a trailing gown from Prada for the occasion. The navy dress features some gorgeous floral applique detailing around the bustier. We wouldn’t like to be tackling any steps with a train that long, especially in front of an audience but, then again, we are not Hollywood stars.A little light reading Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Three dead and four others injured in crash
Three people have died and four others have been injured in a car crash in Co Tyrone.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Trump curious why Iran has not 'capitulated', US envoy Witkoff says
US envoy Steve Witkoff says the president is puzzled why Iran has not yet compromised in the face of a major American military build-up nearby.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Tributes paid to 'amazing' men aged 19 and 20 who died on Yr Wyddfa
They have been named locally as Jayden Long, 19, and Eddie Hill, 20, from Norfolk.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
How sister's success paved way for Atkin's bronze
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin wins bronze in the women's halfpipe to secure Great Britain's fifth medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics, equalling the team's record-best haul.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Can you name every GB medal winner at Milan-Cortina?
Test your knowledge - how well do you remember Great Britain's medal-winning moments at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham v Arsenal: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielI’ll level with you: it’s taken me the last 15 minutes to try and work out what on earth Igor Tudor is doing. I’m guessing it’s Palhinha in the middle of a back three, because managers trying to force a 3-4-2-1 on players unsuited to it has such a strong recent history of Premier-League success. I can’t say I’m entirely sure how you can win a football match with two attackers on the pitch but, on the plus side, he and his XI will have to go some to deliver a performance as pointless and as cowardly as Thomas Frank’s lot did when these sides convened at Arsenal earlier in the season. I’m not sure I’ve seen a side asked to do less to record a 4-1 derby win.Tottenham Hotspur (a possible 3-4-2-1 that could ba anything): Vicario; Dragusin, Palhinha, Van de Ven; Gray, Bissouma, Sarr, Spence; Gallagher, Xavi; Kolo Muani. Subs: Austin, Richarlison, Tel, Solanke, Souza, Olusesi, Williams-Barnett, Rowswell, Wilson. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final: Canada v USA goes to overtime – live
Canada captain Sidney Crosby ruled out with injuryOld rivals face off with gold medal on lineEmail Beau or drop him a line on BlueSkyMedal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingAway we go …What else has happened at the Games today? And what were some of the highlights of the past two weeks and change? Check our multisport coverage: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, Secret Service says
Identity of man who was ‘carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can’ has not been releasedThe US Secret Service shot and killed an armed intruder who breached the perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach, early on Sunday.Although the US president often spends weekends at the ocean resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump.Additional reporting by the Associated Press Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Arab nations condemn US ambassador's Israel remarks
Multiple Arab nations have condemned the US ambassador to Israel after he said "it would be fine" if Tel Aviv took control of almost all of the Middle East.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Secret Service shoots dead man at Trump's Mar-a-Lago
Authorities said the man breached a secure perimeter around the president's private residence and was carrying a shotgun and a fuel can.

Mail Online
Open 
Alicia Vikander flashes her abs in a floral embroidered gown as she joins Minnie Driver, Rose Byrne and Maura Higgins on the star-studded red carpet at the BAFTAs 2026
The stars were out in force for the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 held at The Royal Festival Hall in London on Sunday.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price marries Lee Andrews AGAIN in 'legal' ceremony ahead of another wedding in the UK
The former glamour model shocked the showbiz world when she announced that she was engaged last month, just days after her breakup from reality star JJ Slater , 32.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round tie goes to extra-time – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca here5 min: Lauren James progresses with the ball before slipping in Thompson. Thompson plays it on to Johanna Rytting Kaneryd but she can’t get a shot away.4 min: Chelsea are dominating possession in the opening stages. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Former PM Gordon Brown urges police probe into whether Andrew used RAF bases to meet Epstein
Reports say the former prime minister has demanded a full investigation into Andrew's role as UK trade envoy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tottenham v Arsenal: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 4.30pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DanielThere’s a therapeutic idea that we create ourselves afresh every day, in full control of the person we are – or, to answer the Stone Roses’ question, we’re not etched in stone but sketched in the sand. It’s a liberating, comforting, affirming – and daunting – reality.A liberating, comforting, affirming, daunting reality and not one easily inhabited, because changing ourselves is difficult – consider Mikel Arteta, to pick a name at random. His excellent work – albeit with serious boardroom backing – turned Arsenal from a rabble into title challengers but in each of the last three seasons, his desperate, flapping intensity and scalding sense of injustice surely transmitted to team and crowd, wins bringing respite more than joy and anything else disaster multiplied by travesty. We can’t say it’s been the difference; we can say it isn’t helpful. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will Jacks stars for England as Sri Lanka flail with bat in T20 World Cup
Super 8s: England, 146-9, beat Sri Lanka, 95, by 51 runsHarry Brook hails ‘awesome performance’ in Super 8 win Over the first hour of this match the grass banks on either side of the wicket filled both in numbers and in belief. Dot balls set off boisterous celebrations, wickets provoked delirium. An increasingly joyous crowd whooped as England’s batters trooped dolefully to and from the middle. Mexican waves rippled around a stadium already, and prematurely as it turned out, in full celebration.England were restricted to just 146 for nine, an innings that revealed few demons in the pitch – for all that it had spent much of the previous few days sweating under covers – and several in their heads. Again they faltered against spin. Jos Buttler remains in dismal form. Tom Banton was run out seeking a make-believe single, victim of scrambled decision-making. Jacob Bethell, rather than giving himself a few moments to get the measure of Maheesh Theekshana, attacked the spinner’s first ball of the game and sent a leading edge to short third. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump says sending 'great hospital boat' to Greenland
The US president said a vessel was "on the way" to Greenland, with the move coming amid a rift between the US and Europe over control of the island. Denmark hit back, saying no medical help is needed.

Mail Online
Open 
Dire warning for East Coast as bomb cyclone blizzard brings New York's airports to their knees with 26 INCHES of snow coming: 'This will shut down cities. It will rewrite history'
Nearly 54 million Americans are bracing for impact from an intense blizzard that is set to blanket major cities in up to two feet of snow.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mother of Nottingham attacks victim calls for ‘whole truth’ to emerge at inquiry
Emma Webber, mother of Barnaby Webber, expects ‘shocking’ failures into care of triple killer Valdo Calacone to emerge at inquiry starting on MondayThe mother of a student who was killed in the 2023 Nottingham attacks has said she will “fight to the bitter end” to get to the truth of how Valdo Calocane was free to attack, before the beginning of a public inquiry into the incident.Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, 19-year-old students, and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates were fatally stabbed by Calocane on 13 June 2023 in a frenzied attack. Early the next day, Calocane drove a van into pedestrians Wayne Birkett, Sharon Miller and Marcin Gawronski, leaving all three with severe and life-changing injuries. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
How to speak 'millennial': Hilarious 2002 slang glossary reveals the most popular early-noughties lingo - so, do you know what they mean?
New slang words and phrases seem to pop up on an almost daily basis. But it's time to wind the clock back, as language learning app Preply has unearthed a hilarious 2002 glossary of slang.

Mail Online
Open 
Experts name four 'amber flags' that could slowly erode your relationship... and make love turn toxic
We've spent years learning about relationship 'red flags' - but experts have warned that their lesser known 'amber flag' cousins can prove to be just as dangerous.

Mail Online
Open 
Our writer tries a real-life Who Do You Think You Are? holiday with her grandma after a DNA test uncovered a family mystery
Last year, Erin Deborah Waks took a swab test that would shed light on her family's lost heritage - and then took her grandmother on the journey of a lifetime to discover their story.

Mail Online
Open 
The TV episode with torture scene so 'insane and disturbing' it was NEVER broadcast - as viewers who tracked it down on DVD admit 'I regret watching it'
When it comes to their ability to make audiences recoil, not all horror films and TV episodes are created equally, but one example from 2006 was so 'insane and disturbing' that it was actually BANNED.

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William pays tribute to the 'warmth and compassion' of British Army medic TikTok star, 25, who died suddenly
Corporal Lucy Wilde had racked up thousands of followers on TikTok by filming herself working out in her base's gym and giving advice on health and fitness.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price marries Lee Andrews AGAIN in 'legal' ceremony ahead of another wedding in the UK
The former glamour model shocked the showbiz world when she announced that she was engaged last, just days after her breakup from reality star JJ Slater , 32.

Mail Online
Open 
Multiple dead after truck EXPLODES and highway is swallowed by thunderous gas cloud in Chile
Devastating video showed the moments after a gas tanker overturned and erupted into massive flames. The highway is seen being completely engulfed by a gas cloud in just 30 seconds.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA stars arrive on red carpet as Hamnet, Sinners and One Battle After Another lead race for awards: Live updates
LIVE UPDATES: Follow the latest from the BAFTA Film Awards at Royal Festival Hall with all the action and gossip from the red carpet and inside the star-studded ceremony.

TechRadar News
Open 
The iPhone Fold is again rumored to be launching alongside the iPhone 18 Pro – but Apple's iPhone schedule is set to be different this year

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, February 23 (game #988)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Monday, February 23 (game #1491)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, February 23 (game #722)

TechRadar News
Open 
Did someone wash their underwear in your hotel coffee machine? Bring a portable espresso maker, and you won't have to worry

TechRadar News
Open 
How a mature API management strategy can help eliminate agentic blind spots

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tariffs costs and refunds take the spotlight as Home Depot, TJX and other retailers report earnings this week
The Supreme Court struck down most of the Trump administration’s tariffs, but uncertainty remains for store chains.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Ukraine's Fast-Tracked EU Membership Would De Facto Advance EU Federalist Goals
Ukraine's Fast-Tracked EU Membership Would De Facto Advance EU Federalist Goals

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

The approval of “reverse enlargement” to Ukraine and other candidate states would institutionalize a three-tiered Europe between the “E6”, Central Europe, and the new partial members from Eastern Europe and the Balkans for facilitating Germany’s divide-and-rule federalist plans.



Politico reported on the EU’s plan to grant Ukraine partial membership by next year at the earliest as part of a comprehensive solution to that country’s conflict. An unnamed official described this as “reverse enlargement” and explained that “It would be a sort of recalibration of the process — you join and then you get phased in rights and obligations.”

This modus operandi would enable all the other candidates to join too and thus complete the bloc’s expansion in Eastern Europe and the Balkans.

If Orban isn’t ‘democratically deposed’ during next month’s parliamentary elections, then the EU plans to appeal to Trump to pressure him into agreeing to this, absent which they’ll remove Hungary’s voting rights.

Left unsaid is the assessment from early November when this general idea was first reported about how “Poland Might Impede The EU’s Push To Speedily Grant Ukraine Membership” if this compels it to open its agricultural market to another deluge of low-cost and low-quality Ukrainian exports.

Per the preceding hyperlinked analysis, “neither half of its ruling duopoly wants to be blamed for the domestic consequences of Ukraine joining the EU, especially not ahead of fall 2027’s next parliamentary elections. Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s ruling liberal-globalist coalition is already facing an uphill battle and would torpedo any hope of keeping control if they supported this, while President Karol Nawrocki from the conservative-nationalist opposition would betray his base if he went along with them.”

It’s therefore possible that the EU’s “reverse enlargement” to Ukraine doesn’t include unlimited tariff-free access of its agricultural products either to the bloc as a whole or only to Poland in order to secure Warsaw’s approval. In any case, Ukraine’s fast-tracked EU membership would de facto advance EU federalist goals by institutionalizing Germany’s “two-speed Europe” proposal, thus leading to three tiers of membership actually between the “E6”, other full members, and the new partial members.

The “E6” refers to the bloc’s six largest economies – Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Poland – who’d collectively sit atop this institutionalized hierarchy that would unofficially be led by the German-Franco duopoly (or divided into factions by them if their rivalry becomes unmanageable).

Regardless of Poland’s participation or lack thereof within the “E6”, which the abovementioned hyperlinked analysis argues can’t be taken for granted, the EU would thus be formally divided.

The “E6” would push through reforms for facilitating federalization even if that end goal isn’t openly declared to avoid spooking some countries and their societies. The new partial members would then be pressured to conform with these new policies to obtain full membership, while the remaining full members from the second tier would be pressured by the first and third one into following suit. There’s a distinct geopolitical division between these tiers that deserves mention before concluding the analysis.

The “E6” represents Western Europe (with the exception of Poland), the new partial members would represent Eastern Europe and the Balkans, while the rest represent Central Europe. The EU federalists therefore want to pit the first three against the Central European members who oppose federalism in order to then impose that system upon them as a fait accompli. This observation further contextualizes the perceived urgency over approving “reverse enlargement” to Ukraine and the other candidates.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 07:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Preparation For Martial Law? Europe To Recruit Migrants For "National Defense"
Preparation For Martial Law? Europe To Recruit Migrants For "National Defense"

Europe's lack of military readiness has become painfully obvious in recent years, due largely to the war in Ukraine as well as the Trump Administration's efforts to force NATO members to fulfill their basic obligations. 

Specifically, Russia's successful use of attrition tactics against NATO supported forces in Ukraine has exposed a significant weakness in western military doctrine.

New and cheap technologies (including drone technologies) are making large scale maneuver warfare obsolete.  The era of super-weapons dominating the battlefield with minimal manpower is over.  As was the case in WWI and WWII, troop strength and boots on the ground are once again the key to victory.  

A Washington DC-based defense think-tank, Center For A New American Century (CNAS), has come to the same realization and suggests a novel (as well as predictable) solution:  Exploit mass immigration from Ukraine and third world countries to the west as a resource to fill the persistent void in military recruitment numbers.  

Writing for Foreign Policy, the CNAS notes:


"Closing manpower gaps may prove harder than writing bigger checks. The continent’s demographic crisis compounds the problem: Births in the European Union fell below 4 million in 2022 for the first time since 1960, shrinking the pool of potential recruits as geopolitical threats—chief among them, Russian aggression—demand larger, more capable forces..."


The argument, of course, presupposes that Russia has any intention of invading greater Europe.  There is no evidence that this is Vladimir Putin's goal.  However, the Russian bogeyman does make for a useful excuse to justify the development of a unified EU military force.  

The threat of war can also be exploited by European officials as a way to justify open borders and mass immigration from the third world.  Immigration from Ukraine makes some sense - It is a legitimate war torn country and Ukrainians are close to the rest of Europeans in terms of cultural attitude.  But, EU elites need a rationale for flooding the region with third worlders and war with Russia seems to be their ticket.  The CNAS uses the "demographic collapse" claim as a catalyst.


"Ukraine’s grinding war of attrition has laid bare an uncomfortable truth: Emerging capabilities in the form of high-tech weaponry cannot substitute for boots on the ground. Soldiers, sailors, marines, coast guardsmen, and airmen are the backbone of national defense. Yet the European Commission estimates a 43 million reduction in the bloc’s working-age population by 2070..."

"...Meanwhile, Europe continues to grapple with significant migration flows from Africa, the Middle East, and other regions. These arrivals, often young, male, and seeking better opportunities, represent exactly the demographic cohort European militaries desperately need. Many migrants arrive with valuable skills: language abilities, cultural knowledge of strategic regions, technical expertise, and, most importantly, motivation to prove themselves and build new lives."


It should be noted that these kind of articles from think-tanks are not so much "suggestions" for future policy initiatives.  Rather, they are propaganda pieces designed to promote policies that governments already intend to implement in the near future.



A number of European countries have already begun the groundwork for recruiting migrants for national defense. 

Ireland just recently announced that their are reviewing a possible program to give fast-track citizenship to immigrants who volunteer to join the military.  Irish leaders assert that this is necessary to boost defense capabilities, but they also argue that it is need to increase Ireland's "diversity."    

Several other European governments are looking at similar programs, including Germany, France and Spain. 

The real question is, would third world migrants actually fight on the front lines for Europe?  Furthermore, is this really the true agenda behind mass immigration?  To boost western demographics to defend against invasion, or to support the economy?

It is clear that third worlders are a net negative on the economic health of the countries they migrate to.  The majority represent a drain on social welfare systems.  Europe is on a downward spiral in terms of economic health and crime over the past decade.  In fact, the more European leaders embrace mass immigration, the more the economy declines and the worse their native demographic crisis becomes.  

It makes more sense if one considers the possibility that mass immigration and military recruitment are designed to keep European citizens in line, not Russia or Putin.  As we mentioned in our recent article on Canada's new program to recruit military trained foreign nationals for their own armed forces, left-wing governments are not really worried about invasion from Russia or China, they are worried about opposition from their own conservative and nationalist populations. 

It is much easier to control native Europeans using immigrant mercenaries with no loyalty to the culture.  The CNAS specifically mentions the use of military service as a way to sooth the concerns of "xenophobic" conservatives.


"The political center regarding migration has collapsed in the face of far-right xenophobic approaches to the migration file, such that few policy initiatives other than hardening land and maritime borders and cutting deals to send migrants away see the light of day..."

"The promise of citizenship provides powerful motivation, and military service demonstrates commitment to the nation in the most tangible way possible. The United States demonstrates that national identity is forged through shared sacrifice, not shared ancestry..."


In other words, sell Europeans on the idea that they have no shared ancestry and that migrants going to war for them is proof enough that they are loyal and should be citizens.  Of course, it's unlikely that migrants will be convinced to risk their lives for Europeans.  They might, however, be easily convinced to help oppress Europeans in exchange for citizenship and the spoils of subjugation.  

It's a threat western citizens need to seriously consider before supporting any government policy for the recruitment of foreign nationals.  They might just be supporting the very recruits that will eventually be used to enslave them.  

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 07:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Potentially Worst Blizzard In Decade" Set To Hammer Mid-Atlantic And Northeast
"Potentially Worst Blizzard In Decade" Set To Hammer Mid-Atlantic And Northeast

A potentially historic winter storm is set to slam the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast beginning Sunday, bringing heavy snow, damaging winds, and coastal flooding.

As of Sunday morning, 35 million people are under Blizzard Warning alerts from the Mid-Atlantic through New England, according to a post on X from the National Weather Service Prediction Center.



Meteorologists are already labeling the nor'easter as potentially historic and warn it could be the most intense blizzard to hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast in a decade.


⚠️We are continuing to track what is looking to be a historic winter storm for the Northeastern US. Heavy Rates, high gusts, and better consensus within models. This is not a storm to underestimate for SUN PM - MON!
We will be doing a client live for the area at 7PM-ET! If you… pic.twitter.com/81AWSqqoAO
— BAM Weather (@bam_weather) February 21, 2026

Potentially the worst blizzard in a decade is forecast to strike the northeast on Sunday into Monday. A historic snowstorm is forecast to bury Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston with potentially up to two feet of snow. Powerful 60-70 MPH wind gusts could cause widespread… pic.twitter.com/wlfWDKJ7mF
— Dylan Federico (@DylanFedericoWX) February 21, 2026

The 21z RAP is just a few inches short of producing the biggest snowfall of ALL TIME in the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Area.
The record is 27.2" in March 2017#wxtwitter #wxX #NEPA #BlizzardOf2026 pic.twitter.com/DzqIa9MFTq
— Mark Margavage (@MeteoMark) February 21, 2026
Snowfall forecasts are already pointing to a high-impact setup along large stretches of the I-95 corridor, from the Washington, D.C., area to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston, where significant accumulations are possible.



In the Tri-State region, some forecasts suggest localized totals could reach upwards of 2 feet, likely sparking major travel disruptions from the I-95 corridor to air travel.



"DHS suspends TSA PreCheck & Global Entry over shutdown. Millions who paid for faster security now stuck in regular lines—while a historic blizzard cancels 7,000+ flights in the Northeast," Fox News reporter Lucas Tomlinson wrote on X.



Related:

Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card
The storm's setup is similar to the 2016 blizzard that blanketed Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and New York City with up to 2 feet of snow in some areas.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 08:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Fico Threatens To Cut Ukraine's Emergency Power As Russian Oil Transit Fight Escalates
Fico Threatens To Cut Ukraine's Emergency Power As Russian Oil Transit Fight Escalates

Slovakia's populist Prime Minister and pro-Trump ally Robert Fico has drawn an unexpectedly hard line in his country's ongoing energy showdown with Ukraine: restore Russian oil flows, or else a key emergency electricity lifeline for Ukraine gets pulled.

In a weekend post on X, Fico warned that unless Ukraine resumes pumping Russian crude to Slovakia by Monday, Bratislava will cut off its emergency power exports. This is an immense threat given current frigid subzero temperatures in war-ravaged Ukraine.

"If the West does not mind that the Nord Stream gas pipeline was blown up, Slovakia cannot accept Slovak-Ukrainian relations as a one-way ticket benefiting only Ukraine," he wrote, in a pointed swipe at Brussels and Washington alike.
AFP/Getty Images

Fico went on to blast Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, saying: "The Ukrainian president refuses to understand our peace-oriented approach and, because we do not support the war, he is behaving maliciously toward Slovakia."

The pipeline in question has been offline for nearly a month, as we've reported previously: Russian Oil To Slovakia Via Damaged Druzhba Pipeline Still Halted As Accusations Fly. Kiev has alleged it was initially damaged in a Russian drone strike, and the whole incident and showdown has quickly snowballed into a broader inter-EU fight. According to more background:


Transit through Druzhba has been halted since 27 January, with Hungary and Slovakia stopping diesel exports to Ukraine earlier this week until Ukraine resumes transit. Despite requests from both the Hungarian and Slovak governments, the European Commission said it will not apply pressure on Ukraine to restore transit.

Kyiv reacted sharply to the coordinated pressure from Budapest and Bratislava, accusing both governments of ‘ultimatums and blackmail’ and claiming their actions were ‘provocative’ and ‘irresponsible’.

In a statement, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry argued that Hungary and Slovakia were ‘playing into the hands of the aggressor’ and threatening regional energy security, while insisting that ongoing Russian strikes and technical damage justified the disruption of transit.


Hungary has actually stood by Fico's criticisms, with the rest of the EU supporting the Ukrainian version of events. For example, earlier this month, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto suggested Kiev was responsible for blocking electricity supplies for the operation of the pipeline.

Just one day earlier to Fico issuing his ultimatum, Hungary signaled it would block a €90 billion emergency loan package for Ukraine over the same pipeline dispute, which Slovakia in turn now says it will back.

Both countries remain heavily dependent on Russian oil and maintain comparatively warmer ties with Moscow than most of their EU counterparts - for which they've come under severe criticism by Western European nations.

Hungary's FM Szijjártó has most recently charged Ukraine with "blackmailing" Budapest by failing to restart oil shipments, and that all other delays are based on false excuses.


IF THE UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT DOES NOT RESUME OIL SUPPLIES TO SLOVAKIA ON MONDAY, ON THAT SAME DAY I WILL ASK THE RELEVANT SLOVAK COMPANIES TO STOP EMERGENCY ELECTRICITY SUPPLIES TO UKRAINE.
Since the beginning of the war, Slovakia has been helping Ukraine. Around 180,000…
— Robert Fico 🇸🇰 (@RobertFicoSVK) February 21, 2026
A major irony in all this is that Slovakia has become one of Ukraine's most critical electricity suppliers after repeated Russian strikes crippled large swaths of the country's power grid. Now, that support may hinge on whether Russian oil starts flowing again, and it all continues to highlight fractured EU policy when it comes to Russian energy dependency.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 02/22/2026 - 08:45

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sheffield Wednesday endure historic relegation from Championship after derby defeat
Sheffield Wednesday’s three-year stay in the Championship was ended in a cruel final twist of fate by Sheffield United after a 2-1 derby defeat at Bramall Lane.For their city rivals to operate the relegation trap door only added insult to injury as Wednesday’s miserable mathematical fate was confirmed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France v Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) in Lille. Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Daniel.Bad news for the mercurial 10. Although it’s hardly a downgrade as Ramos, who has found himself at first receiver this campaign, slots in at 10. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mother of Nottingham attacks victim calls for ‘whole truth’ to emerge at inquiry
Emma Webber, mother of Barnaby Webber, expects ‘shocking’ failures into care of triple killer Valdo Calacone to emerge at inquiry starting on MondayThe mother of a student who was killed in the 2023 Nottingham attacks has said she will “fight to the bitter end” to get to the truth of how Valdo Calocane was free to attack, before the beginning of a public inquiry into the incident.Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, 19-year-old students, and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates were killed by Calocane on 13 June 2023 in a frenzied attack. Early the next day, Calocane drove a van into pedestrians Wayne Birkett, Sharon Miller and Marcin Gawronski, leaving all three with severe and life-changing injuries. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Greenland says ‘no, thanks’ to Trump’s US hospital boat
Leaders of both Denmark and Arctic territory rebuff US president’s claim that islanders are ‘not being taken care of’Greenland has said it does not need medical assistance from other countries, after Donald Trump said he was sending a hospital ship to the autonomous Danish territory he wants to acquire.The US president said he would dispatch the vessel in a social media post on Saturday, claiming that Greenlanders were not getting the healthcare they needed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lamborghini pulls plug on plans to launch all-electric supercar
Company will shift focus to hybrids, citing drop-off in EV demand among sports car lovers who ‘miss the noise’The Italian supercar manufacturer Lamborghini has abandoned plans to make all-electric vehicles, and will instead focus on making plug-in hybrid cars, after a drop-off in demand for EVs among its wealthy clientele.Lamborghini unveiled its first all-electric concept car, the Lanzador, in 2023, but it is no longer planning to put it into production. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Man fatally shot by law enforcement at Trump's Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach
A man was shot and killed by law enforcement personnel at President Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., early Sunday morning. Secret Service chief of communications Anthony Guglielmi said the man, in is early 20s, was killed after "unlawfully entering the secure perimeter" at the resort around 1:30 a.m. local time Sunday. Both Secret...

The Hill
Open 
6 in 10 disapprove of Trump ahead of State of the Union: Poll
Over half of Americans disapprove of President Trump's performance in office, according to a poll released shortly before delivering his State of the Union address this week. In the Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll, conducted from Feb. 12 to 17, 60 percent of respondents said they "disapprove strongly" or "disapprove somewhat" of "the way Donald Trump...

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Armed man KILLED when breaching Mar-a-Lago
It&#8217;s being reported this morning that a man armed with a shotgun and a fuel can was killed by Secret Service agents and a Palm Beach County deputy sheriff after breaching Mar-a-Lago . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Sheriff gives update, explains what happened when armed suspect breached Mar-a-Lago
Palm Beach County Sheriff just gave an update and explained what happened after an armed 22-year-old suspect breached Mar-a-Lago. Here&#8217;s the video: This is the very definition of FAFO, and he clearly . . .

CNET News
Open 
Premier League Soccer 2026: Watch Tottenham vs. Arsenal Live
Igor Tudor takes charge of Spurs for the first time in a crucial North London derby for both teams.

Russia Today News
Open 
US Secret Service kills armed man at Trump’s estate

Mail Online
Open 
Villagers cut off from civilisation after storm destroyed coastal road demand their 'lifeline' to the outside world is restored
Families in Torcross, Devon were forced to evacuate earlier this month when 12ft waves swept in, demolishing stone walls, ripping up pavements and shattering windows two weeks ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Sir Mo Farah finally sells three-storey Surrey home that languished on the market for more than a year - after slashing the price by £1.25million
Sir Mo and wife Tania bought the property for £4 million in 2019, but hoped to make £2 million profit when they sold.

Mail Online
Open 
Celebrity homeware collections ranked from tacky to tasteful: From one TV presenter's 'cheap floral patterns' to another's 'disjointed' but 'playful' range
Wine. Clothing. Perfume. These are the money-making collections that celebrities across the UK and America quickly include in their brand - but now, homeware is also a popular addition.

Mail Online
Open 
Year of the reboot! Every TV show returning to screens in 2026 - from legendary detective series to teen sitcom and iconic fantasy thriller
Whether bringing back the same cast or reimagining the story, fans will soon see old favourites come back for a revival.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chinese new year in London and floods in France: photos of the weekend
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France v Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) in Lille. Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Daniel.In the last five games between these teams, the team that has scored the first try has won just once.Slightly warped as France have won four of those, with that aforementioned draw, but it shows that registering the first try doesn’t guarantee success. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister says children in England will get support more quickly under Send overhaul
Bridget Phillipson says government is ‘not taking away support’ as she prepares to announce changesUK politics live – latest updatesBridget Phillipson has pledged that under the government’s overhaul of the special educational needs system it will take weeks for children to get access to support, not months or years – as she prepares to announce the controversial changes.Speaking before publication of the white paper on the overhaul, the education secretary said children with special needs would be treated as “integral to the school system” rather than as a carved-out issue. She said the changes would be brought in as part of a “decade-long shift” to give schools and families time to adjust. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, Secret Service says
Identity of man who was ‘carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can’ has not been releasedThe US Secret Service announced on Sunday morning that an armed man was shot and killed after entering the secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach.Although the US president often spends weekends at the ocean resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident, as was first lady Melania Trump. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Defence secretary says he hopes to deploy British troops to Ukraine - UK politics live
European leaders said in December that Europe was ready to lead a “multinational force” in Ukraine as part of a peace agreement proposalSearches are expected to continue today at Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s previous home – Royal Lodge, in Windsor – as calls grow for a probe into the former prince’s links with Jeffrey Epstein.Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s police and crime correspondent, Vikram Dodd, about what could be next for Andrew here:If the government bring forward this bill with the support of the King then we will back it. We have to be realistic. Andrew is the eighth in line to the throne, so there’s no chance of him becoming our monarch.And so parliament really should be focused on things that are of more importance to the public, whether that’s the economy, crime, the health service, immigration. But if the bill does come before parliament, then we’ll support it. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Secret Service shoots dead man at Trump's Mar-a-Lago
US Secret Service agents shot and killed a man trying to enter President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Man, 20, stabbed to death in skate park attack as teenager, 17, still fights for life in hospital
Mason Miller, 20, was fatally stabbed during the incident at Briar Hill Skate Park in Northampton at around 3.30pm on February 18.

Mail Online
Open 
Chimps FLIRT with each other by ripping up leaves - and it's most common in randy teenagers
It's a rite of passage for awkward teenagers. But learning how to flirt is not a uniquely human trait, an expert has revealed.

Mail Online
Open 
Cristiano Ronaldo finally breaks silence on future in Saudi Arabia after £488k-per-day star scores brace following shocking strike
Cristiano Ronaldo has finally broken his silence on his dramatic Saudi strike. The 41-year-old returned to action last week for Al-Nassr and scored a brace in their 4-0 victory over Al-Hazem.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, Secret Service says
Identity of man who was ‘carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can’ has not been releasedThe US Secret Service announced on Sunday morning that an armed man was shot and killed after entering the secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach.Although the US president often spends weekends at the ocean resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Armed man is shot and killed by Secret Service after entering Mar-a-Lago in middle of the night
The man, in his early 20s, was holding a shotgun and a fuel can as he tried to enter Trump's Palm Beach residence, the Secret Service said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Homeland security to suspend TSA PreCheck and Global Entry airport security programs
Democrats accuse DHS of ‘kneecapping’ programs that help speed registered travelers through security lines The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) suspended the TSA PreCheck and Global Entry airport security programs that give approved participants a fast-track through bag check and passport control, as a partial government shutdown continued.The popular government programs at US airports accelerate security lines and make travel slicker for all. The suspension from early Sunday was destined to cause headaches for passengers – combined in the north-east with an incoming blizzard. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sheffield Wednesday endure historic relegation from Championship after derby defeat
Sheffield Wednesday’s three-year stay in the Championship was ended in a cruel final twist of fate by their city rivals Sheffield United after a 2-1 derby defeat at Bramall Lane.For their city rivals to operate the relegation trap door only added insult to injury as Wednesday’s miserable mathematical fate was confirmed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
T20 World Cup: England win Super 8s opener as Sri Lanka flail with bat
Super 8s: England, 146-9, beat Sri Lanka, 95, by 51 runsWill Jacks scores useful 21 and takes three key wicketsDuring the first hour of this match the grass banks on each side of the wicket filled both in number and belief. Dot balls set off boisterous celebrations, wickets provoked delirium. An increasingly joyous crowd whooped as England’s batters trooped dolefully to and from the square. Mexican waves rippled around a stadium already – and prematurely as it turned out – in full celebration.England were restricted to 146 for nine, an innings that revealed a few demons in the pitch and several, it seemed, in their heads. Again England faltered against spin. Jos Buttler remains in a pitiful search of form. Tom Banton was run out seeking a make-believe single, a victim of his own scrambled decision-making. Jacob Bethell, rather than giving himself a few moments to get the measure of Maheesh Theekshana, attacked the spinner’s first ball of the game and sent a leading edge to short third. The crowd delighted in every mis-step. Nothing about England’s innings made their total look remotely defendable. They won, in the end, by 51 runs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France v Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) in Lille. Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Daniel.This might be the first real test of France’s scrumThe Italians dominated both the Scottish and Irish packs and are a formidable force in the set piece. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Milano Cortina Winter Olympics 2026 day 16 – in pictures
We take a look at some of the best images on the final day of the Games, from bobsleigh to ice hockey Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Greenland does not need US hospital boat to be sent by Trump, says Denmark
Prime minister and defence minister rebuff US president’s claim that Arctic islanders are ‘not being taken care of’Greenland does not need medical assistance from other countries, Denmark has said, after Donald Trump said he was sending a hospital ship to the autonomous Danish territory that he wants to acquire.The US president said he would dispatch the vessel in a social media post on Saturday, claiming that Greenlanders were not getting the healthcare they needed. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'Total shock and sadness' as three people killed in road collision
Two men, aged 31 and 48, and a woman, aged 23, were pronounced dead at the scene.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Devastated' GB miss out on bobsleigh medal
Team GB cap off a disappointing bobsleigh campaign at the Winter Olympics with a seventh-place finish in the four-man bob event.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
KLA veteran: 'Life is hard in Kosovo but we are free.'
Gezim Haxhimusa fought in the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). This month, he celebrated independence day by protesting against a trial in The Hague. Four KLA leaders are in the dock for war crimes.

Mail Online
Open 
Donald Trump performs Winter Olympics U-turn as the president battles Supreme Court over tariffs crisis
It had been speculated that the US president, who fanned the flames of the heated hockey rivalry between America and Canada last year, could make the trip to Milan to support Team USA.

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles will grant police access to ALL files and records for any Andrew investigations
The former prince was sensationally arrested on Thursday morning on suspicion of misconduct in a public office.

Mail Online
Open 
Where's Andy: No sign of disgraced former duke at his Wood Farm bolthole at Sandringham following his arrest as searches continue at former home in Windsor
The former Duke of York was detained by officers on the morning of his 66th birthday during an 8am raid on his house at Wood Farm.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC Clothes Show star Jeff Banks says Whitechapel in London is 'a different country and language' as he weighs in on Jim Ratcliffe's 'colony' comments as 'this is a Muslim area' viral video sparks controversy
The fashion designer visited his 'old stomping ground' earlier this week following the Manchester United co-owner's controversial comments about Britain being 'colonised by immigrants'.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment tourist minibus sinks in the world's deepest lake killing seven after crashing through the frozen ice
The tour bus carrying eight Chinese tourists plunged into the freezing water in Lake Baikal, the world's deepest lake, in Siberia.

Mail Online
Open 
Eileen Gu learns of heartbreaking personal loss just moments after winning Winter Olympics gold
The Chinese star was only told of the news in the minutes between clinching her halfpipe victory in Livigno and attending a press conference to discuss how it was won.

Mail Online
Open 
Nato chiefs warn Britain will be second-rate military power without spending boost - as John Healey snubs Boris call to send troops to Ukraine now
Keir Starmer has been told that the UK faces falling towards the bottom of the alliance's league table without more investment.

Mail Online
Open 
Sophie Habboo wows in a strapless black lace dress as she poses with husband Jamie Laing while leading the early arrivals at the BAFTAs 2026
The stars were out in force for the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 held at The Royal Festival Hall in London on Sunday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France v Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) at the Stade de France Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielThe lightning feet of Ange Capuozzo returns after a spell out with injury while Italy starts with the same pack that featured in Dublin last Saturday, with Michele Lamaro captaining the side from blind-side flanker.Capuozzo slots in at fullback, replacing Lorenzo Pani who misses out on the match-day 23 entirely. That’s the only change to the starting XV from last week. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK in talks with US over ‘best possible deal’ for British firms amid higher tariffs threat
Business leaders expect UK to ‘double down’ on deal announced by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer in 2025Graeme Wearden: Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cutsHigh-level talks with the US administration over the threat of increased tariffs are under way as the UK government says it wants “the best possible deal” for UK companies.Business leaders said they expected the UK to “double down” on the existing Economic Prosperity Deal (EPD) – announced by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer in May last year – rather than walk away. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Armed man shot and killed after entering Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, Secret Service says
Identity of person who was ‘carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can’ has not been releasedThe US Secret Service announced on Sunday morning that an armed man was shot and killed after entering the secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club in Palm Beach.Although the US president often spends weekends at the ocean resort, he was at the White House in Washington during this incident. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Spain’s top court rejects father’s bid to block daughter’s euthanasia

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK in talks with US over ‘best possible deal’ for British firms amid higher tariffs threat
Business leaders expect UK to ‘double down’ on deal announced by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer in 2025Graeme Wearden: Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cutsHigh-level talks with the US administration over the threat of increased tariffs are under way as the UK government says it wants “the best possible deal” for UK companies.Business leaders also said they expected the UK to “double down” on the existing Economic Prosperity Deal (EPD) – announced by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer in May last year – rather than walk away. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Sky News Explains YouTube series relaunches
Sky News is relaunching its YouTube series Explains.

Sky News Home
Open 
Three dead and four injured in crash
Three people have died and four others have been injured in a crash in Northern Ireland.

BBC World News
Open 
'Affront to humanity': Sudan slams Uganda for hosting RSF paramilitary boss
Sudan accuses Uganda of flouting international law by meeting Rapid Support Forces boss Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The next Mamdani? Progressive Nithya Raman shakes up LA mayor’s race
Highly rated councilmember makes last-minute entry after endorsing former ally Karen Bass – can she build a campaign to win?Nithya Raman, a progressive urban planner, entered Los Angeles politics with a bang when she was elected to city council in 2020, defeating an incumbent Democrat endorsed by Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton.More than five years on, the 44-year-old is making waves again with her last-minute entry into the LA mayoral race. Raman filed to run just hours before the deadline – after recently endorsing Mayor Karen Bass for re-election – to the surprise of constituents, and political allies and opponents alike. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My daughter turns 18 today. I’m giving her the gift of shared caring responsibilities with her brothers | Ranjana Srivastava
As a doctor, I have a front-row seat to the physical, emotional and financial impact on women who find themselves in the role of primary carer‘Why do you always grip the dashboard like that when I am driving?’It’s the bleary-eyed 5am run to rowing practice and I have just relented to the eager ‘Can I drive?’ When your teenager takes a reluctant ‘I guess’ as full-throated approval, you still want to show grace. Especially when there are many more mandated hours of supervision en route to a probationary licence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Do you have a ‘competence hangover’? | Emma Beddington
It’s what happens when people, especially women, are overworked and underappreciated. Time for all the incompetent slackers to step up ...Are you bone-deep exhausted and struggling to cope? Do you have “insomnia, headaches, irritability, emotional flatness and a sense of being permanently on?” I mean, obviously you do, you’re a person existing in 2026, but you may also have a “competence hangover”. That’s what Grazia says some women in the workplace are experiencing. They are depleted by accepting additional responsibilities, over delivering, taking on emotional labour, supplying the Colin the Caterpillar birthday cake, and generally being the person to whom everyone complacently says: “What would we do without you?!”It’s a familiar story in the domestic sphere, where women shoulder disproportionate responsibilities plus a bonus mental load. At work, as multiple surveys and reports have indicated in recent years, they are more likely to burn out (the “competence hangover” sounds like burnout lite). In large part this is due to difficulties reconciling the domestic burden and professional obligations. Other factors also amp up the pressure to over perform professionally: women’s extra hours are rewarded less than men’s, according to a 2024 study; presenteeism means women who work more efficiently (completing their work in fewer hours) are judged negatively for it; and they lack the “status shield” men enjoy, meaning they’re more likely to bear the brunt of negative emotions and perceptions. No wonder McKinsey’s 2025 Women in the Workplace report suggested for the first time that “women are less interested in being promoted than men”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
T20 World Cup: England win Super 8s opener as Sri Lanka flail with bat
Super 8s: England, 146-9, bt Sri Lanka, 95 out, by 51 runsWill Jacks scores useful 21 and takes three key wicketsOver the first hour of this match the grass banks on either side of the wicket filled both in number and in belief. Dot balls set off boisterous celebrations, wickets provoked delirium. An increasingly joyous crowd whooped as England’s batters trooped dolefully to and from the square. Mexican waves rippled around a stadium already, and prematurely as it turned out, in full celebration.England were restricted to just 146 for nine, an innings that revealed a few demons in the pitch and several, it seemed, in their heads. Again England faltered against spin. Jos Buttler remains in a pitiful search of form. Tom Banton was run out seeking a make-believe single, victim of his own scrambled decision-making. Jacob Bethell, rather than giving himself a few moments to get the measure of Maheesh Theekshana, attacked the spinner’s first ball of the game and sent a leading edge to short third. The crowd delighted in every mis-step. Nothing about England’s innings made their total look remotely defendable. They won, in the end, by 51 runs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France v Italy: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 3.10pm kickoff (GMT) at the Stade de France Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielIt’s already been a weekend of shocks. Not necessarily in terms of results. After all, Ireland are a side still capable of mixing it with the big boys of world rugby and you’d expect Scotland to have the measure of a struggling Welsh outfit.But did anyone see the shellacking handed out to England on their own patch? And what about the Welsh? Did anyone really predict that they’d be leading right til the 75th minute? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The kindness of strangers: I was exhausted wrangling my two young kids – then a man popped $2 into the coin-op ride
When I was feeling utterly worn out, a stranger came along to give my kids joyRead more in the kindness of strangers seriesI was completely exhausted. While wrangling two kids aged under three, my husband and I had just moved all the way from the Kimberley to Tasmania. I remember being totally sleep deprived and trying to furnish a new house entirely from op-shops, without a support network around. I was so tired I’d recently driven the car into the fence at home – that’s the level of exhaustion I was dealing with!We were out doing the groceries when I let the kids sit on those small mechanical rides you find out the front of shopping centres, while I sat down to take a breather. I never actually put any money in to start the rides, because I considered them a waste. When you’ve got little kids, you don’t have much disposable income to splash on silly things like that. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Readers reply: what would be the most socially useful way to spend a billion dollars?
The long-running series in which readers answer other readers’ questions on subjects ranging from trivial flights of fancy to profound scientific and philosophical concepts• This week’s question: what would happen to the world if computer said yes?I’ve always thought it would be good to acquire an old warehouse in every town throughout the land and convert it into low-rent community workspaces for artists, local charities and small businesses getting off the ground. A kind of people’s WeWork. What would others do with a humungous, but not unlimited, pile of dosh to benefit society? Roland Freeman, West YorkshireSend new questions to nq@theguardian.com. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Harriet Kemsley looks back: ‘My parents say I was a very well-behaved child. Sadly this has been in steady decline over the years’
The comedian on overcoming her shyness, doing standup in secret and being a chaos magnetBorn in Canterbury in 1987, Harriet Kemsley is a comedian and podcaster. She began standup in 2011, winning a string of best newcomer awards. As well as touring, she has appeared on 8 Out of 10 Cats and LOL: Last One Laughing UK. In 2017 she starred in the Viceland reality series Bobby &amp; Harriet Get Married with fellow comedian Bobby Mair, with whom she has a four-year-old daughter, Mabel. She presents the podcast Single Ladies in Your Area with Amy Gledhill, and her new show, Floozy, begins in October.This thick fringe was a big part of my childhood. Sadly now I don’t have the get-up-and-go to maintain one. It’s a separate job altogether. I have no idea where the photo was taken; it could have been Kent, it could have been on holiday, but either way I would have loved that ice-cream. My expression is pure joy. My parents say that I was a conscientious child and very well-behaved. Sadly this has been in steady decline over the years. I was incredibly shy and didn’t know what to say to anybody. Someone would ask how I was and I would panic and say nothing. I have a younger brother and sister but nobody ever thought I was the eldest as I didn’t seem responsible enough. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The world order we’re leaving behind may be replaced by no order at all | Eduardo Porter
In the world being ushered in by Trump, power will prevail over cooperation. We will come to rue having taken this pathThe Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, inspired a wave of enthusiastic nodding among the cosmopolitan crowd gathered in Davos last month when he took to the podium and proclaimed that the world order underwritten by the United States, which prevailed in the west throughout the postwar era, was over.The organizing principle that emerged from the ashes of the second world war, that interdependence would promote world peace by knitting nations’ interests together in a drive for common security and prosperity, no longer works. The US blew it up. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Beyond worried’: the families waiting to hear how Send reform will change their lives
Already struggling to get help, families with children with special needs are concerned changes could make things worseAt the age of 12, May Race’s son Joseph spends almost all of his time in his bedroom, too anxious, burnt out and – she says – traumatised even to join his parents and older brother downstairs most days. Joseph no longer leaves the house at all.He is autistic and has dyslexia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). His autism is of a type known as pathological demand avoidance, or PDA, which can make the ordinary demands of everyday life feel overwhelming and impossible to cope with. Since he was eight years old, he has rarely been able to go to school. Today, he doesn’t attend at all, and is too unwell even to meet with professionals who may be able to help him. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US Secret Service shoots dead man who tried to enter Mar-a-Lago
US Secret Service agents shot and killed a man trying to enter President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort.

Mail Online
Open 
Jesy Nelson burst into tears after receiving a reminder of 'another obstacle to tackle' after building her twin daughters' special feeding chairs following SMA1 diagnosis
The Little Mix star, 34, welcomed twin girls Ocean Jade and Story Monroe prematurely in May 2025 with her ex-fiancé Zion Foster.

Mail Online
Open 
Twelve million people watched a TikTok video of flirty Aussie hitmaker Dean Lewis telling a woman 'oh baby, I want it'... Now he reveals crucial detail influencer allegedly DELETED - as he lawyers up
The 38-year-old Waves hitmaker has hit back at what he describes as a sustained online campaign involving false allegations of criminal conduct against women and underage girls.

Mail Online
Open 
Charli XCX takes swipe at Gordon Ramsay as he says her Brat album gave his daughters 'attitude in abundance' as they appear on The Graham Norton Show
The singer, 33, and the chef, 59, appeared on the chat show to promote their respective releases, The Moment and Being Gordon Ramsay.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: China’s Gu soars to gold, build-up to the closing ceremony and more – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingUSA v Canada ice hockey final – live | email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Rail signs call after runner's death at crossing
Footage shows Sam Dudley, who was listening to music, appeared shocked at the sight of the train.

Autosport F1
Open 
The concern with straight mode which arose in F1 Commission meeting
McLaren boss Andrea Stella previously outlined three major concerns with the 2026 Formula 1 power unit rules and he has since revealed a fourth issue entered the mix. This year F1 is introducing a completely new set of regulations with one of the changes concerning the power unit, which is now more reliant on electrical energy. That should significantly change the style of racing in 2026, as ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
France vs Italy Free Streams: TV Channels, Kick-Off time, Team News, Preview for Six Nations 2026 match

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon cans a major warehouse robotics project — but Blue Jay will live on, with new robots set to come soon

TechRadar News
Open 
'Super-fast dryers often dry hair quickly but without smoothness' — a GHD exec on how the brand created a hair dryer that combines power and control

TechRadar News
Open 
HDMI cables explained: the different types, the ones I use as TechRadar's TV reviewer, and what I recommend you buy (don't worry, they're cheap!)

Digital Trends
Open 
The iPhone 18 Pro’s signature color could be deep red
The iPhone 18 Pro is expected to get a slew of battery, camera, and chip upgrades. Bloomberg now reports that it could come adorned in a deep color, as well.
The post The iPhone 18 Pro&#8217;s signature color could be deep red appeared first on Digital Trends.

The Verge
Open 
Georgia says Elon Musk’s America PAC violated election law
For all his bluster about voter fraud, Elon Musk has been one of the most flagrant flouters of US election law. Now his America PAC has been slapped with a reprimand by the Georgia State Election Board for sending out pre-filled absentee ballot applications. State law prohibits anyone, other than an authorized relative, from sending [&#8230;]

The Verge
Open 
This magazine plays Tetris — here’s how
Tetris has been immortalized in a playable McDonald's plastic chicken nugget, a playable fake 7-Eleven Slurpee cup, and a playable wristwatch. But the most intriguing way to play Tetris yet is encased in paper. Last year the Tetris Company partnered with Red Bull for a gaming tournament that culminated in the 150-meter-tall Dubai Frame landmark [&#8230;]

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Hamza Sajawal: Fixing ORM Slowness by 80% with Strategic PostgreSQL Indexing
Modern applications heavily rely on ORMs (Object-Relational Mappers) for rapid development. While ORMs accelerate development, they often generate queries that are not fully optimized for database performance. In such environments, database engineers have limited control over query structure, leaving indexing and database tuning as the primary performance optimization tools.In this article, I’ll share how we improved PostgreSQL performance dramatically for one of our enterprise customers by applying strategic indexing techniques,without modifying application queries.The Challenge: High Read IOPS and Slow Query PerformanceOne of our customers experienced severe performance degradation, including:High Read IOPS on the databaseSlow page loads and delayed reportsIncreasing database load during peak hoursAfter analyzing PostgreSQL configuration parameters, we confirmed that:Memory parameters were properly tunedAutovacuum was functioning correctlyHardware resources were sufficientHowever, performance issues persisted.Since the application relied entirely on ORM-generated queries, rewriting queries was not an option. We needed a solution at the database level.Root Cause Analysis: Excessive Sequential ScansWe analyzed PostgreSQL statistics using:pg_stat_user_tablespg_stat_user_indexespg_constraintpg_indexWe discovered extremely high sequential scans on large tables—some exceeding 41 million scans.Sequential scans on large tables significantly increase disk I/O and slow query execution.













The primary reason: Missing indexes on foreign key columns and frequently filtered columns.Strategy #1: Foreign Key Index OptimizationWhy this mattersPostgreSQL does NOT automatically create indexes on foreign key columns.Without these indexes, PostgreSQL must perform sequential scans when:Joining tablesFiltering by foreign keysEnforcing referential integrityThis is especially critical in ORM-based systems, where joins on foreign keys are extremely common.How we identified missing FK indexesWe ran the following query to detect missing indexes on foreign key columns in large, frequently scanned tables:WITH high_seq_tables AS (SELECT     st.relid,     st.schemaname,     st.relname AS table_name,     st.seq_scan,        pg_total_relation_size(st.relid) AS table_size_bytesFROM pg_stat_user_tables stWHERE st.seq_scan &gt; 10000   AND pg_total_relation_size(st.relid) &gt;= 524288000),fk_columns AS (SELECT     con.conrelid,     att.attname AS fk_columnFROM pg_constraint conJOIN unnest(con.conkey) AS colnum(colnum) ON trueJOIN pg_attribute att     ON att.attrelid = con.conrelid    AND att.attnum = colnum.colnumWHERE con.contype = 'f'),fk_index_check AS (SELECT     fk.conrelid,     fk.fk_column,     NOT EXISTS (         SELECT 1         FROM pg_index idx         JOIN pg_attribute ia             ON ia.attrelid = idx.indrelid            AND ia.attnum = ANY(idx.indkey)         WHERE idx.indrelid = fk.conrelid           AND idx.indisvalid           AND ia.attname = fk.fk_column     ) AS is_missing_fk_indexFROM fk_columns fk)SELECT *FROM fk_index_checkWHERE is_missing_fk_index = true;













Results after implementing FK indexesAfter creating indexes on critical foreign key columns:Sequential scans reduced by over 87%Query response time improved by 60-80%Disk read IOPS dropped significantlyOverall system responsiveness improved dramaticallyThis was the single most impactful optimization.











Strategy #2: Slow Query Driven Index OptimizationInstead of blindly indexing everything, we followed a targeted approach using slow query analysis.Step 1: Enable Slow Query LoggingSET log_min_duration_statement = 420000;This logs queries taking longer than 7 minutes. You can adjust this threshold based on your workload.Step 2: Identify Query PatternsFrom slow query logs, we identified common patterns:Columns frequently used in:WHERE clausesJOIN conditionsGROUP BY operationsAggregations (AVG, COUNT, SUM)Step 3: Create Targeted IndexesWe created indexes on:Foreign key columnsJoin columnsFilter columnsFrequently aggregated columnsExample:CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY idx_orders_customer_id ON orders_main(customer_id);Index Usage ValidationAfter creating indexes, we verified usage via:SELECT *FROM pg_stat_user_indexesORDER BY idx_scan DESC;This helped ensure indexes were actually used and provided performance benefits.Overall Performance ImprovementsMetricImprovementSequential Scans↓ 87%Query Execution Time↓ 60–80%Disk Read IOPS↓ 70%Application Response Time Dramatically ImprovedKey Lessons LearnedAlways index foreign key columns in ORM-driven applicationsUse PostgreSQL statistics views to identify missing indexesEnable slow query logging to identify optimization opportunitiesCreate targeted indexes, not excessive indexesContinuously monitor index usage and performanceFinal ThoughtsWhen application-level optimization is limited due to ORM constraints, database-level indexing becomes the most powerful performance optimization tool.Strategic indexing can dramatically improve PostgreSQL performance without modifying application code or upgrading hardware.











The post Fixing ORM Slowness by 80% with Strategic PostgreSQL Indexing appeared first on Stormatics.

Mail Online
Open 
Armed man is shot and killed by Secret Service after entering Mar-a-Lago in middle of the night
The man, in his early 20s, was holding what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can as he tried to enter Trump's Palm Beach residence, the Secret Service said.

Mirror F1
Open 
Red Bull car catches fire at F1 fan event as worried crowd warn driver
Red Bull reserve driver Yuki Tsunoda was forced to make a quick escape after an F1 car caught fire during a demonstration run in San Francisco in front of horrified spectators

The Hill
Open 
DHS suspends TSA PreCheck, Global Entry programs amid shutdown
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will pause two of its programs meant to expedite the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) airport screening process starting Sunday as a shutdown of the agency stretches into a second week, according to the agency. The TSA PreCheck and Global Entry programs will temporarily cease starting at 6 a.m. ET...

The Hill
Open 
Can the pardon power be saved from its own abusers?
The Pardon Integrity Act, which would grant Congress the power to veto presidential pardons, is intended to address the president's abuse of his pardon powers, but would further politicize the pardon process and potentially remove the people's final fail-safe against an overreaching federal government.

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he’s sending ‘great' US hospital boat to Greenland
President Trump on Saturday said he was sending a “great” U.S. hospital boat to Greenland, a territory of Denmark that the president fixated on in recent months. “Working with the fantastic Governor of Louisiana, Jeff Landry, we are going to send a great hospital boat to Greenland to take care of the many people who...

CNET News
Open 
Apple Watch vs. Oura Ring: After Months of Testing, I've Finally Made My Choice
One feature ultimately sealed the deal for me, but it might not be the one that matters most to you.

CNET News
Open 
Give Your Phone Photos a Warm, Dreamy Analog Film Look With These 3 Tricks
Whether you have the latest iPhone or Samsung phone, or even an older handset, you can take some beautiful nostalgic images with a bit of help. Here's how.

CNET News
Open 
The Best Smart Scales of 2026 for Measuring Body Fat, Muscle Mass and More
If you're looking to keep track of your health, a smart scale can help by providing data on various metrics right from your bathroom.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sheffield Wednesday suffer historic relegation to League One after derby defeat – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereLiam Rosenior has revealed that one of his Chelsea stars marked the wrong Burnley player in added time yesterday, resulting in Zian Flemming’s equaliser.The Chelsea head coach said: “An assignment was missed. An assignment, a marking assignment wasn’t done. Flemming, we know, is their best header of the ball. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Liverpool: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnEric Peterson gets in touch: “I wouldn’t mind Wayne Rooney pulling on an old Everton kit and getting on some podcast to remind Arne Slot, “Easy there, sport. You say that the only thing you and Jurgen Klopp have in common is that you both won the league. That’s not true. You both won the league with Jurgen’s team. Whether you can build a champion of your own is a different question.”Arne Slot just spoke to Sky, starting with Dominik Szoboszlai at full-back: “He needs to be because that’s what we need. We have our issues, especially in defence. Missing our 2 fullbacks, but Dominic has done that job really well. Last week, Curtis Jones, did his job really well. So that’s the good thing about midfielders, they are usually able to play in more positions than only in the midfields. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Greenland does not need US hospital boat sent by Trump, says Denmark
Prime minister and defence minister rebuff US president’s claim that Arctic islanders are ‘not being taken care of’Greenland does not need medical assistance from other countries, Denmark has said, after Donald Trump said he was sending a hospital ship to the autonomous Danish territory that he wants to acquire.The US president said he would dispatch the vessel in a social media post on Saturday, claiming that Greenlanders were not getting the healthcare they needed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Only 10% of boys aged 14-16 read daily for pleasure, National Literacy Trust finds
Exclusive: Report says British teenagers’ time for books is being crowded out by schoolwork, screens and sportsFewer than one in 10 boys aged 14 to 16 in the UK read daily, according to research, which found reading for pleasure was being crowded out of teenage lives by schoolwork, screens and sports.While reading declines for both boys and girls in early adolescence, there are “signs of recovery” among girls in later teenage years, but boys’ engagement remains persistently low, according to the National Literacy Trust (NLT). Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Iran students stage first large anti-government protests since deadly crackdown
Student protesters honoured thousands of those killed when nationwide mass protests were put down by Iranian authorities last month.

BBC UK News
Open 
Three dead, four injured, after three-vehicle collision
Two men, aged 31 and 48, and a woman, aged 23, were pronounced dead at the scene.

Telegraph
Open 
Brilliant bowlers crush Sri Lanka to put England on verge of T20 World Cup semi-final
Brilliant bowlers crush Sri Lanka to put England on verge of T20 World Cup semi-final

Telegraph
Open 
Team GB seal greatest Winter Olympics medal haul in history with Atkin bronze
Team GB seal greatest Winter Olympics medal haul in history with Atkin bronze

Mail Online
Open 
Nottingham Forest vs Liverpool - Premier League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Reds look to chase down top four spot plus updates from two others games
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog from Sunday's 2pm Premier League games featuring Nottingham Forest vs Liverpool, Crystal Palace vs Wolves and Sunderland vs Fulham. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Liverpool: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnMatt Dony gets in touch: “I hope Neco Williams has a great game, and all Liverpool’s goals(!) come down the other flank. I really thought he’d be the successor to TAA, and he’d be a superstar for Wales. He’s obviously very good, can be a really lovely footballer to watch, but just never quite became what we were hoping. The difference between ‘good’ and ‘great’ is such a fine line in so many ways, but a yawning chasm in others.”Vitor Pereira is currently sat on his own in the Forest dugout but spoke to Sky Sports, starting with that big win at Fenerbahce: “It was special mentally. The team was there in the first minute. This is the squad we need, mentally and tactically. And this is what we need today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca here5 min: Lauren James progresses with the ball before slipping in Thompson. Thompson plays it on to Johanna Rytting Kaneryd but she can’t get a shot away.4 min: Chelsea are dominating possession in the opening stages. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Victim killed in skate park double stabbing named
Mason Miller, 20, was killed on Wednesday when he was fatally stabbed, detectives say.

Sky News Home
Open 
Prince William pays tribute to TikToker army medic following her death aged 25
Prince William has told of his "immense sadness" at the death of an army medic who had become a TikTok star.

BBC UK News
Open 
Three dead, four injured, after three-vehicle collision
Two men, aged 31 and 48, and woman, aged 23, were pronounced dead at the scene.

Mail Online
Open 
Amanda Holden's most complained about dresses: Britain's Got Talent judge's raciest ensembles revealed - including one that prompted 600 Ofcom reports
It's almost that time of year again, when the wildest acts from across the country flock to the Britain's Got Talent auditions with the hope of entertaining the nation. 

Mail Online
Open 
Snoop Dogg and Martha Stewart's unlikely 18-year friendship: From baking brownies to 'getting high' and landing their own reality TV show as pair reunite at the Winter Olympics
The rap legend, 54, and lifestyle guru, 84, are firm friends and have been for 18 years since they first met on Martha's show back in 2008.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump warns Netflix of ‘consequences’ unless it pulls top Democrat from board
US president calls for removal of Susan Rice as streaming platform pursues takeover of Warner Bros DiscoveryDonald Trump has told Netflix to remove the Democratic foreign policy expert Susan Rice from its board or “face the consequences”, while the streaming platform is locked in an extraordinary corporate battle to take control of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD).In comments posted on his Truth Social platform, the US president described Rice – who served as national security adviser to Barack Obama and UN ambassador and White House adviser under Joe Biden – as a “political hack” and accused her of having “no talent or skills”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca here1 min: Alyssa Thompson has started brightly on the left. The American winger wins a corner for the home side.Manchester United get us under way, kicking from right to left. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
France declares war on meat

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
T20 World Cup Super 8s: Sri Lanka v England – as it happened
Will Jacks leads an excellent England bowling display as they pocket a win against stuttering Sri Lanka in the Super EightsIn the battle of the anthems, a crushing win by Sri Lanka’s jaunty tune. The crowd, with parasol, flag and face paint, sing along enthusiastically.More news from Simon, who has become something of a banana expert on his trip. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca hereMeanwhile, Sonia Bompastor spoke about Manchester United’s unbeaten run. We know we are facing a really good team. They are in really good form and there have been a lot of wins in the games for them recently. So we are prepared for that and, as usual, the training this week has been good.On Sunday we’re playing one of the best teams in English history, and it’s an early-round draw – but that’s football. That’s the beauty of the cup. There’s an element of luck in competitions. Drawing Chelsea might feel like rough luck, but that’s part of it. It’s what makes the cup special. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Met Police officers working for Andrew told to guard Epstein's home, emails show
The Met says it has not identified any wrongdoing by its protection officers "at this time".

Mail Online
Open 
Sky Sports' darts commentator Wayne Mardle shares raw and emotional video about his ongoing 'brutal' grief following the death of his wife in 2024
Popular Sky Sports darts commentator Wayne Mardle has shared a brave and heartfelt video about his grief having lost his wife Donna in 2024. 

Mail Online
Open 
Families with caravans on park owned by 'Gypsy Billionaire' Alfie Best say they are 'trapped' on a site that has fallen into ruin
Several owners at Seaview Holiday Park in Sennen, Cornwall, said their investment in a mobile home is now worth little more than the paper their contract was written on.

Mail Online
Open 
Sophie Habboo leads the stars getting glammed up ahead of the BAFTAs as her husband Jamie Laing declares their hotel room is 'chaos' ahead of pair hosting the red carpet
Sophie Habboo led the stars getting glammed up ahead of the star-studded BAFTAs 2026.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How daily routines in Minneapolis and St Paul have changed amid 3,000 federal immigration agents – in pictures
Many people have been sheltering at home. Protests have become part of the daily rhythm. Community networks continue to patrol and document agents’ interactionsIn St Paul, Minnesota, Brittany Kubricky pulled into a school parking lot. Normally, she was there just to pick up her daughter. But today, two of her daughter’s schoolmates also climbed into the backseat. Their mother had been sheltering at home for weeks, afraid of a run-in with federal immigration agents. So friends coordinated school pickup for her.In December, the Trump administration launched Operation Metro Surge, deploying a reported 3,000 agents to Minnesota to target undocumented immigrants with criminal records, officials said. But in two months, agents have instead detained thousands of people, regardless of legal status, including US citizens pulled out of their cars, taken from their homes and picked up while working. Agents have also killed two Minneapolis residents – and US citizens – Renee Good and Alex Pretti, while they were monitoring Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activities. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Liverpool: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnFor Forest, an unchanged team from Fenerbahce, while for Liverpool, two changes from Brighton in the FA Cup, Ryan Gravenberch in for Curtis Jones and Hugo Ekitike in for Federico Chiesa. That looks like Szoboszlai at right-back, with Gravenberch as midfield anchor.Nottingham Forest: Ortega, Aina, Milenkovic, Murillo, Williams, Sangare, Anderson, Hutchinson, Gibbs-White, Hudson-Odoi, Igor Jesus. Subs: Gunn, Morato, Ndoye, Dominguez, Lucca, Yates, Jair Cunha, McAtee, Bakwa. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca hereYesterday’s only FA Cup fixture saw second-tier Birmingham City thrash fourth-tier Chatham Town 8-0. You can read Tom Garry’s match report here.Chelsea: Hampton, Carpenter, Buurman, Girma, Bronze, Nüsken, Walsh, Cuthbert, Kaneryd, Thompson, James Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: China’s Gu soars to gold, build-up to the closing ceremony and more – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingUSA v Canada ice hockey final – live | email YaraWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Worst of the worst? Most US immigrants targeted for deportation in 2025 had no criminal charges, documents reveal
A Guardian analysis finds the vast majority of people who entered deportation proceedings for the first time from January to August last year had no criminal convictionsA Guardian analysis of government records has found that the vast majority – 77% – of people who entered deportation proceedings for the first time in 2025 had no criminal conviction, exposing a stark gap between the Trump administration’s rhetoric and reality.Within days of Donald Trump’s inauguration, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) trotted out a phrase that his surrogates would come to use over and over again: “the worst of the worst.”Fewer than half of the people in the data (40%) had any criminal charge against them, and only 23% had a conviction.Of those who did have a criminal conviction, nearly half were for non-violent traffic and immigration offenses.Traffic offenses alone made up nearly 30% of the convictions, the largest category by far.Some 9% of criminal convictions were for assault, while only 1% were for sexual assault and just 0.5% were for homicide. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Only 10% of boys aged 14-16 read daily for pleasure, National Literacy Trust finds
Exclusive: NLT report says time for books is being crowded out by schoolwork, screens and sportsFewer than one in 10 boys aged 14 to 16 read daily, according to research, which found reading for pleasure was being crowded out of teenage lives by schoolwork, screens and sports.While reading declines for both boys and girls in early adolescence, there are “signs of recovery” among girls in later teenage years, but boys’ engagement remains persistently low, according to the National Literacy Trust (NLT). Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Three dead after three-vehicle collision
Two men, aged 31 and 48, and woman, aged 23, were pronounced dead at the scene.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How to make proper rice pudding – recipe | Felicity Cloake's Masterclass
Shake off memories of stodgy school dinners: rice pudding, when done right, is a warming, luxuriant delightThere are almost as many rice puddings as there are savoury rice recipes. If you were also put off by that dazzlingly white, school dinner gloop, fear not, this is a much more luxuriant baked dessert, gently spiced and finished with sweet wine and cream. It can be enjoyed warm or cool, on its own or with a spoonful of jarred fruit or some vivid pink spring rhubarb.Prep 5 min
Cook 2 hr 10 minServes 450g butter, plus extra for greasing50g soft light brown sugar
100g pudding rice
1 litre whole milk (see step 4)1 unwaxed lemon
¼ tsp freshly grated nutmeg¼ tsp ground cinnamon, or a small length of cinnamon stick1 bay leaf
½ vanilla pod, or 1 tsp vanilla extract 1 pinch salt
2 tbsp sweet fortified wine –eg pedro ximenéz or cream sherry, madeira, tawny port (optional)150ml double cream Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A crunchy, blistered, golden-brown pillow’: the best supermarket puff pastry, tasted and rated
Which supermarket puff pastry puffs up proudly, and which comes up short?• The best supermarket unsalted butterPuff pastry is made by wrapping a block of fat (ideally butter) in a sheet of dough, then rolling it out, folding it over itself, and repeating the rolling and folding process several times more. This creates dozens of thin layers of fat between each layer of pastry. It’s skilled, arduous work, but that’s where ready-rolled puff pastry comes in. This miraculous product makes baking your own pastries, vol-au-vents and upside-down tarts very simple indeed.I baked a small rectangle of pastry from each brand for 10-15 minutes at 180-200C (or according to the manufacturer’s instructions). I noted the height of the rise as well as the lamination (the separation of layers), texture, flavour, ingredients and value relative to quality. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Liverpool: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnFor Forest, an unchanged team from Fenerbahce, while for Liverpool, makes two changes from Brighton in the FA Cup, Ryan Gravenberch in for Curtis Jones and Hugo Ekitike in for Federico Chiesa. That looks like Szoboszlai at right-back, with Gravenberch as midfield anchor.Nottingham Forest: Ortega, Aina, Milenkovic, Murillo, Williams, Sangare, Anderson, Hutchinson, Gibbs-White, Hudson-Odoi, Igor Jesus. Subs: Gunn, Morato, Ndoye, Dominguez, Lucca, Yates, Jair Cunha, McAtee, Bakwa. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca hereChelsea: Hampton, Carpenter, Buurman, Girma, Bronze, Nüsken, Walsh, Cuthbert, Kaneryd, Thompson, JamesSubs: Peng, Reiten, Baltimore, Kaptein, Kerr, Buchanan, Potter, Sarwie, Beever-Jones Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final: Canada v USA – live
Canada captain Sidney Crosby ruled out with injuryOld rivals face off with gold medal on lineEmail Beau or drop him a line on BlueSkyMedal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingAway we go …What else has happened at the Games today? And what were some of the highlights of the past two weeks and change? Check our multisport coverage: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Only 10% of boys aged 14-16 read daily for pleasure, UK study finds
National Literacy Trust survey says time for books is being crowded out by schoolwork, screens and sportsFewer than one in 10 boys aged 14 to 16 read daily, according to research, which found reading for pleasure was being crowded out of teenage lives by schoolwork, screens and sports.While reading declines for both boys and girls in early adolescence, there are “signs of recovery” among girls in later teenage years, but boys’ engagement remains persistently low, according to the National Literacy Trust (NLT). Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Three dead after 'serious traffic collision'
The Armagh Road in Moy is expected to be closed for a "significant period of time", police say.

TechRadar News
Open 
Neuromancer is just the thing I needed to give me a dark, sci-fi hit while I wait for Cyberpunk 2

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Tottenham vs Arsenal: Free Streams, TV Guide, Preview for North London derby

The Verge
Open 
Vibe camera shootout: Camp Snap Pro vs. Flashback One35 V2
There's been a surge of interest over the last few years in inexpensive digital cameras. Younger folks are snapping up old point-and-shoots because they view the aesthetic as more authentic and more appealing than smartphone images. Companies are even rereleasing old tech at new prices. And there are cameras like the original Camp Snap: a [&#8230;]

The Verge
Open 
America desperately needs new privacy laws
This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech world. For more on the dire state of tech regulation, follow Adi Robertson. The Stepback arrives in our subscribers' inboxes at 8AM ET. Opt in for The Stepback here. How it started In 1973, long before the modern digital era, [&#8230;]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China overtakes US as Germany’s top trading partner
Friedrich Merz to meet Xi Jinping in Beijing, with goods worth €251bn traded between two countries in 2025China has overtaken the US as Germany’s top trading partner, figures have shown, as the chancellor, Friedrich Merz, prepares for his first visit to Beijing since taking office.Merz will head to China on Tuesday and will be welcomed with military honours on Wednesday in Beijing by the prime minister, Li Qiang, before later meeting the president, Xi Jinping, for talks over dinner, his spokesperson Sebastian Hille said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Liverpool: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 2pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email JohnNottingham Forest: Ortega, Aina, Milenkovic, Murillo, Williams, Sangare, Anderson, Hutchinson, Gibbs-White, Hudson-Odoi, Igor Jesus. Subs: Gunn, Morato, Ndoye, Dominguez, Lucca, Yates, Jair Cunha, McAtee, Bakwa.Liverpool: Alisson, Szoboszlai, Konate, van Dijk, Kerkez, Gravenberch, Mac Allister, Salah, Wirtz, Gakpo, Ekitike. Subs: Mamardashvili, Gomez, Chiesa, Jones, Robertson, Nyoni, Ramsay, Morrison, Ngumoha. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
ECB reminds Hundred franchises of responsibilities
The England and Wales Cricket Board writes to the eight Hundred franchises reminding them of their responsibilities around discrimination.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
How sister's success paved way for Atkin's Olympic bronze
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin wins bronze in the women's halfpipe to secure Great Britain's fifth medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics, equalling the team's record-best haul.

ZDNet News
Open 
I've tested dozens of power stations - this one handled at everything I threw at it
The Bluetti AC180 features up to 1800W of power output and 11 ports with exceptional durability.

Russia Today News
Open 
Thousands march in Lyon in tribute to murdered right-wing activist (VIDEOS)

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Manchester United: Women’s FA Cup fifth round – live
Updates on the 1.30pm (GMT) kick-off at Kingsmeadow Report: Birmingham 8-0 Chatham | Email Xaymaca hereHello and welcome to minute-by-minute coverage of Chelsea v Manchester United in the Women’s FA Cup fifth round.Today’s game is a repeat of last season’s final in which Chelsea won 3-0 to complete a domestic treble. While Chelsea are still fighting on four fronts, the prospect of Sonia Bompastor’s side winning another treble is no longer on the cards after back to back defeats against Arsenal and Manchester City in the league. But they bounced back with wins against Spurs and Liverpool to put them within a point of Manchester United in the WSL. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
T20 World Cup: England beat Sri Lanka by 51 runs in Super 8s cricket opener – live reaction
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaIn the battle of the anthems, a crushing win by Sri Lanka’s jaunty tune. The crowd, with parasol, flag and face paint, sing along enthusiastically.More news from Simon, who has become something of a banana expert on his trip. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final: Canada v USA – live
Canada captain Sidney Crosby ruled out with injuryOld rivals face off with gold medal on lineEmail Beau or drop him a line on BlueSkyMedal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingNBC, meanwhile, has brought out 1980 men’s hockey legend Mike Eruzione to talk about what it means to play for the USA. He says this is the best US team ever assembled. He also notes “there’s not a TV set in Canada that isn’t tuned to this game,” and that’s probably not an outlandish statement.The United States will be facing a hostile crowd at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena as they seek their third ever Olympic title in men’s hockey and first since the Miracle on Ice team of 1980. The Americans were greeted with a chorus of lusty boos when they took the ice in their white jerseys for their 20-minute warm-up ahead of today’s gold medal game. It already felt like there were more Canada shirts in the building and along the concourses of the brand-new 14,700-seat arena on Milan’s south-eastern edge. Now it sounds that way too.
It is arguably the hottest ticket of the Milano Cortina Olympics and that’s clear from the scenes outside the gates, where hordes of Canadian and American fans in hockey sweaters are pounding beers and roaring through songs and chants in glorious 53F (12C) sunshine. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tories would stop government funding for ‘dead-end’ university courses, citing ‘creative arts’ - UK politics live
The Conservative party’s education spokesperson said many such graduates are leaving university with weaker job prospectsSearches are expected to continue today at Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s previous home – Royal Lodge, in Windsor – as calls grow for a probe into the former prince’s links with Jeffrey Epstein.Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s police and crime correspondent, Vikram Dodd, about what could be next for Andrew here:If the government bring forward this bill with the support of the King then we will back it. We have to be realistic. Andrew is the eighth in line to the throne, so there’s no chance of him becoming our monarch.And so parliament really should be focused on things that are of more importance to the public, whether that’s the economy, crime, the health service, immigration. But if the bill does come before parliament, then we’ll support it. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
Webb Just Spent 17 Hours Staring at Uranus—and Found Its Auroras Are Even Weirder Than We Thought
The telescope observed the ice giant for a full rotation, revealing how temperature and charged particles vary with altitude.

The Hill
Open 
Former CIA director: Potential Iran strikes ‘will not bring about a regime change, sadly'
Former CIA Director David Petraeus said that if the Trump administration decides to carry out strikes on Iran amid escalating tensions and threats between President Trump and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, it "will not bring about regime change, sadly." The retired general said in an interview that aired Sunday on the “Cats Roundtable” radio show hosted...

The Hill
Open 
Burgum reups Trump’s push to take Greenland: ‘So much opportunity up there’
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum cast Greenland as a strategically vital asset for the U.S. economy and national security amid ongoing negotiations over a deal on mineral rights. “If you look at geographically, where it's positioned, it is like the end cap opposite of Alaska, and if you want to protect North America and the United...

CNET News
Open 
Seeing More iPhone Battery Life? Adaptive Power in iOS 26 Could Be the Boost
This somewhat obscure feature in the latest iPhone system can delivery more battery power during your day.

CNET News
Open 
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro Tablet Review: It Gets the Job Done
When you don't need a tablet to do everything, this one does the basics well for a reasonable price.

CNET News
Open 
10 New Large Appliance Features That Prove the Home Is Getting Smarter in 2026
The future of the home is taking shape. After a massive three-day home, kitchen and bath showcase in Orlando, these are the innovations that stood out.

Telegraph
Open 
Team GB’s Zoe Atkin takes freeski halfpipe bronze after Eileen Gu soars to victory
Team GB’s Zoe Atkin takes freeski halfpipe bronze after Eileen Gu soars to victory

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
England bowlers secure crucial win over Sri Lanka
A superb bowling performance ignites England's T20 World Cup campaign as Harry Brook's side beat co-hosts Sri Lanka by 51 runs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cuts | Graeme Wearden
Upping tariffs may have lifted the president’s mood but it is a headache for the Federal Reserve and its next chairDonald Trump and Denis Healey don’t have much in common. One of the greatest prime ministers Britain never had shares little of his famous hinterland with what some historians see as one of the worst occupants of the White House.But Trump would be well advised to remember Healey’s first law of holes – when you’re in one, stop digging Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Girl, 7, and woman die in crash
A seven-year-old girl and a 43-year-old woman have died in a crash in Hampshire.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Tributes paid to 'amazing' men aged 19 and 20 who died on Yr Wyddfa
They have been named locally as Eddie Hill, 20, and Jayden Long, 19, from Norfolk.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Russia, Ukraine report overnight strikes on energy infrastructure
The attacks come as Ukraine prepares to mark four years since the start of the war on February 24.

Mail Online
Open 
Businessman handed £3,000 bill after he used his company's cherry picker to put Union Jack flags up - before council took them all down
Will Haylett, 43, maintains he was simply attempting to 'lift people's spirits' by adding the patriotic bunting throughout Scarborough, North Yorkshire.

Mail Online
Open 
No10 ethics chief 'ordered safe break-in' before 'copy of Antonia Romeo bullying report was destroyed'
No10's ethics chief Darren Tierney is said to have ordered a safe broken into, with claims a copy of a report into Antonia Romeo was subsequently destroyed.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police officer defends Christian preacher's freedom of speech after Whitechapel group say 'This is a Muslim area'
The confrontation sees a female Met Police officer being surrounded by males and telling them: 'In this country, we have freedom of speech.'

BBC World News
Open 
Minnesota Vikings receiver Moore dies aged 25
The Minnesota Vikings have paid tribute to Rondale Moore after the 25-year-old's death.

Sky News Home
Open 
Team GB win record-equalling medal haul at Winter Olympics
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin has won a bronze medal in the women's halfpipe final at the Winter Olympics in Italy.

Mail Online
Open 
Minister says 'nothing ruled out' on Andrew as MP urges Parliament to launch TREASON probe
Bridget Phillipson said the government is ready to do 'whatever it takes', but stressed action must wait until the police finish investigating.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Met police using AI tools supplied by Palantir to flag officer misconduct
Exclusive: Police Federation condemns deployment of US firm’s tech to analyse behaviour as ‘automated suspicion’Scotland Yard is using AI tools supplied by the US tech company Palantir to monitor staff behaviour in an attempt to root out failing officers, the Guardian has learned.The Metropolitan police has previously declined to confirm or deny whether it used technology supplied by the company, which also works for the Israeli military and Donald Trump’s ICE operation. It has now confirmed that it is using Palantir’s AI to analyse internal data about sickness levels, absences from duty and overtime patterns in an effort to identify potential shortcomings in professional standards. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
CalMac's newest ferry MV Isle of Islay arrives in Scotland
The vessel, which can carry 450 passengers and 100 cars or 14 HGVs, will soon serve the Kennacraig to Islay route.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine war: Exhausted troops not holding out hope for peace
Former DW correspondent Kostiantyn Honcharov joined the Ukrainian army in 2022. He describes the grim front-line situation after four years of fighting.

Ars Technica
Open 
Study shows how rocket launches pollute the atmosphere

Mail Online
Open 
The Italian fashion houses paying workers £1.74 an hour to make £3k jackets, and what's going on at scandal-hit brands like Valentino and Tod's
Scandal has rocked the Milan fashion scene, with some of its most famous names investigated for supply chains paying workers a pittance to produce £3,000 jackets.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The new treatment that turned my fine menopausal frizzy hair into a thick, sleek bob in just 20 minutes
Sitting in a salon chair waiting for my hair to be exposed to ice crystals might seem like an odd thing to be doing at this time of year.

Mail Online
Open 
The secret of how I beat my chronic migraine - and it WASN'T by using medication, therapy or avoiding triggers: My method could work for YOU
It was while working a summer job at the Wimbledon Championships that Amy Mowbray noticed flickering lines on the edges of her vision.

Mail Online
Open 
LIBBY PURVES: Sympathy for haunted, humiliated, idiot Andrew is hard to come by. But here's why I feel a little sad for him too...
For once we should be grateful for the slow and stately progression of the Law and welcome the imminent break from hourly updates about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm a fashion editor... this is the 'hideous' Spring/Summer 2026 trend women MUST avoid
They may have been all over the S/S 26 catwalks but, for Sophie Dearden-Howell, they're still a heinous fashion crime

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France to summon US ambassador after comments about death of far-right activist
Official US social media accounts posted about rise of ‘violent radical leftism’ after killing of Quentin Deranque in Lyon last weekThe French foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, has said he will summon Charles Kushner, the US ambassador to France, over comments related to the killing of the French far-right activist Quentin Deranque.Deranque was beaten to death in Lyon last week during a fight with alleged hard-left activists. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China overtakes US as Germany’s top trading partner
Friedrich Merz to meet Xi Jinping in Beijing as China overtakes US as country’s leading export destinationChina has overtaken the US as Germany’s top trading partner, figures have shown, as the chancellor, Friedrich Merz, prepares for his first visit to Beijing since taking office.Merz will head to China on Tuesday and will be welcomed with military honours on Wednesday in Beijing by the prime minister, Li Qiang, before later meeting the president, Xi Jinping, for talks over dinner, his spokesperson Sebastian Hille said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Amateur YouTube detectives’ constant streams put cases in jeopardy: ‘It’s clickbait’
Self-declared sleuths have inserted themselves into the search for Nancy Guthrie, compromising the investigation for views and clicksOn the 10th day of the search for Nancy Guthrie, reporters camped outside of the missing woman’s home noticed a strange man strut right up to the front door. It had been more than a week since the mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie had disappeared, and authorities had just announced they had a new lead from Ring footage of what looked like a “potential subject” attempting to tamper with the doorbell camera on the morning of her disappearance. So now who was this unknown person, clad in a gray top and black pants, carrying a large black bag and striding to the door?It was a Domino’s delivery driver. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How loose social ties can help heal political division | Eva M Meyersson Milgrom
Weak connections known as ‘bridge ties’ cross the boundaries that normally structure our lives. We must restore this connective tissueThe first time a woman I’ll call Shoshana went toBrandi Carlile’s music festival, she arrived alone. She had just been through another unsuccessful round of IVF. During one of the songs, about motherhood, she began to cry in the middle of the crowd. Then two women she had never met stepped closer and wordlessly wrapped their arms around her until her breathing slowed.“That’s when I realized,” Shoshana told me in an interview, “this place isn’t just about music.”Eva M Meyersson Milgrom is a social scientist and professor emerita from Stanford University, where she was affiliated with the department of sociology, the Institute of Economic Policy, and the Graduate School of Business. She is working on a book on the importance of diversifying our social networks Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dining across the divide: ‘Universities should be free. We all lose for every bright kid who doesn’t go’
Two south-westerners shared a love of boats, but how would they fare on tuition fees and NHS funding?Grant, 61, Yelverton, DevonOccupation Retired: restored properties Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Myth, monsters and making sense of a disenchanted world: why everyone is reading fantasy
I have made the leap from literary fiction to fantasy – for those who think it’s mere wish-fulfilment, here’s why we need that thing with the dragonsFantasy doesn’t need defending. It is one of the great cultural forms at the moment, all-pervading, ubiquitous. Maybe even the dominant form of writing just now, in line with the bookseller’s joke that contemporary publishing divides into A: romantasy and B: everything else.But it might need explaining a little bit, for those who don’t get its pleasures; who still see it as wish-fulfilment, or as a low form that literary fiction gets to look down upon or direct a puzzled tolerance towards. As a writer of literary fiction who has borrowed and rejoiced in fantasy tropes for years, and has now himself written an out-and-out fantasy, I’m beyond embarrassment. I’ve been reading and loving fantasy all my life, and for me its best creators stand comfortably alongside the greats of any genre. And yet, I’m still encountering a faint sense that there is something to be accounted for in writing fantasy. That I ought to have reasons for wanting to do that thing with the dragons, no matter how culturally pervasive it is. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: China’s Gu soars to gold, Germany dominate four-man bobsleigh – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email YaraWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How a Welsh village saved its forest … and its future
In an edited extract from her latest book, Hazel Sheffield sets out a new blueprint for community stewardship It was a Saturday in February 2020 when the flood came. It had been a wet winter, so wet it seemed that before the month was out, the brown trout of the River Taff might be washed clean out into Cardiff Bay before the fishing season had even begun. But this is Wales. People are used to a spot of rain. No one realised how bad it would get.For two days, it hammered on the windows of the houses at the top of the South Wales Valleys, where people tucked in their children before a sleepless night. It poured into the rivers at the bottom. By the time the rain departed again, many people would be standing in water up to their knees. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are we really overdiagnosing mental illness?
It’s tempting to dismiss the proliferation of labels as a fad, but there’s more to this phenomenon than a simple culture-war reading allowsMy psychological research rarely makes good comedy material, but in a standup show in London recently, those two worlds collided. One of the jokes was about how everyone is getting diagnosed with ADHD these days – about the social media videos that encourage viewers to identify common human experiences, like daydreaming or talking a lot, as evidence of the condition. The audience laughed because everyone got it – they’ve all witnessed how common it seems to have become in the last few years. When something becomes this prevalent in society, and this mystifying, it’s no surprise it ends up as a punchline.Part of my work as an academic involves trying to solve the puzzle of why so many more people, especially young people, are reporting symptoms of mental illness compared to even five or 10 years ago. (ADHD is a form of neurodivergence, rather than a mental illness, but both have seen an increase, so they are related questions.) Whenever I talk about this – to colleagues, school staff, parents – it doesn’t take long until someone brings up that judgment-laden, hot-button word: overdiagnosis. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘She would pop up in my sexual fantasies’: what happens when you fancy your therapist?
They’re often compassionate good listeners who focus on their clients’ needs – so is it any wonder many patients find themselves with a crush? A writer, who is in exactly this position, talks to people on both sides of the couchI was half-watching the latest series of the Netflix romcom Nobody Wants This when suddenly things got interesting. Spoiler alert: it had just been revealed that one of the characters (Morgan) was in a relationship with her newly ex-therapist (Dr Andy). While some of the characters freaked out, declaring the relationship very concerning, I felt a frisson of excitement. Because I, too, have harboured the desire to date my therapist.As it turns out, this fantasy is neither unusual nor unexpected. “Psychoanalysis almost insists on transference,” explains psychotherapist Charlotte Fox Weber, using the term coined by Sigmund Freud, the founding father of psychoanalysis, in his 1895 work Studies on Hysteria. The basic premise is that the patient projects old feelings, attitudes, desires or fantasies on to their therapist. This can manifest in numerous ways – often at the same time – covering the whole gamut of emotions and relationships, from love to hate, maternal to erotic, and everything in between. Continue reading...

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tech Life
We chat about a conversational AI that's almost human-like in its speech skills

Wired Top Stories
Open 
What Is Down Fill Power (2026): Fill Weight, Synthetics
Whether you’re looking for extra-warm jackets or bedding, you’ve probably seen this term. Let us, er, fill you in.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
What to Know About At-Home STI Tests: Pros, Cons, and Recommendations (2026)
It's easier than ever to test for sexually transmitted infections at home. We break down whether or not you should.

Mail Online
Open 
Corner shop is shut down after hygeine inspectors uncover 'worst mice infestation ever seen'
Crisp packets ripped into and eaten by the rodents were for sale on the shelves of a Premier Express in Portsmouth, Hampshire.

Mail Online
Open 
Dani Dyer horrifies fans as she reveals her mother Joanne gives her husband Jarod Bowen foot massages
The TV personality, 28, and West Ham captain, also 28, tied the knot in an intimate ceremony surrounded by their closest friends and family last May.

Sky News Home
Open 
Team GB win record-equalling medal haul at Winter Olympics
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin has won a bronze medal in the women's halfpipe final at the Winter Olympics in Italy.

Mail Online
Open 
Meet the Stanford University student who won bronze for Team GB at the Winter Olympics: Zoe Atkin on baffling her professors with her high-flying antics, 'fearing' the halfpipe - and her Beijing nightmare
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI IN MILAN: A significant chunk of her life is given over to their revered lecture theatres, where she has spent the past four years working towards a degree in symbolic systems.

BBC World News
Open 
Explosions kill police officer and injure 25 in western Ukraine
Twenty-five people were injured by explosions overnight in what officials are calling a terror attack.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The Baftas 2026 takes place tonight. Here's everything you need to know
The biggest night in the British film calendar is upon us - find out who's nominated and how to watch.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Arab, Muslim nations rebuke US envoy's Israel land claim
Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, suggested that Israel holds a biblical entitlement to a large portion of the Middle East.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ritual review – pizza, punch-ups and paint drying in an eight-hour epic with Orestes
Colab Tower, LondonGet lucky with your arrival time in this expansion of Aeschylus’s Oresteia and you’ll witness a fight or a sacrifice – but there are long dull patchesEgg yolk is being mixed up to make gold paint when I arrive at Ritual, an eight-hour-long performance installation in a windowless basement posing as a Mycenaean palace. I’ve just missed Orestes (a committed Charlie MacRae-Tod, in a hoodie and three-stripe trackies) fighting off a janitor with a knife, an audience member whispers to me, before being sternly shushed. Chastened, we return to watching paint dry.In this ambitious but under-resourced production from immersive company Witness, first performed in New York, this former prince is in exile, waiting for communication from the gods before taking revenge for the murder of his father. For as long or as little as we like, we are invited to wait with him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cuts | Graeme Wearden
Upping tariffs may have lifted the president’s mood but it is a headache for the Federal Reserve and its next chairDonald Trump and Denis Healey don’t have much in common. One of the greatest prime ministers Britain never had shares little of his famous hinterland with what some historians see as one of the worst occupants of the White House.But Trump would be well advised to remember Healey’s first law of holes – when you’re in one, stop digging. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: China’s Gu soars to gold as GB’s Atkin takes bronze in freeski halfpipe final – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email YaraWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘She did kill. There’s no grey area there’: Labour MP Naz Shah on the day she and her mother were arrested for murder
The politician was 18 when she and her mum were hauled off to a police station for the killing of the man she’d considered an uncle. What happened next would shape her future. She talks Labour’s woes, making mistakes, and why it’s finally time to share her own traumatic storyRead an extract from Naz Shah’s memoirNaz Shah found it thrilling when she was arrested on suspicion of murder. “I’ll be honest with you, I had fun. It was the most excitement I’d ever had in my flipping life. I’d never been to a police station before. I was 18 and wet behind the ears. I was this really sheltered kid who’d been arrested. And I was like, they’ve got it wrong, so in my head it was all going to be over soon,” the MP for Bradford West says. “They took my clothes and gave me this white suit to wear, and I was saying, ‘Ooh, I look foxy in this, don’t I? Can you imagine taking me on a date in this?’ I was having a right laugh with the police officers. Honestly, I was so naive.”Shah’s beloved “Uncle” Azam had died unexpectedly in April 1992. An autopsy revealed that he had been poisoned with arsenic. Shah and her mother, Zoora, who spoke little English, had cooked the previous night’s supper. They were arrested and taken to different police stations. Shah was released. Zoora admitted that she had made the dessert that contained the arsenic. After a month-long trial, she was convicted of Azam’s murder in December 1993 and sentenced to 20 years in jail. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Man, 20, stabbed to death at skate park named
A 20-year-old man who was stabbed to death at a skate park has been named.

TechRadar News
Open 
I’ve owned an EV for four years – and the one big solution to my range anxiety woes is stuck in political traffic

TechRadar News
Open 
France vs Italy Free Streams: TV Channels, Kick-Off time, Preview for Six Nations 2026 match

Slashdot
Open 
Has the AI Disruption Arrived - and Will It Just Make Software Cheaper and More Accessible?
Programmer/entrepreneur Paul Ford is the co-founder of AI-driven business software platform Aboard. This week he wrote a guest essay for the New York Times titled "The AI Disruption Has Arrived, and It Sure Is Fun," arguing that Anthropic's Claude Code "was always a helpful coding assistant, but in November it suddenly got much better, and ever since I've been knocking off side projects that had sat in folders for a decade or longer... [W]hen the stars align and my prompts work out, I can do hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of work for fun (fun for me) over weekends and evenings, for the price of the Claude $200-a-month."

He elaborates on his point on the Aboard.com blog:

I'm deeply convinced that it's possible to accelerate software development with AI coding - not deprofessionalize it entirely, or simplify it so that everything is prompts, but make it into a more accessible craft. Things which not long ago cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to pull off might come for hundreds of dollars, and be doable by you, or your cousin. This is a remarkable accelerant, dumped into the public square at a bad moment, with no guidance or manual - and the reaction of many people who could gain the most power from these tools is rejection and anxiety. But as I wrote....

I believe there are millions, maybe billions, of software products that don't exist but should: Dashboards, reports, apps, project trackers and countless others. People want these things to do their jobs, or to help others, but they can't find the budget. They make do with spreadsheets and to-do lists.

I don't expect to change any minds; that's not how minds work. I just wanted to make sure that I used the platform offered by the Times to say, in as cheerful a way as possible: Hey, this new power is real, and it should be in as many hands as possible. I believe everyone should have good software, and that it's more possible now than it was a few years ago.

From his guest essay:

Is the software I'm making for myself on my phone as good as handcrafted, bespoke code? No. But it's immediate and cheap. And the quantities, measured in lines of text, are large. It might fail a company's quality test, but it would meet every deadline. That is what makes A.I. coding such a shock to the system... What if software suddenly wanted to ship? What if all of that immense bureaucracy, the endless processes, the mind-boggling range of costs that you need to make the computer compute, just goes?

That doesn't mean that the software will be good. But most software today is not good. It simply means that products could go to market very quickly. And for lots of users, that's going to be fine. People don't judge A.I. code the same way they judge slop articles or glazed videos. They're not looking for the human connection of art. They're looking to achieve a goal. Code just has to work... In about six months you could do a lot of things that took me 20 years to learn. I'm writing all kinds of code I never could before - but you can, too. If we can't stop the freight train, we can at least hop on for a ride.

The simple truth is that I am less valuable than I used to be. It stings to be made obsolete, but it's fun to code on the train, too. And if this technology keeps improving, then all of the people who tell me how hard it is to make a report, place an order, upgrade an app or update a record - they could get the software they deserve, too. That might be a good trade, long term.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Kensington Palace release slick video of Kate at the rugby for her first appearance since Andrew arrest
England were defeated by Ireland in the Six Nations , doubling their score with 42 to 21, but you might not have known it watching this video, backed with triumphant music and English roses.

ZDNet News
Open 
Ready for your first smart ring? Here's a subscription-free one I recommend
RingConn's second-gen smart ring is an accessible health tracker that's competitively priced and doesn't require a subscription.

ZDNet News
Open 
I made the ultimate Windows keyboard shortcut guide (and they'll work for anyone)
These essential keyboard shortcuts can save you tons of time, and some of them were even new to me.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sheffield United aim to relegate Wednesday, Spurs v Arsenal buildup and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereLiam Rosenior has revealed that one of his Chelsea stars marked the wrong Burnley player in added time yesterday, resulting in Zian Flemming’s equaliser.The Chelsea head coach said: “An assignment was missed. An assignment, a marking assignment wasn’t done. Flemming, we know, is their best header of the ball. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘She did kill. There’s no grey area there’: Labour MP Naz Shah on the day she and her mother were arrested for murder
The politician was 18 when she and her mum were hauled off to a police station for the killing of the man she’d considered an uncle. What happened next would shape her future. She talks Labour’s woes, making mistakes, and why it’s finally time to share her own traumatic storyNaz Shah found it thrilling when she was arrested on suspicion of murder. “I’ll be honest with you, I had fun. It was the most excitement I’d ever had in my flipping life. I’d never been to a police station before. I was 18 and wet behind the ears. I was this really sheltered kid who’d been arrested. And I was like, they’ve got it wrong, so in my head it was all going to be over soon,” the MP for Bradford West says. “They took my clothes and gave me this white suit to wear, and I was saying, ‘Ooh, I look foxy in this, don’t I? Can you imagine taking me on a date in this?’ I was having a right laugh with the police officers. Honestly, I was so naive.”Shah’s beloved “Uncle” Azam had died unexpectedly in April 1992. An autopsy revealed that he had been poisoned with arsenic. Shah and her mother, Zoora, who spoke little English, had cooked the previous night’s supper. They were arrested and taken to different police stations. Shah was released. Zoora admitted that she had made the dessert that contained the arsenic. After a month-long trial, she was convicted of Azam’s murder in December 1993 and sentenced to 20 years in jail. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Team GB wins record-equalling medal haul at Winter Olympics
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin has won a bronze medal in the women's halfpipe final at the Winter Olympics in Italy.

The Hill
Open 
US arms sale to Taiwan clashes with Trump’s desire to strike trade deal with China
A U.S. arms sale to Taiwan is clashing with President Trump’s desire to strike a trade deal with China. Chinese President Xi Jinping has voiced opposition to the new major arms sale to Taiwan, which China sees as its territory, and the president took note. The arms package’s delivery to Taiwan is now up in...

The Hill
Open 
DHS tech buildout sparks backlash from Democrats
The Trump administration's deployment of a wide range of technologies to support its sweeping deportation push and respond to those protesting immigration raids is sparking pushback among Democrats and civil liberties advocates, who fear it may be abusing its power as it launches new tools. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has used funding from...

The Hill
Open 
GOP frets over competitive Texas Senate primary as early voting starts
Some Republicans are growing anxious that incumbent Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) could be ousted in the competitive Texas GOP primary for Senate, giving Democrats a rare opening in the red Lone Star State this fall. As James Talarico gains steam in the Democratic primary against Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas), across the aisle, Cornyn and some national Republicans...

CNET News
Open 
Premier League Soccer: Stream Nottingham Forest vs. Liverpool Live From Anywhere
The Tricky Trees look to build on encouraging European win as they host the top-five chasing Reds in the English Premier League.

CNET News
Open 
AI Slop Is Destroying the Internet. These Are the People Fighting to Save It
On the front line of the war on AI, these people are fighting for a better internet.

Telegraph
Open 
GB’s Zoe Atkin takes bronze after Eileen Gu soars to victory in freeski halfpipe
GB’s Zoe Atkin takes bronze after Eileen Gu soars to victory in freeski halfpipe

BBC UK News
Open 
Three people taken to hospital after 'serious traffic collision'
The Armagh Road in Moy is expected to be closed for a "significant period of time", police say.

Mail Online
Open 
When storm chasing goes wrong: Adrenaline junkie reveals how his car was trapped by felled power lines - as a tornado barreled towards him
Tanner Charles, 32, from Minnesota regularly seeks out tornados and crazy weather phenomena - but says one day three years ago saw his car thrown around like a 'tin can'.

Mail Online
Open 
'Wonder nutrient' that's a natural Ozempic, boosts skin health and even cuts bowel cancer risk - nutritionist EMMA BARDWELL reveals how to get more in your diet
Despite its impressive health credentials, 96 per cent of people in the UK fail to eat the recommended 30g a day of fibre. Most manage barely half that.

Mail Online
Open 
Millie Bobby Brown, 22, posts rare snap with baby daughter and says she feels 'so grateful' for her and husband Jake as she celebrates her birthday
Millie Bobby Brown posted an adorable snap with her baby daughter to mark her 22nd birthday over the weekend.

Mail Online
Open 
Number of male migrants in Crowborough former army barracks have doubled over past month
Council bosses say male migrants in Crowborough, East Sussex, have increased from 27 to 80 since January 22, when the first group arrived under the cover of darkness.

Mail Online
Open 
British skier Zoe Atkin wins brilliant BRONZE medal in freeski halfpipe final
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI: Having spent much of this trip in defence mode, Eileen Gu went on the attack on Sunday.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
GB's Atkin claims halfpipe bronze as Gu wins gold
Great Britain's Zoe Atkin takes bronze in the women's halfpipe final as China's Eileen Gu takes gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police officer defends Christian preacher's freedom of speech after Whitechapel group tell him 'This is a Muslim area'
The confrontation sees a female Met Police officer being surrounded by males and telling them: 'In this country, we have freedom of speech.'

Mail Online
Open 
ISABEL OAKESHOTT: A stark warning to the Palace that Andrew had been playing with fire
One summer evening, a prominent British businessman opened his laptop and began writing a long email...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Canada and USA to meet in charged Olympic finale
Milan-Cortina 2026 has been one of the most eventful Winter Olympics in history - in sporting and political terms - so it is appropriate that the final medal event could be the most enticing of all.

Russia Today News
Open 
UK mulls removing ex-Prince Andrew from royal succession – media

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump sending 'great hospital boat' to Greenland
Donald Trump has said he is sending a "great hospital boat" to Greenland, the semi-autonomous Danish territory he wants to acquire.

BBC UK News
Open 
'I love the look on his face' - The mum who takes her baby on wilderness adventures
Experienced mountaineer Morag Skelton has taken Hamish on skiing expeditions and an island-hopping camping trip.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister pledges that children will receive Send support ‘much more quickly’ under new reforms - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in England between the poorest pupils and their more affluent peersSearches are expected to continue today at Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s previous home – Royal Lodge, in Windsor – as calls grow for a probe into the former prince’s links with Jeffrey Epstein.Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s police and crime correspondent, Vikram Dodd, about what could be next for Andrew here:If the government bring forward this bill with the support of the King then we will back it. We have to be realistic. Andrew is the eighth in line to the throne, so there’s no chance of him becoming our monarch.And so parliament really should be focused on things that are of more importance to the public, whether that’s the economy, crime, the health service, immigration. But if the bill does come before parliament, then we’ll support it. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Eileen Gu finally wins gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics as she triumphs in halfpipe final amid 'traitor' controversy over decision to represent China
Having spent much of this trip in defence mode, Eileen Gu went on the attack on Sunday. It was to the detriment of the field that they found her in no mood to settle for a third silver medal.

BBC World News
Open 
US ambassador's Israel comments condemned by Arab and Muslim nations
Mike Huckabee suggested Israel would be justified in taking much of the Middle East on Biblical grounds.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The strategy of Russia’s liberal elite is clear: make your peace with Putin. This is how they survive | Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan
As the fourth anniversary looms of Russia’s war on Ukraine, those close to the Kremlin prosper while others merely strive to escape the worst repressionFour years into the full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia’s elite has shown no sign of resisting the very difficult spot that Vladimir Putin placed them in by acting without their consultation. Instead, it has largely adapted, reshaping itself in ways that ensure its survival in what increasingly looks like a state of permanent conflict.In the atmosphere of repression, Russian top-level officials and public intellectuals, who are tasked with ruling the country and shaping what society thinks and discusses, remain reluctant to express directly what they really think. The narratives they offer through culture are therefore some of the clearest expressions of how they see their role in a wartime country.Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan are Russian journalists in exile in London and authors of Our Dear Friends in Moscow: The Inside Story of a Broken Generation Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Saint Francis of Assisi’s skeleton goes on public display for first time
Hundreds of thousands of visitors expected for month-long display of 13th-century saint’s remainsSaint Francis of Assisi’s skeleton is going on full public display from Sunday for the first time, in a move that is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors.Inside a nitrogen-filled case with the Latin inscription “Corpus Sancti Francisci” (the body of Saint Francis), the remains are being shown in the Italian hillside town’s Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandSearches are expected to continue today at Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s previous home – Royal Lodge, in Windsor – as calls grow for a probe into the former prince’s links with Jeffrey Epstein.Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s police and crime correspondent, Vikram Dodd, about what could be next for Andrew here:If the government bring forward this bill with the support of the King then we will back it. We have to be realistic. Andrew is the eighth in line to the throne, so there’s no chance of him becoming our monarch.And so parliament really should be focused on things that are of more importance to the public, whether that’s the economy, crime, the health service, immigration. But if the bill does come before parliament, then we’ll support it. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Creatine Supplements Are Everywhere. Do I Need Them? (2026)
It’s the most studied supplement in sports medicine, but it’s not just for athletes anymore.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
How to Hide Google’s AI Overviews From Your Search Results
You can avoid Google’s AI summaries in your search results by simply adjusting your query. Or just switch search engines altogether.

Mail Online
Open 
Catholic monk who sent naked photos of himself to woman holidaymaker will not be prosecuted after it's ruled the snaps were 'spiritual'
Brother Titus Keet, 77, confessed to having 200 pictures of himself posing naked on a beach at daybreak, but says they are not sexual.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
This is how we do it: ‘He gives me the confidence to try things I’ve never done before’
A new relationship in their 50s brought adventure, curiosity and freedom for Alexandra and Laurent• How do you do it? Share the story of your sex life, anonymouslyI love how committed and loyal Laurent is. For him, I’m at the top of the pyramid Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: China’s Gu soars to gold as GB’s Atkin takes bronze in freeski halfpipe final – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandReform UK’s new economy spokesperson, Robert Jenrick, said his party would support legislation to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the line of succession.Speaking to Sky News, Jenrick, who left the Conservative frontbench last month, said:If the government bring forward this bill with the support of the King then we will back it. We have to be realistic. Andrew is the eighth in line to the throne, so there’s no chance of him becoming our monarch.And so parliament really should be focused on things that are of more importance to the public, whether that’s the economy, crime, the health service, immigration. But if the bill does come before parliament, then we’ll support it.We’ll look at any sensible proposals that do come forward. But it’s premature at the moment because we do have the police doing their work.They need to have the time and space to do so. As the king set out, no one is above the law, and it’s right that the police go wherever the evidence takes them. So that has to be the focus at the moment. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin wins bronze in record-equalling medal haul for Team GB at Winter Olympics
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin has won a bronze medal in the women's halfpipe final at the Winter Olympics in Italy.

BBC UK News
Open 
Scottish government deletes data from school 'sex survey'
The survey asked pupils as young as 14 about their sexual experiences but parents said they were not told about the nature of the questions.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Atkin wins halfpipe bronze for Team GB's fifth medal
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin wins bronze in the women's halfpipe to secure Great Britain's fifth medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics, equalling the team's record-best haul.

TechRadar News
Open 
Here's a sneaky way to watch the A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms finale for free

TechRadar News
Open 
This Magic Bullet Blender offers unbeatable value for under $30 on Amazon

TechRadar News
Open 
Hit the road, jack? Not at all, iFi's tiny Go Blu Air DAC brings the headphone port back to your phone — and levels up the audio to boot

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
China overtakes US as Germany’s top trading partner
Friedrich Merz to meet Xi Jinping in Beijing as China overtakes US as country’s leading export destinationChina has overtaken the US as Germany’s top trading partner, figures have shown, as the chancellor, Friedrich Merz, prepares for his first visit to Beijing since taking office.Merz will head to China on Tuesday and will be welcomed with military honours on Wednesday in Beijing by the prime minister, Li Qiang, before later meeting the president, Xi Jinping, for talks over dinner, his spokesperson, Sebastian Hille, said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Greenland does not need US hospital boat sent by Trump, says Denmark
Defence minister rebuffs US president’s claim that Arctic islanders are ‘not being taken care of’Greenland does not need medical assistance from other countries, Denmark has said, after Donald Trump said he was sending a hospital ship to the autonomous Danish territory that he wants to acquire.“The Greenlandic population receives the healthcare it needs. They receive it either in Greenland, or, if they require specialised treatment, they receive it in Denmark. So it’s not as if there’s a need for a special healthcare initiative in Greenland,” the country’s defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, told the Danish broadcaster DR on Sunday. Continue reading...

UK Government News
Open 
More children to be protected from deadly viruses
New changes to the GP contract will help protect thousands more children across the country from deadly and highly infectious diseases.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the abandoned Winter Olympics ghost-town: Site left derelict despite £5.2BILLION government spend 20 years ago... so, will Milan Cortina suffer the same fate?
There is significant overgrowth and the venue resembles a ghost town. The bobsleigh track has fallen to bits while graffiti covers large parts of the facility, with the Alps in view in the background.

Mail Online
Open 
The collapse of Communist Cuba: Piles of garbage block the streets, fuel and food are running out - and blackouts plunge the island into darkness as Trump brings the island to its knees
As the US tightens its economic noose over the communist-run island and fuel grows scarce, its inhabitants are being pushed to the edge, scrambling to find food, power and survival.

Mail Online
Open 
Vera Wang, 76, flaunts her midriff in a black co-ord as she shows off her age-defying looks at the BAFTA Nominees Party in London
The designer, 76, was among the stars who attended the party at the National Portrait Gallery ahead of Sunday's award ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
Liza Minnelli shares heartbreaking details of her upbringing with mother Judy Garland who was 'poisoned with uppers and downers' as a child - before finding love with husband who she found in bed with another man
Liza Minnelli has shared heartbreaking details of her upbringing with mother Judy Garland - before describing how she once found her husband in bed with another man in an insightful look into her life.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best web hosting services of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
Whether you're looking for a small online project web host or a scalable option with enterprise-ready infrastructure, we have a recommendation for you.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Pakistan launches deadly strikes on Afghanistan
Pakistan says the strikes were retaliation for recent suicide bombings in the country.

Gizmodo
Open 
Flock Cameras Have a People-Love-Smashing-Them Problem
People just aren't being very nice to these mass surveillance devices.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ritual review – eight-hour immersive performance is ambitious but under-resourced
Colab Tower, LondonGet lucky with your arrival time in this expansion of Aeschylus’s Oresteia and you’ll witness a fight or a sacrifice – but there are long dull patchesEgg yolk is being mixed up to make gold paint when I arrive at Ritual, an eight-hour-long performance installation in a windowless basement posing as a Mycenaean palace. I’ve just missed Orestes (a committed Charlie MacRae-Tod, in a hoodie and three-stripe trackies) fighting off a janitor with a knife, an audience member whispers to me, before being sternly shushed. Chastened, we return to watching paint dry.In this ambitious but under-resourced production from immersive company Witness, first performed in New York, this former prince is in exile, waiting for communication from the gods before taking revenge for the murder of his father. For as long or as little as we like, we are invited to wait with him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Maria Bamford review – an unflinching comedian in complete command of every joke and every step
Soho Theatre Walthamstow, LondonShe draws us in with bursts of manic physical expression and never stops poking fun at her own quirks and compulsions‘Why did Americans decide to elect a dictator for a second time?” a freshly post-somersaulted Maria Bamford asks her audience. One word: money. In her new show, soon to embark on a tour around North America, she digs into the seductions, benefits and complications of cash for herself, her friends and the anxious culture that surrounds them. Despite inheriting what she calls “generational wealth” after the early deaths of both her parents, longtime presences in her act, Bamford still approaches the world with a fundamentally economic mindset.That’s the idea on paper. In practice, Bamford has never been one for clean narrative arcs. Instead, she draws us in with bursts of manic physical expression: she runs in tiptoed circles before dropping fully outstretched to the floor, all while holding the mic. Bamford is a comedian in complete command of every joke, every step. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A global hero’: Jesse Jackson’s legacy of activism around the world
From opposing apartheid in South Africa to supporting Palestinian rights, the US civil rights leader left his mark across the globeWhen Jesse Jackson called for the Democratic party platform to include Palestinian statehood, the pushback was fierce. “While we had strong support from delegates at the convention, there was still a fear factor that the issue couldn’t be discussed,” recalls James Zogby, who was deputy manager of Jackson’s presidential campaign. “I was told by the [nominee Michael] Dukakis negotiators, if you even say the P-word, you’ll destroy the Democratic party.”Jackson’s effort did not succeed at the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. But 10 Democratic state parties had already passed resolutions in favour of Palestinian self-determination. And as the decades rolled by, more and more progressives came to share Jackson’s stance. Zogby, founder of the Arab American Institute, reflects: “He was way ahead of the base. Even the activists who supported Palestinians did not have the same depth of understanding.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Greenland does not need US hospital boat sent by Trump, says Denmark
Defence minister rebuffs US president’s claim that Arctic islanders are ‘not being taken care of’Greenland does not need medical assistance from other countries, Denmark’s defence minister has said, after Donald Trump said he was sending a hospital ship to the autonomous Danish territory that he wants to acquire.“The Greenlandic population receives the healthcare it needs. They receive it either in Greenland, or, if they require specialised treatment, they receive it in Denmark. So it’s not as if there’s a need for a special healthcare initiative in Greenland,” the country’s defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, told the Danish broadcaster DR on Sunday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandThe government is considering introducing legislation to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, King Charles’s brother, from the line of royal succession.Andrew was arrested on Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Police took him to Aylsham police station in Norfolk for questioning about allegations he shared confidential material with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.So we’re not ruling anything out around this. But we have obviously got a live police investigation under way, so we’ll not be setting out further steps until the police have been able to do their work. And wherever that investigation, wherever the evidence takes them.So we’ve said that we have to keep all of these options available to us, but you’ll appreciate that because we have a live police investigation under way it’s right that the police are allowed to do their job. Once that is concluded, then of course we’ll consider in discussion with the royal family, with the King what further action is needed.But I do just think as well, in all of this, we really shouldn’t lose sight of where this began. And where this began was with young women and girls being exploited over an extended period of time by a network of very powerful men. And we can’t ever forget that.I think that we want to be really constructive where it comes to this. But I do have some big concerns about what is being floated. Obviously, we’ll see the detail tomorrow. But for too many parents … they’ve had to fight for the support and the idea that they’re going to be reassessed will be genuinely frightening. And I do worry about that …It has been way too hard for many parents to get that support. But once that support is in place for many young people that has actually been very effective. So it’s important that that is not taken away. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Effective' SEND support won't be taken away, minister says
But the education secretary says children "will be reviewed in terms of their needs", under planned reforms.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
I wore this rugged Suunto smartwatch for months, and I reckon Garmin's got competition in the outdoor superwatch arena

Mail Online
Open 
Who knew! Meghan imparts new As Ever hosting advice to chill her branded Brut before serving - as she shows off huge pear diamond ring
The Duchess of Sussex, 44, offered the 'tip' while showcasing her As Ever bottles of the celebratory drink in a series of new photos on Instagram.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess Andre says vicious row between dad Peter and mum Katie Price 'RUINED' her ITV show as she opens up about their bitter feud
The rising star, 18, is back with the second series of her ITV2 reality show, The Princess Diaries.

Mail Online
Open 
Kym Marsh recounts 'grim' moment she was fat-shamed by TV bosses and left her feeling 'insecure and unattractive' moments before performance - and makes defiant vow to her critics
Kym Marsh first shot to fame on ITV talent show Popstars, joining the band Hear'Say alongside Myleene Klass , Noel Sullivan, Suzanne Shaw and Danny Foster.

Mail Online
Open 
Is your boss a psychopath? Scientists reveal how to spot a 'dark leader' - and how to stop them from ruining your life
You might already think your boss is a lunatic - but a scientist has revealed how to truly tell if they are a 'dark leader'.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Hero London Bridge terror attack police detective sacked for joking about travellers on WhatsApp
A hero police detective amongst the first on the scene of the London Bridge terror attack who was sacked for making jokes about travellers on WhatsApp has been pictured for the first time.

Mail Online
Open 
Film reviews: Wasteman and If I Had Legs I'd Kick You both get FOUR STARS for brutal brilliance - but prepare to feel exhausted, warns BRIAN VINER
BRUTAL and harrowing, the gripping prison thriller Wasteman shows us both that British film-making is in good shape - and that the British penal system is not.

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles needs to admit what he knew about Andrew, when he found out and what he did about it, Royal expert insists
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on the morning of his 66th birthday on Thursday over suspicions of misconduct in public office.

Mail Online
Open 
Unmarked police arrive at Windsor Lodge this morning as probe into Andrew continues amid calls for Treason investigation
The former prince, 66, was arrested on Thursday morning on suspicion of misconduct in a public office, and spent 11 hours in police custody before being released pending further investigation.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor may have used taxpayer-funded planes and RAF bases to meet Jeffrey Epstein, Gordon Brown claims
The former Prime Minister has demanded an investigation into the disgraced former Prince's 10-year tenure as a trade envoy in letters sent to various police forces.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: How glamorous German Countess millionaire connected vile Jeffrey Epstein to the heart of UK government - and called him 'baby'
Nicole Junkermann, a London-based technology investor, stepped down as a trustee of a cancer charity after revelations of her 20-year friendship with Epstein.

Russia Today News
Open 
Spain’s Sagrada Familia reaches maximum height (VIDEO)

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump says sending 'great hospital boat' to Greenland
The US president said a vessel was "on the way" to Greenland, with the move coming amid a rift between the US and Europe over control of the island. Denmark hit back, saying no medical help was needed.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
High energy prices threaten UK’s status as manufacturing power, business groups say
CBI and Energy UK report finds 40% of firms have cut investment as electricity costs remain far above pre-Ukraine levels‘It’s a ticking timebomb’: food producers sound alarm on rise in energy chargesThe UK is at risk of losing its status as a major manufacturing centre after a sharp rise in energy prices that has forced about 40% of businesses to cut back investment, according to a report by the CBI and Energy UK.In a stinging message to ministers, the report said British businesses – from chemical producers to pubs and restaurants – were being undermined by a failure to cap prices and upgrade the UK’s ageing gas and electricity networks. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'Sustainable' Loch Lomond viewpoint removed as wood rotted away
The park authority said "significant structural issues" had been found with the structure due to a design flaw.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Saint Francis of Assisi’s skeleton goes on public display for first time
Hundreds of thousands of visitors expected for month-long display of remains of 13th-century saintSaint Francis of Assisi’s skeleton is going on full public display from Sunday for the first time, in a move that is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors.Inside a nitrogen-filled plexiglass case with the Latin inscription “Corpus Sancti Francisci” (the body of Saint Francis), the remains are being shown in the Italian hillside town’s Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: GB’s Zoe Atkin goes for medal in freeski halfpipe final, plus Canada v USA in ice hockey – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best Electric Toothbrush, Backed by Real-Life Testing (2026)
How to choose a toothbrush that protects your smile and gum health.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
How to View the ‘Blood Moon’ Total Lunar Eclipse on March 3
Next month, the Earth will come between the sun and the moon, causing the moon to take on an eerie reddish hue.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
We conduct affairs of state in a building that’s riddled with asbestos and mice. Can’t Britain do any better? | Rupa Huq
Parliament is steeped in history, but too many parts of the estate are dangerous and squalid. The promised upgrade can’t come a minute too soonKemi Badenoch, mid-TV interview with Robert Peston at the House of Commons recently, was embarrassingly upstaged by a mouse. Just another day in a parliament building not fit for purpose.Last week, a critical meeting between the prime minister and his more than 400 MPs plus assorted peers (who total another 800) happened in a room only big enough to accommodate 170. Consider that the Commons chamber itself seats only 430 of the total 650 MPs. That same day, exhibition boards went up around parliament explaining the “restoration and renewal” options for the Palace of Westminster. They are expected to be voted on as early as March.Rupa Huq is Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: women’s freeski halfpipe final, plus Canada and USA go for ice hockey gold – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: New rules aim to give asylum-seekers job access
Germany is hoping to boost integration by making it possible for asylum-seekers to start working after just three months in the country. Meanwhile, a social media ban for children is gaining momentum. Follow DW.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
We conduct affairs of state in a building that’s riddled with asbestos with mice. Can’t Britain do any better? | Rupa Huq
Parliament is steeped in history, but too many parts of the estate are dangerous and squalid. The promised upgrade can’t come a minute too soonKemi Badenoch, mid-TV interview with Robert Peston at the House of Commons recently, was embarrassingly upstaged by a mouse. Just another day in a parliament building not fit for purpose.Last week, a critical meeting between the prime minister and his more than 400 MPs plus assorted peers (who total another 800) happened in a room only big enough to accommodate 170. Consider that the Commons chamber itself seats only 430 of the total 650 MPs. That same day, exhibition boards went up around parliament explaining the “restoration and renewal” options for the Palace of Westminster. They are expected to be voted on as early as March.Rupa Huq is Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: women’s freeski halfpipe final and Canada v USA in ice hockey final – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A reminder of how careless I was’: from cringe cartoons to cancelled rockstars, the tattoos fans regret
What happens when you’re sporting signs of your devotion long after your idol has fallen from grace? Meet the fans whose tattoos have become embarrassing – even problematic On 20 February 2012, Coté Arias met Morrissey at a fan meet-up in Santiago, Chile. The former Smiths frontman signed her forearm in spiky capitalised lettering, which Coté later had traced permanently on to her skin with ink. Her years-long plan for the tattoo, which had started with her founding Morrissey’s Chilean fanclub, had worked. “Morrissey had such an impact on me growing up,” she says. “I struggled with shyness and lacked confidence for much of my life, and his lyrics helped me feel seen while transitioning into adulthood.”But in recent years, that inked signature has taken on more complicated associations for Coté. “The tattoo is very visible,” she says, “so it’s brought up many discussions regarding Morrissey’s comments.” Morrissey has publicly supported a far-right party, and made inflammatory comments about immigration, but denies allegations of racism. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A global hero’: Jesse’s Jackson’s legacy of activism around the world
From opposing apartheid in South Africa to supporting Palestinian rights, the US civil rights leader left his mark across the globeWhen Jesse Jackson called for the Democratic party platform to include Palestinian statehood, the pushback was fierce. “While we had strong support from delegates at the convention, there was still a fear factor that the issue couldn’t be discussed,” recalls James Zogby, who was deputy manager of Jackson’s presidential campaign. “I was told by the [nominee Michael] Dukakis negotiators, if you even say the P-word, you’ll destroy the Democratic party.”Jackson’s effort did not succeed at the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. But 10 Democratic state parties had already passed resolutions in favour of Palestinian self-determination. And as the decades rolled by, more and more progressives came to share Jackson’s stance. Zogby, founder of the Arab American Institute, reflects: “He was way ahead of the base. Even the activists who supported Palestinians did not have the same depth of understanding.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I’m going to fight’: freed Venezuelan activist on life after Maduro’s downfall
Jesús Armas’s joy at being released has been tempered by reality that the march towards democracy will be slowJesús Armas was asleep inside Venezuela’s most infamous political prison at the start of January when a thunderous explosion and a blackout announced the start of a new era.The activist remembers roars of excitement rippling through the jail’s cells as befuddled guards scurried around “like something really big was happening”. Prisoners began to belt out Venezuela’s national anthem, a stirring battle cry against tyranny: “Glory to the brave people! … Down with the chains! … Death to oppression!” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandA total overhaul of the special educational needs and disabilities (Send) system is due to be unveiled on Monday in a schools white paper that could face major opposition from Labour MPs.The changes will raise the bar at which children in England qualify for an education, health and care plan (EHCP), which legally entitles children with Send to get support. EHCPs will be reserved for children with the most severe and complex needs, but new plans for children on lower tiers will still confer additional support and legal rights. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
High energy prices threaten UK’s status as manufacturing power, business groups say
CBI and Energy UK report finds 40% of firms have cut investment as electricity costs remain far above pre-Ukraine levels‘Eye-watering numbers’: food producers sound alarm on rise in energy chargesThe UK is at risk of losing its status as a major manufacturing centre after a sharp rise in energy prices that has forced about 40% of businesses to cut back investment, according to a report by the CBI and Energy UK.In a stinging message to ministers, the report said British businesses – from chemical producers to pubs and restaurants – were being undermined by a failure to cap prices and upgrade the UK’s ageing gas and electricity networks. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Fundraiser for family of late Grey's Anatomy actor surpasses £200,000
A fundraiser has secured more than $275,000 (£200,000) for the family of the late Grey's Anatomy actor Eric Dane, who died on Thursday at the age of 53.

Propublica
Open 
The Victims Who Fought Back
The post The Victims Who Fought Back appeared first on ProPublica.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Super 8 at T20 World Cup 2026: Free Streams, TV Channels, Schedule, Today's Games

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch India vs South Africa: Free Streams, TV Channels & Preview for T20 World Cup 2026 match

Mail Online
Open 
MP calls for Parliament to launch TREASON probe into Andrew and Mandelson
Former security minister Tom Tugendhat said a special committee of MPs, peers and retired judges should look into the implications for the state.

The Register
Open 
UK council faces data breach claim after mishandling trans complaints
Confidential complainant details passed to local politician following debate A UK councillor has dubbed her local authority's data breach "crazy" after the personal details of individuals behind a series of complaints were revealed to her.…

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandThe education secretary is asked about the growing anger of the cost of student loans which has escalated since the chancellor’s decision last November to freeze the salary threshold for “plan 2” student loan repayments for three years.Rachel Reeves said the salary at which plan 2 student loans must be paid back would be frozen at £29,385 for three years starting from next April. It means borrowers will have to pay even more towards their student loans as they benefit from pay rises.Now I get the problem. I see the issue. In reality, as a government, you have to look at a question of priorities and what you can do and how fast you can do it. Given the shape of what we have in the public finances, this is really hard.Part of what we’ve seen is that support for children with Send has been treated almost as an entirely separate issue, rather than it being integral to our school system. Lots of children at some point during their school lives will experience some form of challenge, will need extra support.But the system that we have at the moment… is one that has made it the case that in order to get the support that children need, parents have to fight really hard to get that education, health and care plan. I’ve heard from so many parents just how difficult, how devastating that has been. It can take years. It’s really adversarial.Yes. We will make sure that children get support much, much more quickly than is the case right now. And the commitment that I give to parents is that when they see all of the documents published tomorrow what they will see is a government that is focused on delivering better outcomes for their children. I am fiercely ambitious for every child in our country. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Minister squirms as Tories outflank Labour with pledge to slash eye-watering student loan repayments by cutting 100,000 'low quality' university places
Kemi Badenoch is proposing to get rid of 100,000 places on 'low quality' university courses to fund an overhaul.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh, curling and Canada v USA ice hockey final on last day – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomWe’re heading over to Livigno shortly for the women’s halfpipe. Team GB’s Zoe Atkin qualified first but there is plenty of competition, not least from China’s Eileen Gu.Some big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereLiam Rosenior has revealed that one of his Chelsea stars marked the wrong Burnley player in added time yesterday, resulting in Zian Flemming’s equaliser.The Chelsea head coach said: “An assignment was missed. An assignment, a marking assignment wasn’t done. Flemming, we know, is their best header of the ball. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lanka v England: T20 World Cup Super 8s cricket – live
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaIn the battle of the anthems, a crushing win by Sri Lanka’s jaunty tune. The crowd, with parasol, flag and face paint, sing along enthusiastically.More news from Simon, who has become something of a banana expert on his trip. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh, curling and Canada v USA ice hockey final on last day – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomSome big news coming out of the 50km women’s cross-country skiing, with Frida Karlsson pulling out. The Swede was the gold meal favourite having won the skiathlon and the 10km intervals, as well as a silver in 4x7.5km relay.The Americans have a disaster run there. They’ve lost more than a second, largely as a result of a huge tap and fishtail coming out of the start ramp. They’ll be tumbling down the rankings. I’ll have those standings in full later ahead of the fourth and final runs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandBridget Phillipson is asked about the government’s school reforms, namely around those concerning children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) in England.Trevor Phillips points out to her that there are 1.7 million children with special educational needs, nearly 500,000 of whom are school pupils. He says the proportion of children with education, health and care (EHCP) plans – which identify a child’s needs and set out the support they should receive – has been increasing. He asks why this may be and Phillipson replies:Part of what we’ve seen is that support for children with Send has been treated almost as an entirely separate issue, rather than it being integral to our school system. Lots of children at some point during their school lives will experience some form of challenge, will need extra support.But the system that we have at the moment… is one that has made it the case that in order to get the support that children need, parents have to fight really hard to get that education, health and care plan. I’ve heard from so many parents just how difficult, how devastating that has been. It can take years. It’s really adversarial.Yes. We will make sure that children get support much, much more quickly than is the case right now. And the commitment that I give to parents is that when they see all of the documents published tomorrow what they will see is a government that is focused on delivering better outcomes for their children. I am fiercely ambitious for every child in our country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh, curling and Canada v USA ice hockey final on last day – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomThe Swiss are less clean with their run, but they post their second-quickest time (54.69) which sees them lose ground on the team above them.The Swiss are down in 54.55, quicker than Ammour’s sled in the third run but not quick enough to move up into the medal positions. Neither can the Italians, who get down in a tidy fashion but a lack of speed out of the gate sees them post a 54.57 and remain a couple of hundredths off bronze. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Less snow, or more risk? What you need to know about avalanches and climate change
Rising temperatures are forcing some ski resorts to close, while leaving others at greater risk of extreme weatherAvalanches kill about 100 people in Europe each year, with vast masses of ice, snow and rock regularly crashing down on hikers and skiers who have been caught unawares.The structure of the snow, angle of the slope and variation of the weather can dictate whether a gentle disturbance – like a gust of wind or the glide of a snowboard – can trigger a deadly shift in the mountain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereElsewhere in the Premier League yesterday, Zian Flemming scored a late equaliser against Chelsea to earn a point for Burnley.Manchester City moved within two points of Arsenal last night with a 2-0 win over Newcastle at the Etihad Stadium. Nico O’Reilly scored a first-half brace to pile the pressure on the Gunners ahead of today’s North London Derby. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lanka v England: T20 World Cup Super 8s cricket – live
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaSky have roped in Moeen Ali as commentator and he’s quite charming – and somehow looks unruffled in a long sleeved grey polo shirt in the high humidity of Pallekele.England are unchanged: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh, curling and Canada v USA ice hockey final on last day – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomBrad Hall’s Team GB are next. They get off quick with 4.78 start but with perfection required this is a little short. There are a couple of errors in turns one and two, with speed not picking up further down the course.The time of 54.66secs is much better than their second run (55.04) but Lochner’s team is further off in the distance, 1.23secs ahead. Team GB are only 0.31 seconds behind third-placed Ammour’s third-place German crew but that’s a lot to ask in one run. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘What do I play at a party? Oasis’s Wonderwall goes down a storm’: Alex James’s honest playlist
The Blur bassist loves his Britpop rivals, weeps over Radiohead’s Creep and finds Chitty Chitty Bang Bang sexy. But which Beatles hit did he get sick of?The first song I fell in love with
I remember standing up in year 3 and doing the routine to The Trail of the Lonesome Pine by Laurel and Hardy and the Avalon Boys. I really wanted it for Christmas – it went to No 2 in 1975 – and Father Christmas managed to get it in my stocking.The first single I bought
I was on a canal boat holiday with the Scouts and Come on Eileen by Dexys Midnight Runners was all over the radio, so I went down on my bike to buy it from Wilco in Bradpole Road in Bournemouth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran willing to dilute uranium stockpile as fresh protests erupt
Proposal will be at heart of offer to US as Trump considers whether to attack IranIran is refusing to export its 300kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium, but is willing to dilute the purity of the stockpile it holds under the supervision of UN nuclear inspectorate the IAEA, Iranian sources have said.The proposal will be at the heart of the offer Iran is due to make to the US in the next few days, as the US president, Donald Trump, weighs whether to use his vast naval buildup in the Middle East to attack the country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lay out plans to reduce gap between poorest and most affluent pupils - UK politics live
The government plans to halve the attainment gap in EnglandGood morning and welcome to our live coverage of UK politics. The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, will be speaking to the BBC and Sky News shortly and will likely be asked about government plans to halve the attainment gap between the poorest pupils in England and their more affluent peers.The schools white paper, set to be published in full tomorrow, will set a target to halve the disadvantage gap by the time children born in this parliament finish secondary school. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Cheapest day to travel has changed - and it could save you 18% on flights | Money newsletter
More than 160,000 people have now signed up to our free Money newsletter, which brings the kind of content you enjoy in the award-winning Money blog directly to your inbox every Friday.

Mail Online
Open 
As Labour are accused of creating a 'jobless generation' in Britain - what percentage of young people are on jobless benefits in YOUR area?
Some parts of Britain are being hit worse by a joblessness crisis among young people than other areas, according to House of Commons Library data.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the kennel from hell where 41 animals were found dead - amid fears its sadistic owner may be responsible for the deaths of hundreds of pets whose owners gave him £15k a month
Oaveed Rahman, 26, posed as a kind-hearted animal lover to deceive owners into handing over their problem pets - but then butchered them and kept tens of thousands of pounds.

Mail Online
Open 
Secrets of Kim Jong Un's sexual 'Pleasure Squad': Women and girls hand-picked to 'satisfy' North Korean leaders so a young virgin's life force can be absorbed during sex
In 2015, just over three years after he became the third supreme leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un resurrected a sordid family tradition, still shrouded in mystery today.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer scrambles to stop Trump's new 15% tariff onslaught inflicting fresh damage on UK economy
Donald Trump has escalated his response after the Supreme Court dramatically struck down his 'liberation day' reciprocal levies on Friday.

Mail Online
Open 
Vera Wang, 76, flaunts her toned abs in a black co-ord as she shows off her age-defying looks at the BAFTA Awards Nominees Party in London
The designer, 76, was among the stars who attended the party at the National Portrait Gallery ahead of Sunday's award ceremony.

Mail Online
Open 
The BAFTAs most shocking moments: From physical fights to awkward blunders and the unlikely interaction between Kylie Jenner and David Tennant
This year's BAFTAs is just hours away with the biggest Hollywood stars set to descend to the Southbank's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday afternoon.

Mail Online
Open 
Love Island's Faye Winters reveals the truth behind TV's most complained about scene that sparked 25k Ofcom complaints - as she offers advice to the All Stars amid this year's bullying row
On Faye's series back in 2021, Love Island received a record breaking 25,000 complaints to the broadcast watchdog following her expletive-filled rant.

Mail Online
Open 
Liza Minnelli shares heartbreaking details of her upbringing with mother Judy Garland who was 'poisoned with uppers and downers' as a child - before finding love with husband who she found in bed with another man
Liza Minnelli has shared heartbreaking details of her upbringing with mother Judy Garland - before describing how she once found her husband in bed with another man.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Amazing!' - Klaebo sets record for most golds won at a single Winter Olympics
Norway's Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo sets the record for the most golds won at a single Winter Olympics, winning his sixth, and the 11th of his career, in the men's 50km mass start.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump sending hospital ship to Greenland ‘to care for the sick’

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lanka v England: T20 World Cup Super 8s cricket – live
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Tanya“We’ve been chasing well so, I’m very happy,” says Dasun Shanaka, “and very confident.”Harry Brook would have fielded too, but he looks happy enough. “We’ve got to be brave and take them on.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh, curling and Canada v USA ice hockey final on last day – live
Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | BriefingFollow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TomLochner’s team start 0.6secs faster than Lochner’s team but he’s losing time further down the track and the 54.30secs finishing time means the time advantage for the leaders grows to 0.48secs.We’re straight into it with the four-man bobsleigh. The leaders, the Johannes Lochner’s German crew are down in 54.25, not his best but not far off. Now what can Francesco Friedrich do with Germany’s second-place team? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lanka v England: T20 World Cup Super 8s cricket – live
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Tanya“We’ve been chasing well so, I’m very happy,” says Dasun Shanaka, “and very confident.”He also has news of England’s best player – Sam Curran. “Curran has warmed up with strapping on his right leg. Wasn’t stopping him bowling. He was wearing it the other day also, probably no big deal” Continue reading...

Autosport F1
Open 
Russell: Red Bull still holds best energy deployment in F1
Mercedes star George Russell is adamant that Red Bull holds the best energy deployment on the Formula 1 grid, with pre-season testing for the 2026 campaign now finished.This year will introduce widespread regulation changes, and one of the alterations concerns the power unit, which holds more electrical energy, meaning battery harvesting will play a key role in grands prix.It may include ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
What is the release date for Bridgerton season 4 part 2 on Netflix?

Digital Trends
Open 
Elon Musk confirms target window for next Starship launch
If you’re wondering what happened to the Starship, then rest assured, SpaceX engineers are still working to get it airborne again soon. In fact, in a post on X on Saturday, SpaceX chief Elon Musk confirmed an earlier stated target window for the 12th launch of the most powerful rocket: next month. In that case, [&#8230;]
The post Elon Musk confirms target window for next Starship launch appeared first on Digital Trends.

Slashdot
Open 
After 16 Years, 'Interim' CTO Finally Eradicating Fujitsu and Horizon From the UK's Post Office
Besides running tech operations at the UK's Post Office, their interim CTO is also removing and replacing Fujitsu's Horizon system, which Computer Weekly describes as "the error-ridden software that a public inquiry linked to 13 people taking their own lives."

After over 16 years of covering the scandal they'd first discovered back in 2009, Computer Weekly now talks to CTO Paul Anastassi about his plans to finally remove every trace of the Horizon system that's been in use at Post Office branches for over 30 years - before the year 2030:



"There are more than 80 components that make up the Horizon platform, and only half of those are managed by Fujitsu," said Anastassi. "The other components are internal and often with other third parties as well," he added... The plan is to introduce a modern front end that is device agnostic. "We want to get away from [the need] to have a certain device on a certain terminal in your branch. We want to provide flexibility around that...."

Anastassi is not the first person to be given the task of terminating Horizon and ending Fujitsu's contract. In 2015, the Post Office began a project to replace Fujitsu and Horizon with IBM and its technology, but after things got complex, Post Office directors went crawling back to Fujitsu. Then, after Horizon was proved in the High Court to be at fault for the account shortfalls that subpostmasters were blamed and punished for, the Post Office knew it had to change the system. This culminated in the New Branch IT (NBIT) project, but this ran into trouble and was eventually axed. This was before Anastassi's time, and before that of its new top team of executives....
Things are finally moving at pace, and by the summer of this year, two separate contracts will be signed with suppliers, signalling the beginning of the final act for Fujitsu and its Horizon system.
Anastassi has 30 years of IT management experience, the article points out, and he estimates the project will even bring "a considerable cost saving over what we currently pay for Fujitsu."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC UK News
Open 
Michael McIntyre plays ultimate prank on EastEnders superfan
Amanda Grey's furniture, clothes and even members of her family made sneaky appearances on the soap.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereYesterday’s Premier League resultsAston Villa 1-1 Leeds UnitedBrentford 0-2 BrightonChelsea 1-1 BurnleyWest Ham 0-0 BournemouthManchester City 2-1 Newcastle Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The most played music artists for UK cities - some may surprise you
Spotify and YouTube's streaming data for 2025 shows some interesting variations in listening habits.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us here“When did the reality dawn? Perhaps it was towards the end of the first half of West Ham’s game at Chelsea at the end of January with the away side leading 2-0. Or perhaps it was when West Ham took the lead against Manchester United 10 days later. As it turned out, West Ham won neither fixture; had they done so they would have had five points more and so been level with Tottenham going into this weekend. And then Tottenham’s proximity to relegation could not have been denied.West Ham’s revival means this isn’t like last season, when a win at Ipswich at the end of February took Tottenham to 33 points and as good as confirmed their continued presence in the Premier League, allowing Ange Postecoglou to focus on Europe. Were Spurs to pull off something extremely unlikely and beat Arsenal on Sunday, they would move to 32 and, for all the glee their fans would feel, nobody would feel secure…” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lanka v England: T20 World Cup Super 8s cricket – live
Updates from 9.30am start (GMT) in Pallekele Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaYesterday, the opening Super Eight match between New Zealand and Pakistan at Colombo was washed out without a ball bowled, with both sides taking one point.Good morning! After skirting around the edges of the tournament for a few weeks, here, at last, be monsters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We are not scared’: the Ukrainians building families in the shadow of war
Birthrates have fallen since Russia’s invasion but some have held on to hope and are bringing up children despite risksFour years ago Russian troops were a few kilometres away from Leleka maternity hospital, beyond a pine forest and a lake. Vladimir Putin’s plan to conquer Ukraine – wrapping it into a new Russian empire – began just down the road. His forces were meant to seize Kyiv and topple Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s pro-western government.To the Kremlin’s surprise, Ukraine fought back. A Russian armoured column was destroyed in nearby Bucha. For five weeks a battle raged. Maternity staff treated wounded Ukrainian soldiers. Then, in March 2022, Russian troops pulled out of the Kyiv region. They left behind the bodies of hundreds of civilians they had killed, including fleeing families gunned down in their cars. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sông Quê Phở Bar, London E1: ‘The best phở in town’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants
This is one of those places where I say: use it or lose itSome hot dining spots seem to expand almost the moment they open, but east London’s Vietnamese stalwart Sông Quê has waited almost 25 years to spawn a little sister, Sông Quê Phở Bar. The new offshoot sits on Commercial Street, a mile or so down the road, and serves a tiny menu focusing on phở, as well as a smattering of the original cafe’s small plates in the form of summer rolls, green papaya salad, grilled lamb chops and savoury banh khot cupcakes.Quite why Sông Quê, with its regular weekend queues and well-known name, took so long to branch out, however, is unknown. Still, why rush things? After all, the road to restaurant ruin is paved with premature brand roll-outs, and even if managers think they’re superhuman, they cannot be in two – or three or four – sites all at the same time. Plus, the big question with an institution such as the OG Sông Quê is: can you really recreate the magic elsewhere? Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Are ties and blazers on the way out? Why some schools are pushing for 'active' uniforms
Proponents say relaxed uniforms make life easier for children and are much more practical for physical play.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Your guide to the final day
What's happening and who to look out for at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Penis injections, swearing curlers and a wolfdog - Olympic stories you might have missed
The Olympics is a hub of wonderful and weird stories. Here are the ones we didn't expect to tell from Milan-Cortina 2026.

Russia Today News
Open 
Minnesota Democrats should pay ‘reparations’ – Vance

Sky News Home
Open 
Close friends and sisters among nine skiers killed in avalanche
Six close friends and mothers are among the nine off-piste skiers who were killed in an avalanche in California.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereMikel Arteta has insisted the word “bottlers” is not in his vocabulary and that Arsenal must take criticism “on the chin” after surrendering a 2-0 lead against the bottom side, Wolves, in midweek.It’s North London Derby day! Always a huge occasion for both teams but it feels even more so today. For Arsenal, today marks a fantastic opportunity to bounce back from their midweek 2-2 draw at Wolves. The result on Wednesday sparked an all too familiar feeling among Arsenal fans as the Gunners lost ground in the title race once again. It meant that Manchester City were able to move within two points following their 2-1 win over Newcastle last night (more on that later). But victory today could spark a much-needed resurgence going into the most important part of the season. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Iranian students clash with security forces during protests amid Trump warning
Protesters commemorating people killed during a deadly government crackdown in Iran last month have clashed with security forces at a university in Tehran.

Mail Online
Open 
Hollywood legend Tom Hanks and wife Rita Wilson beam on sunny Sydney Harbour hike
Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson put on their walking gear for a low-key stroll around Shark Beach and along the scenic Hermitage Foreshore walking track on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
Why detectives suddenly switched the desperate hunt for the body of missing Gus Lamont to a vast new search area - as fresh details of his grandparents' HUGE Outback empire and the station's sinister past are revealed
A cadaver dog, a police helicopter, and Taskforce Horizon detectives converged on Bullyaninnie Station near Oodla Wirra in the South Australian Outback on February 16.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump world explodes as America's biggest bank admits it closed the president's accounts after January 6
JPMorgan Chase, America's largest bank by assets, admitted Friday that it closed dozens of Donald Trump's accounts after attack on the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Mail Online
Open 
US soldiers relocated from major military base in Qatar... as Trump ally tells president to pull the trigger on Iran NOW
President Trump has strongly alluded to a military strike to force Iran to come to the table for negotiations, telling reporters on Friday that he was 'considering' it.

Mail Online
Open 
Royal-approved Aspinal of London is the little-known destination for chic travel accessories - from leather bags to passport holders and luggage tags
If your travel accessories could use an upgrade, look no further than Aspinal of London as your one-stop shop.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news, Spurs v Arsenal buildup, Sheffield derby, and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereToday’s Premier League games (2pm GMT unless stated otherwise)Nottingham Forest v LiverpoolSunderland v FulhamCrystal Palace v WolvesTottenham v Arsenal (4:30pm) Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'It is a catastrophe' - the man battling to stem rising youth unemployment
Alan Milburn returns to his hometown of Newcastle as he undertakes a review into the growing numbers of young people out of work.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Why is the Strait of Hormuz off Iran so crucial?
The Strait of Hormuz is considered the world's most critical chokepoint for the oil trade. Iran has repeatedly threatened to block the waterway and last week partially closed it for military drills.

BBC World News
Open 
Pakistan launches strikes on Afghanistan, with Taliban saying dozens killed
Pakistan says the strikes were retaliation for recent suicide bombings in the country.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The strategy of Russia’s liberal elite is clear: make your peace with Putin. It’s how they survive | Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan
As the fourth anniversary looms of Russia’s war on Ukraine, those close to the Kremlin prosper while others merely strive to escape the worst repressionFour years into the full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia’s elite has shown no sign of resisting the very difficult spot that Vladimir Putin placed them in by acting without their consultation. Instead, it has largely adapted, reshaping itself in ways that ensure its survival in what increasingly looks like a state of permanent conflict.In the atmosphere of repression, Russian top-level officials and public intellectuals, who are tasked with ruling the country and shaping what society thinks and discusses, remain reluctant to express directly what they really think. The narratives they offer through culture are therefore some of the clearest expressions of how they see their role in a wartime country.Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan are Russian journalists in exile in London and authors of Our Dear Friends in Moscow: The Inside Story of a Broken Generation Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘You need to be a team’: Rowett urges unity as depleted Leicester show fight
Gary Rowett has told his Leicester players to deprioritise ‘individual ambitions’ after Saturday’s 2-2 draw with StokeBy the stage Ben Nelson headed against the bar in stoppage time and then Luke Thomas nodded against the inside of a post, it felt as if Leicester City were missing the chance to move into the promotion playoffs, so dominant had they been in the second half of this absorbing 2-2 draw with Stoke City.Yet after this month’s six-point deduction for breaching the Premier League’s profitability and sustainability rules, against which they are appealing, Ben Wilmot’s 89th-minute equaliser dropped Leicester back into the Championship’s relegation zone, placing the challenge facing them and their new manager, Gary Rowett, into stark context. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Caipirinhas, daiquiris’: Guardiola tells City players to chill and ignore title pressure
Manchester City beat Newcastle to cut Arsenal’s lead to twoTeam given three days off before facing LeedsPep Guardiola told his players to “take a lot of caipirinhas, daiquiris” to handle the pressure of the title chase after Manchester City beat Newcastle 2-1 to close to within two points of Arsenal.Two goals from Nico O’Reilly on 14 and 27 minutes at the Etihad Stadium were answered only by Lewis Hall’s strike in between as City moved to 56 points and a goal difference of 31, one fewer than Arsenal’s. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Borthwick’s plans in shreds as ruthless Ireland heap more misery on England | Michael Aylwin
A whole haberdasher’s worth of experience, led by the peerless Gibson-Park, fairly tormented their younger and more hopeful hostsSo it looks as if it might have been a bubble. England’s 12-match winning run came to a shuddering halt last week, but it was possible to believe that flop might prove a one-off – a chastened Scotland at home, after all, has been the downfall of many an England team.Well, there are scattered strips of latex all over Twickenham now, England’s balloon more than spectacularly popped by an Ireland side who are hardly afraid of inspirational rugby against this lot themselves. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brady Tkachuk admits to ‘hatred’ as US and Canada prepare for Olympic men’s ice hockey final
Long-time rivals play for gold on Sunday at 2026 GamesTensions are high between two teamsStatus of Canada’s Sidney Crosby still uncertainThe US and Canada are prepared for a stormy men’s ice hockey final on Sunday as the long-time rivals face off for Winter Olympic gold.This year’s Olympics mark the first time NHL players have competed at the Winter Games since 2014, meaning many of the best players in the world will face each other on Sunday. While Canada are the betting favourites – and have won the most ice hockey golds in Olympic history – the US players say they have motivation to upset their northern neighbours. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics briefing: king Klæbo’s greatness on show with sixth gold
Norwegian cross-country skier achieved unprecedented feat with victory in the 50km mass start “I’m starting to believe maybe he is a machine.” Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget was not alone in his assumption on the final weekend of an Olympics that has belonged to Johannes Høsflot Klæbo. Nyenget had as good a view as anyone of his fellow Norwegian’s sixth gold medal of the Games in the 50km mass start.It was not until the final uphill slope that Klæbo landed the killer blow. Nyenget had stayed with him until then and admirably fended off a couple of attacks on the final lap of the 7.2km course. It was inevitable, though, that when push came to shove, Klæbo would find another gear. “It’s close to impossible to beat him in the finish,” said Nyenget, who could only laugh as crossed the line for silver and Emil Iversen completed a Norway one-two-three. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Great Olympic lie: untold story of Winter Games’ huge environmental impact
Rivers drained dry to create artificial snow, a forest cut down for the bobsleigh track – IOC’s claims to prioritise sustainability at Milano Cortina exposedOn the foothills of the mountains, by the banks of the river in Cortina, there was a forest. It was full of tall larch trees. Arborists said the oldest of them had been there for 150 years and dendrologists that it was unique because it was unusual to find a monocultural forest growing at such a low altitude in the southern Alps.The locals knew mostly it was the place where the old wooden bobsleigh run was, where you went on your walks in summer or autumn, or when you wanted to play tennis on the small courts built near the bottom. They called it the Bosco di Ronco and it isn’t there any more. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How Italians fell in love with their Winter Olympics after gaffes turned into gold
After a slow start, when the hosts began to pick up medals in the second week the public’s imagination was capturedWith the atmosphere in Rome subdued as the Winter Olympics unfolded across northern Italy, travelling to the Games was not on Amity Neumeister’s radar.That was until the event entered its second week and, inspired by images of the Dolomites on TV, Italy racking up the medals and friends in Milan describing an energetic vibe, Neumeister, originally from the US, decided she wanted to join the action. “It was a late-night, last-minute crazy decision, completely unplanned,” she said. “I hadn’t even considered going before, but it felt like a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see the Games and celebrate people coming together from around the world.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peter Bradshaw’s Baftas 2026 predictions – who’ll get the gongs, who’ll be the goners?
Will Paul Thomas Anderson’s ICE age conspiracy thriller sweep the board, or will Sinners and Hamnet share some glory? Our critic places his betsFull list of Bafta 2026 nominationsWill win One Battle After AnotherShould win HamnetShoulda been a contender The Secret Agent Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Where are Andrew's exes now? From the Playboy model-turned-teeth whitening promoter to the reality TV star... with former wife Sarah Ferguson in a 'bad way'
In the public eye, the former Duke of York, 66, was romantically involved with numerous high-profile women, earning him the nicknames 'Randy Andy' and 'Playboy Prince'.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Men's Ice Hockey Final: Stream USA vs Canada for free, TV Channels, Preview

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch BAFTAs 2026 for *FREE* — stream 79th British Academy Film Awards from anywhere

Mirror F1
Open 
F1 world champion undergoes body transformation as he takes up new sport
The former Formula 1 hero star has undergone a major transformation that's seen him put on almost two stone in weight since retiring from racing

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Boeing and Lockheed's Space Joint Venture Is Falling Apart
ULA's Vulcan Centaur rocket has suffered two anomalies in four flights.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
A landing gear issue on a United Boeing 737-900 forced the crew to go around and to declare an emergency
Passengers aboard a United Airlines flight from Denver experienced a tense conclusion to their Friday night journey after a landing gear malfunction forced pilots to declare an emergency

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11049 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Supplier Maintenance - Coventry (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 00:00

End: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 07:00

Clear: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 07:34

Edited: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 07:34

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan Markle's dad to receive prosthetic leg after his life-saving surgery
Meghan Markle's father is getting fitted for a prosthetic after undergoing an emergency surgery last year that required his leg to be partially amputated. She and Thomas Markle Sr have been estranged.

Mail Online
Open 
China has been quietly building a 'new generation of nuclear weapons' while all eyes are on Iran
US intelligence has accused Chinese officials of carrying out top-secret nuclear tests in June 2020.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess Anne is hailed for her 'humble' reaction as she makes witty remark to fans who said they'd been waiting to see her 
The Princess Royal, now 75, had just finished a royal engagement in North Yorkshire in May 2021 when eagle-eyed onlookers spotted the royal stepping out of a black SUV car.

Mail Online
Open 
Gordon Ramsay's ex-mistress accuses him of whitewashing his past in his 'completely misleading and fake' new Netflix series
The six-part Netflix documentary series Being Gordon Ramsay highlights a softer, more vulnerable, side of the multi-millionaire restaurateur - as a devoted husband and father of six.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
I cleaned toilets while studying at Cambridge
Jade Franks uses her experience of classism to write a hit play which has been picked up by Netflix.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Ryan Reynolds' sweary reaction to Wrexham drawing Chelsea in the FA Cup
The Hollywood stars share their unedited reactions as they watch the random draw happen live.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Woman's fox rescue forges unusual bond
An injured fox is nursed back to life thanks to a "strong connection" with a Hackney resident.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Pop star's 50-year search for his birth father
The musician, who was born in a mother and baby home, only found out who his natural father was when he was 59.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
My bagpipes dream landed me thousands of followers. A rare chronic illness left me unable to play
Katie Robertson went back and forth to her GP and local hospital before being diagnosed with postural tachycardia syndrome.

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane GoFundMe benefiting late star's daughters raises goal to $500k as friends fiercely defend fundraiser
The Grey's Anatomy star's death was confirmed by his loved ones on Thursday - less than one year after he announced his amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diagnosis.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Three games to save a job? No excuses if England fail again
The T20 World Cup Super 8s may present Brendon McCullum with the chance to save his England job – should he want to continue into the summer.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Weird and wonderful stories from the Winter Olympics
The Olympics is a hub of wonderful and weird stories. Here are the ones we didn't expect to tell from Milan-Cortina 2026.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Government aims to halve attainment gap for disadvantaged students
The measure is part of a new Schools White Paper, which will be published in full on Monday.

Russia Today News
Open 
Putin has always been ‘straight with me’ – Witkoff

BBC World News
Open 
Inside press briefing as Trump criticises Supreme Court tariffs ruling
Bernd Debusmann describes how the president reacted after his sweeping levies were struck down.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It helps with loneliness’: grief, play and the power of lifelike dolls - photo essay
Dolls that look like real babies – complete with tiny veins and folds of skin – can be endearing yet deeply unsettling. In the Netherlands, however, there are tens of thousands of ‘reborn’ doll enthusiasts“It’s a doll,” Ineke Schmelter, 71, often says as she walks down the street with a pram and someone peers fondly under the hood, asking: “How old is the baby?” Then she pulls back the blanket and reveals the doll. She points out the craftsmanship – the little veins, the creases in the skin – and explains that it can take as many as 20 layers of paint to achieve such a lifelike finish. Sometimes, though, she can’t be bothered with the long version – the explanations, the strange looks. “As if I’m not quite right in the head.” Then she just says: “Two months,” and keeps walking.Ineke Schmelter in the kitchen with her reborn baby Ronin Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can a hair dryer really save your scalp from heat damage? I put Dyson’s Supersonic Nural to the test
With sensors that cool the air as it nears your head, this high-end tool promises gentler styling for sensitive scalps• The best hair dryers for smooth, speedy styling at homeTell most hair-care enthusiasts you want to upgrade your hair dryer, and I’d bet good money you’ll be asked, “Will you buy a Dyson?” That would have been a ludicrous question more than a decade ago when the brand specialised in vacuum cleaners, but not since it took the luxury hair-care market by storm in 2016 with its Supersonic hair dryer.The Supersonic ripped up the hair-dryer rulebook, with its distinctive design, lightweight feel and quiet operation. Eight years after the original, Dyson launched the Supersonic Nural: an upgraded version with new tricks up its sleeve. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A natural paradise’: the south of France’s beautiful blue lagoon
With pine-fringed beaches, crystal waters and affordable seafood restaurants, L’Étang de Thau is a hidden gem worth visiting at any time of yearWhen I asked Nordine Nid Hsain, the owner of my favourite Parisian bistro, why he sold up and left the capital to join the arty diaspora living in the Mediterranean port of Sète, he said: “What really drew me here was not Sète itself, but the natural paradise of the adjoining Thau lagoon. I love cycling and, after 10 years here, I am still excited to go out every day to explore the bike paths that run around the lagoon.”He added: “There’s always something new to discover – beaches; wetland landscapes; enjoying a plate of freshly harvested oysters at the water’s edge; riding through the vineyards then tasting the wine in the vigneron’s cellar.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Romance fraud: warning over scam that turns victims into insurance cheats
Insurers say cases of scammers manipulating people into staging crashes and filing bogus claims are under-reportedRomance fraud typically evokes images of people being tricked out of their life savings by partners they meet on dating sites, but some scammers use a different tactic: recruiting unsuspecting victims into fake insurance claims.The scam involves a fraudster convincing their partner, or a person they are dating, either to say they have witnessed a car accident, or to take out an insurance policy and file a bogus claim in order to secure a payout. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘That’s a losing battle’: baboon incursions cause tense human-wildlife standoff in Cape Town
Animal rights activists disagree with authorities on how best to handle boom in primate population near Table MountainAt the edge of Da Gama Park, where the Cape Town suburb meets the mountain, baboons jumped from the road to garden walls to roofs and back again. Children from South African navy families living in the area’s modest houses played in the street. Some were delighted; some wary; most were unfazed by the animals.A few miles away, overlooking a soaring peak and sweeping bay, Nicola de Chaud showed photos of food strewn across her kitchen by a baboon. In another incident, a baboon threw one of her dogs across the veranda. In January, a male baboon lunged at her and refused to leave the house for 10 minutes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
High energy prices threaten UK’s status as manufacturing power, business groups say
CBI and Energy UK report finds 40% of firms have cut investment as electricity costs remain far above pre-Ukraine levelsThe UK is at risk of losing its status as a major manufacturing centre after a sharp rise in energy prices that has forced about 40% of businesses to cut back investment, according to a report by the CBI and Energy UK.In a stinging message to ministers, the report said British businesses – from chemical producers to pubs and restaurants – were being undermined by a failure to cap prices and upgrade the UK’s ageing gas and electricity networks. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Man taken to hospital after stabbing incident
A woman in her 20s has been arrested and is assisting police with their enquiries.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch England vs Sri Lanka: Free Streams, TV Channels & Preview for Super 8 Match

TechRadar News
Open 
Dyson worked out how to make a teeny tiny motor, and now it just can't stop miniaturizing its appliances

Sky News Home
Open 
Call for 'treason' probe into Andrew's Epstein links
Searches are expected for a fourth day at Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's former home - as he faces calls for an investigation into whether "treason" has been committed.

Mirror F1
Open 
F1 2026 teamwear: Ferrari, McLaren and Red Bull unveil new merchandise ahead of Australian GP
The 2026 Formula 1 season is just around the corner and the teams have started to unveil their latest merchandise and apparel ahead of the Australian Grand Prix on March 8

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Football quiz: Name the north London derby's top scorers
With the north London derby coming up on Sunday, can you name the top scorers across Arsenal and Tottenham's Premier League meetings?

BBC World News
Open 
BBC inside press briefing as Trump criticises Supreme Court tariffs ruling
Bernd Debusmann describes how the president reacted after his sweeping levies were struck down.

BBC World News
Open 
BBC inside Trump press briefing slamming Supreme Court tariffs ruling
Bernd Debusmann describes how the president reacted after his sweeping levies were struck down.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Not the medal they wanted - but GB curlers bring spotlight to sport
Who are Great Britain's silver medal-winning curlers? And what might be next for them after another heartbreak?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: a true-crime drama about Sarah Ferguson’s former dresser
Natalie Dormer and Mia McKenna-Bruce star in The Lady, which tells the story of Jane Andrews. Plus: your golden ticket to the Baftas! Here’s what to watch this evening 9pm, ITV1 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Homeland security to suspend TSA PreCheck and Global Entry airport security programs
Democrats accuse DHS of ‘kneecapping’ programs that help speed registered travelers through security lines The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is suspending the TSA PreCheck and Global Entry airport security programs as a partial government shutdown continues.The programs are designed to help speed registered travelers through security lines. Suspending them could cause headaches for passengers. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Fact check: Are China's robot soldiers just AI fakes?
Videos that suggest China may be building a robot army sound like science fiction, but social media says it's real. DW Fact Check investigates.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We are not scared’: the Ukrainians building families in the shadow of war
Birthrates have fallen since Russia’s invasion but some have held on to hope and are bringing up children despite risksFour years ago Russian troops were a few kilometres away from Leleka maternity hospital, beyond a pine forest and a lake. Vladimir Putin’s plan to conquer Ukraine – wrapping it into a new Russian empire – began just down the road. They were meant to seize Kyiv and topple Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s pro-western government.To the Kremlin’s surprise, Ukraine fought back. A Russian armoured column was destroyed in nearby Bucha. For five weeks a battle raged. Maternity staff treated wounded Ukrainian soldiers. Then, in March 2022, Russian troops pulled out of the Kyiv region. They left behind the bodies of hundreds of civilians they had killed, including fleeing families gunned down in their cars. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The anxieties just lift’: why domestic abuse refuges are turning to female tradespeople
With construction overwhelmingly male, Refuge says tradeswomen help survivors of abuse feel saferOne of the main challenges in maintaining the 64 homes for domestic abuse survivors run by Refuge is the reliance on a male-dominated workforce of electricians, plumbers and decorators.“The presence of men can be distressing and could trigger past traumas for our survivors,” said Lisa Cantwell-Hope, the head of property services at the charity. “Male contractors need an escort to make our survivors feel more comfortable, and we always put a notice out to all our residents saying there will be a male presence in the building today. So it can be challenging and takes up more time.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Matt Goodwin is running: the search for Reform’s elusive byelection candidate
Nigel Farage’s man in Gorton and Denton has a huge public platform, and a taste for culture war. What happens when he concerns himself with bin collections?On a bracingly cold February night in Levenshulme, a black Volkswagen people-carrier draws up outside a little parish church, around which a small crowd has begun to gather. From behind the car’s darkened windows steps the Reform candidate for the Gorton and Denton byelection, dressed in the trademark gilet that makes him look less like a politician and more like a man who has come straight from a grouse shoot. As he enters the church where the electoral hustings will take place, a leaflet is thrust into his hand, which as he will later discover with a horrified grimace, is a flyer for the local branch of the Communist League, bearing policies such as “amnesty for all immigrants” and “defend Cuba’s socialist revolution”.But then, when you are trying to attract the attention of someone as elusive as Prof Matt Goodwin, you have to seize your opportunities whenever they arise. Over recent weeks the former academic and rightwing firebrand has been a curiously intangible presence in the constituency whose representation he is seeking: perpetually detectable but not remotely approachable, always visible without ever really being seen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sông Quê Phở Bar, London E1: ‘The best phở in town’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants
This is one of those places where I say: use it or lose it. Some hot dining spots seem to expand almost the moment they open, but east London’s Vietnamese stalwart Sông Quê has waited almost 25 years to spawn a little sister, Sông Quê Phở Bar. The new offshoot sits on Commercial Street, a mile or so down the road, and serves a tiny menu focusing on phở, as well as a smattering of the original cafe’s small plates in the form of summer rolls, green papaya salad, grilled lamb chops and savoury banh khot cupcakes.Quite why Sông Quê, with its regular weekend queues and well-known name, took so long to branch out, however, is unknown. Still, why rush things? After all, the road to restaurant ruin is paved with premature brand roll-outs, and even if managers think they’re superhuman, they cannot be in two – or three or four – sites all at the same time. Plus, the big question with an institution such as the OG Sông Quê is: can you really recreate the magic elsewhere? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I’m worried my boyfriend’s use of AI is affecting his ability to think for himself | Annalisa Barbieri
Overdependence on chatbots is a growing problem, and though your boyfriend’s ADHD may be a factor, he needs to find the root of his anxietyMy boyfriend of eight years, who is 44, has ADHD and runs his own business. He’s always struggled with admin and mundane tasks, but AI has revolutionised how he works. Now I’m worried he can’t seem to do anything without AI. He is a heavy ChatGPT user and uses it even when there’s a better non-AI alternative (eg he’ll ask it for train times rather than using Trainline, even though it’s less accurate). He just got his ChatGPT Wrapped and he’s in the top 0.3% of users worldwide. I worry about his ability to think independently, as well as the environmental impact. I know it’s a useful tool for him at work, but he uses it for everything in life. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘She did kill. There’s no grey area there’: Labour MP Naz Shah on the day she and her mother were arrested for murder
The politician was 18 when she and her mum were hauled off to a police station for the killing of the man she’d considered an uncle. What happened next would shape her future. She talks Labour’s woes, making mistakes, and why it’s finally time to share her own traumatic story• Read an extract from Naz Shah’s memoir hereNaz Shah found it thrilling when she was arrested on suspicion of murder. “I’ll be honest with you, I had fun. It was the most excitement I’d ever had in my flipping life. I’d never been to a police station before. I was 18 and wet behind the ears. I was this really sheltered kid who’d been arrested. And I was like, they’ve got it wrong, so in my head it was all going to be over soon,” the MP for Bradford West says. “They took my clothes and gave me this white suit to wear, and I was saying, ‘Ooh, I look foxy in this, don’t I? Can you imagine taking me on a date in this?’ I was having a right laugh with the police officers. Honestly, I was so naive.”Shah’s beloved “Uncle” Azam had died unexpectedly in April 1992. An autopsy revealed that he had been poisoned with arsenic. Shah and her mother, Zoora, who spoke little English, had cooked the previous night’s supper. They were arrested and taken to different police stations. Shah was released. Zoora admitted that she had made the dessert that contained the arsenic. After a month-long trial, she was convicted of Azam’s murder in December 1993 and sentenced to 20 years in jail. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Andrew is Prince William's problem too - and it makes his future job harder
Andrew's arrest has changed the public's view of the Royal Family, putting pressure on Prince William as he moves closer to being king.

Slashdot
Open 
Ask Slashdot: What's Your Boot Time?
How much time does it take to even begin booting, asks long-time Slashdot reader BrendaEM. Say you want separate Windows and Linux boot processes, and "You have Windows on one SSD/NVMe, and Linux on another. How long do you have to wait for a chance to choose a boot drive?"

And more importantly, why is it all taking so long?
In a world of 4-5 GHz CPU's that are thousands of times faster than they were, has hardware become thousands of times more complicated, to warrant the longer start time? Is this a symptom of a larger UEFI bloat problem? Now with memory characterization on some modern motherboards... how long do you have to wait to find out if your RAM is incompatible, or your system is dead on arrival?

Share your own experiences (and system specs) in the comments. How long is it taking you to choose a boot drive?

And what's your boot time?





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Amb. Huckabee Claims Israel Has 'Biblical Right' To Conquer Whole Middle East
Amb. Huckabee Claims Israel Has 'Biblical Right' To Conquer Whole Middle East

In a jaw-dropping exchange with Tucker Carlson, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee openly framed Israel's territorial claims in biblical terms - suggesting the Jewish state has a divine mandate over virtually the entire region.

Asked whether a passage from the Book of Genesis could be read as granting Israel the right to claim all the land between Egypt's Nile River and Syria's Euphrates, Huckabee didn't hedge. He bluntly and without apology said it would be "fine" if Israel and its military took over the whole Middle East. Full interview can be accessed here:


The Mike Huckabee interview, and the truth about America’s deeply unhealthy relationship with Israel.
(0:00) Why We Were Interrogated in Israel
(25:38) Why Did Huckabee Meet With American Traitor Jonathan Pollard?
(34:26) Has Huckabee Advocated to Extradite Sex Offenders Who… pic.twitter.com/wPoF4GfSpt
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) February 20, 2026
"It would be fine if they took it all," Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist Minister and previously the governor of Arkansas made clear. This led to a wide ranging conversation and back and forth over whether the modern nation-state of Israel, officially founded as a sovereign government on May 14, 1948, is synonymous with the Israel written about in the Old Testament, stretching back thousands of years.

Here's how that contentious segment of the interview unfolded, according to a transcript and commentary: 


Huckabee was asked in an interview with US conservative commentator Tucker Carlson about his understanding of a biblical verse suggesting that land including parts of Egypt, Syria and Iraq had been divinely promised to the Jewish people.

Carlson said that according to the Old Testament, the boundaries would be “basically the entire Middle East.”

He continued: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“Not sure we’d go that far,” Huckabee said in reply. “It would be a big piece of land.”

Carlson then pressed him: “Does Israel have the right to that land?”

“It would be fine if they took it all,” Huckabee responded, before adding, “I don’t think that’s what we’re talking about here today.”

Carlson asked: “You think it would be fine if the state of Israel took over all of Jordan?”


That's when Amb. Huckabee must have realized he was entering some hot diplomatic water, which would be sure to outrage Washington's Arab allies in the region.

"They’re not trying to take over Jordan. They're not trying to take over Syria. They’re not trying to take over Iraq or anywhere else, but they do want to protect their people," Huckabee responded. We should note here that the Israeli army has indeed invaded southern Syria and is occupying swathes of territory which lie a mere dozen or so miles from Damascus.


TUCKER: “How much does it matter what Americans think?”
AMB. HUCKABEE: “It matters every bit.”
TUCKER: “80% oppose war with Iran.”
AMB. HUCKABEE: “We don’t live in a world where polls dictate policy.”
TUCKER: “Oh, I thought you said it matters what Americans think.”
This is… pic.twitter.com/LFiEk32Mna
— African (@ali_naka) February 21, 2026
"I think you’re missing something because they’re not asking to go back to take all of that, but they are asking to at least take the land that they now occupy, they now live in, they now own legitimately, and it is a safe haven for them," Huckabee added.

Huckabee on Saturday, the day after the Carlson interview aired, issued a lengthy clarification of his comments, accusing the former Fox show host of twisting his words and engaging in bad faith arguments and attacks.


Tucker and I had a very twisty and frankly confusing discussion about the meaning of Zionism.
Now, I have no idea if Tucker was trying to be difficult or we were just talking past each other, but he started out the discussion on Zionism by saying he wanted to ask me in my…
— Ambassador Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) February 21, 2026
There are many parts of the rare interview which will be sure to spark lasting debate. Supporters of Huckabee tend to cast any and all criticisms of Israeli policy as 'anti-Semitic' - while critics of Tel Aviv point out that being against political Zionism does not equate to being anti-Jewish in any way.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 22:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
From Blockchain To Ball-And-Chain: Are We Being Borg'd?
From Blockchain To Ball-And-Chain: Are We Being Borg'd?

Authored by Patti Johnson via The Burning Platform blog,

Tokenized Tyranny: How Elites Are Digitizing Our World for Total Control

I’ve followed investigative journalist Whitney Webb’s work for years, and her once-distant warnings now feel eerily prophetic as they unfold in real time. What she has consistently exposed, the systematic digitization and commodification of everything from natural ecosystems to human life itself, is no longer speculative theory. It’s happening before our eyes.

When I first encountered Whitney’s reporting, I found it hard to believe. Could this level of control and financialization truly be underway? It seemed too dystopian, too extreme. Yet after digging deeper the evidence was undeniable. What she described was not exaggeration. It was an accurate and meticulously documented reality.



The tokenization of nature and humanity represents a deliberate strategy by the world’s most powerful financial institutions. Figures like BlackRock’s Chairman and CEO Larry Fink have openly championed turning the planet’s resources, and increasingly aspects of human existence, into fractionalized, tradable digital assets on blockchain-based ledgers. This creates new avenues for elite profit and unprecedented surveillance and control.

With Fink now serving as Interim Co-Chair of the World Economic Forum’s Board of Trustees (alongside André Hoffmann), the technocratic elite have gained an ideal global platform to accelerate this agenda. What better forum than the WEF to mainstream and fast-track “total control” from cradle to grave.

The process begins with assigning unique digital identifiers to virtually everything: land, water, forests, carbon credits, even personal behaviors and biological data. These are then logged on universal ledgers, where ownership is sliced into tradable fractions, much like stocks. But this goes far beyond traditional finance. It encompasses the Earth’s finite resources and, ultimately, the very essence of human life, all reduced to programmable, monetizable units in a centralized system of power.

This is tokenized tyranny in action: a quiet revolution that could redefine ownership, freedom, and existence itself..



Nature on the Chopping Block: From Forests to Fractional Shares

For nature, tokenization means chopping up wild places like the Amazon rainforest into digital securities. Each token represents a piece of land or ecosystem service such as clean air or biodiversity. Companies like O.N.E. Amazon, which is tied to U.S. intelligence and crypto investors, plan to issue these tokens backed by preservation deals. They cap the supply to make them scarce like digital gold. They install massive sensor networks and satellites to monitor every hectare in real time and collect data on everything from tree growth to animal movements. The data feeds into AI systems that manage the assets:


Each initiative will be structured under a transparent, science-based framework ensuring traceability, accountability, and full respect for Panama’s sovereignty. Future projects may also explore nature-backed digital instruments as mechanisms to channel private investment into measurable conservation outcomes.

Juan Carlos Navarro, Minister of Environment of Panama, stated: “As part of the partnership, O.N.E Amazon will pilot its proprietary Internet of Forests (IoF™️), an advanced monitoring system powered by satellites, LiDAR, and ground sensors, to provide real-time ecological intelligence that supports environmental governance and transparency.”

“O.N.E Amazon was created to align global capital with the conservation of our planet’s most valuable ecosystems. Together with Panama, we aim to demonstrate how innovation, transparency, and shared purpose can turn conservation into a true economic opportunity, one that benefits both nature and people. O.N.E Amazon is more than a financial instrument, it is a new contract between humanity, capital markets, and nature. When innovation meets purpose, markets become engines of regeneration,” said Rodrigo Veloso, Founder and CEO of O.N.E Amazon.

Panama and O.N.E Amazon Sign a Letter of Intent to Protect the Darién Region and Pioneer New Models of Conservation Finance


Whitney calls this tokenization of nature “borgifying” the environment (Remember Star Trek and the Borg). It turns planet earth into a controllable grid.



Involved parties include former BlackRock executives, Trump administration figures, and firms linked to stablecoins like Tether. They push this under the banner of sustainability while securing profits through inequitable deals with indigenous groups. Those groups get minimal shares and lose autonomy over their lands.

Greenwashing in Action: Tokenized Nature Happening Now

This is already unfolding through initiatives like Natural Asset Companies (NACs), backed by the Intrinsic Exchange Group and the Rockefeller Foundation. They aim to list ecosystems on stock exchanges as new asset classes. This assigns financial value to untouched nature and creates markets for trading shares in forests or rivers. Clean Air and Water Are Worth Money as ‘Natural Asset’ Companies Attract Cash

The WEF (World Economic Forum) is involved in turning nature into a commodity for investors to profit:


 Finance Solutions for Nature: Pathways to returns and outcomes is out now! This insight report by World Economic Forum and McKinsey & Company provides a practical framework for investors to unlock capital for nature. Key takeaways: A portfolio approach is essential: 10 priority solutions can offer investors and issuers pathways to investable returns and nature outcomes at scale. Model transactions need to be replicated: Over 20 examples of existing transactions show that success in nature finance isn’t just theory — but needs replication. Markets can’t solve nature loss alone: Traditional finance has a central role, but needs enabling policies, robust data, better de-risking mechanisms, and shifting norms to recognize nature’s full value.

Finance Solutions for Nature: Pathways to Returns and Outcomes | World Economic Forum


Another example is Estonia’s Single Earth, which tokenizes forests, swamps, and biodiversity to back its MERIT token. It allows companies to buy fractional ownership for carbon offsets while claiming to make nature the new gold:


“Single.Earth closes the $700 billion nature financing gap by channeling ESG (Environmental Social Governance)-driven company funds to high-impact landowners, while assessing ecological data for maximum impact globally.

Bridging Nature and Finance, Climate and Biodiversity, Corporate Sustainability through Nature Financing Enterprises buy tokens to balance their impact on nature and boost ESG scores, securing a greener financial future.”


In the Central African Republic, the Sango Project is tokenizing land, timber, and diamond reserves to attract investors. It turns national resources into blockchain assets. Even traditional commodities are involved, with platforms tokenizing oil and gas reserves or renewable energy sources:


“The Central African Republic (CAR) has extended its Sango blockchain project to tokenization of its land and natural resources. The country, one of the poorest and most crypto-friendly in the world, is also one of the most active in crypto innovation.”

Central African Republic expands Sango project to land, resource tokenization


In 2023 Australia’s National Australia Bank issued a green stablecoin tied to verified agricultural assets and carbon credits. Their tokenized farms could soon serve as loan collateral. National Australia Bank eyeing a ‘green’ stablecoin – Ledger Insights – blockchain for enterprise

Eco-Dystopia Ahead: When Nature Becomes a Profit Machine

In a future society under this system, nature becomes a Wall Street product where investors buy fractions of forests or rivers without ever setting foot there. Any “conservation” is dictated by profit motives rather than ecological needs. Entire regions could be locked into debt-like swaps where countries trade resource rights for loans. This leads to foreign-owned wind farms or bioenergy plants that displace locals.

Whitney explains that this creates a tokenized world where natural disasters or climate events can spike token values. It encourages exploitation disguised as green finance. Ecosystems are managed by algorithms that prioritize financial returns over life itself.  In the guise of saving ecosystems, they are tokenizing the world and making profit from their exploitation of planet earth.

Humans as Assets: The Financialization of Flesh and Blood

When it comes to human resources, Whitney extends tokenization to the financialization of people themselves. Human potential, data, and behaviors are tokenized into investable assets. This builds on impact investing where elites bet on social outcomes like reducing poverty or improving education through human capital bonds. It turns individuals into data points on a ledger.

Personal information, health records, DNA, and even daily actions get digitized and fractionalized and linked to digital IDs and programmable currencies that track and control spending. It all connects to broader agendas from groups like the World Economic Forum. Humans are seen as resources to be optimized. Blockchain ensures every aspect of life from skills to biometrics becomes a tradeable commodity.

From Blockchain to Ball and Chain

Blockchain is often sold as a liberating technology. It’s sold as a super-secure, shared digital notebook where transactions get recorded in unbreakable blocks that form a chain. These spread across thousands of computers worldwide so no single boss can tamper with it. It promises privacy and freedom from banks or governments. But from my skeptical angle, like the one Whitney Webb takes, it’s actually shaping up to be a high-tech ball and chain designed to track and control every aspect of our lives. This happens despite those privacy boasts. While blockchain claims to be decentralized and anonymous, most versions, like Bitcoin’s, create a permanent, public ledger where every transaction is traceable forever. This makes it easy for powerful entities from governments to corporations to follow your money trail. They link it to your identity through exchanges or data leaks. They can build detailed profiles on your habits, associations, and whereabouts.

Elites are co-opting this tech. They push for things like central bank digital currencies built on blockchain that tie your finances to digital IDs with biometrics. This turns everyday spending into a surveilled activity. In the future non-compliant behavior like buying the “wrong” things or associating with certain people could get you flagged, frozen out, or punished.  This could mean a world where your blockchain-tracked data feeds into AI systems that predict, manipulate, reward or punish your actions.

The ultimate goal is to enforce rules through programmable money. The programmable money can expire, restrict purchases, and track everything you purchase automatically. This is being pushed under the guise of security and efficiency.  Critics on X say that because blockchains are so public and open, it’s easy for others to watch everything you do and even jump ahead of your trades to make quick money off you.

They argue that without true privacy, decentralization just hands control to the most resourced spies. This echoes Webb’s expose on how Bitcoin’s traceability makes it a tool for destroying real financial privacy in favor of elite-controlled systems.

The Blockchain Enabler: Fueling Human Tokenization at Scale

This blockchain backbone is exactly what’s needed to make the tokenization of human resources possible on a massive scale. Without it, you couldn’t reliably slice up and trade fractions of someone’s skills, behaviors, or biometric data. Blockchain provides the immutable ledger that records every tokenized “share” of human capital.

Whether it’s your work output, health metrics, or social compliance, it links them permanently to your digital ID so the elites can monitor, value, and manipulate them in real time. It turns abstract human potential into concrete, programmable assets that can be bought, sold, or penalized without escape.

Human Commodification Unfolding: From Bonds to Biometrics

It seems truly unbelievable and dystopian but real-world implementations are creeping in through programs like social impact bonds.

There investors fund initiatives such as prisoner rehabilitation or early childhood education.

They profit if metrics like reduced recidivism are met. https://socialfinance.org/social-impact-bonds/

Byte by Byte Humans are Being Tokenized

The World Bank’s Human Capital Project measures countries’ human potential as economic assets:

“The Human Capital Project (HCP) is a global initiative launched by the World Bank to inspire and inform investments in human capital”

It paves the way for tokenized investments in workforce development. In refugee aid, organizations use blockchain combined with biometric IDs like iris scans or fingerprints to deliver and track assistance. This is how they implement the plan byte by byte as seen in UN pilots from the World Food Programme’s Building Blocks project in Jordan, where refugees scan their eyes to buy food with aid stored on a blockchain ledger. Or UNHCR’s efforts in Ukraine distributing programmable stablecoin cash directly to digital wallets. These systems make aid traceable and “efficient.” But I see them turning vulnerable people into monitored data commodities under the guise of inclusion and empowerment.

Your Skills as Tradeable Tokens

Companies are experimenting with turning workers’ skills and performance into digital tokens on blockchain platforms. They break down things like work history, credentials, or gig results into small tradable pieces. This mostly targets gig workers: drivers, delivery people, freelancers who do temporary jobs through apps. Platforms verify and tokenize these, letting people buy, sell, or trade tiny fractions of a worker’s “value” (fractionalized trading: like slicing someone’s skills into shares anyone can own and trade, similar to buying a piece of a stock). It turns personal labor into digital assets that can be bought and sold.

I know this sounds wild and hard to believe for most folks. I didn’t buy it either until I dug into the research myself. It’s all part of a larger agenda to digitize and control everything, your job and skills, your land, even nature under a single digital system run by a tiny elite of powerful companies and tech oligarchs. Critics call this endgame a form of fascist dictatorship known as technocracy, where “experts” and algorithms dictate life instead of democratic choice.

For a real-world example happening today, check out platforms like LaborX (part of Chrono.tech), a blockchain-based freelance marketplace where gig workers’ skills and work history are verified on-chain, and payments/rewards can involve tradable tokens tied to performance bringing tokenized labor closer to reality in the gig economy: https://laborx.com/

Another related case is project tokenization ideas for gig workers, as explored here: https://medium.com/@tradefin101/project-tokenization-for-gig-workers-revolutionizing-the-gig-economy-with-blockchain-20359a1ffcfd. These show early steps toward fractionalizing and trading aspects of human capital.

The Ultimate Warning: A Tokenized Hellscape Awaits

In my depiction of a tokenized future, society looks like a giant database where people own nothing tangible, as the WEF slogan suggests. The WEF idea of happiness is enforced through surveillance. Everyone carries a digital ID that opens access to jobs, services, or even basic rights. Tokens represent shares in human capital markets that reward or punish based on compliance.

Governments and corporations use this to engineer behaviors like tying aid to biometric scans or tokenizing refugee programs for “inclusion.” But it really cements a system of digital serfdom. I see this leading to a loss of freedom where the elite overlords hold all the tokens. They manipulate markets to siphon wealth while the masses are reduced to monitored data streams in a hyper-financialized digital prison.

Technocracy Tokenopoly

The world’s billionaire elite, already far beyond any need for more wealth, now crave absolute power and control. They are quietly fulfilling the 1930s vision of the Technocracy movement led by Howard Scott and Technocracy Incorporated which declared that scientists, engineers, and technical experts should replace democratic governments and elected leaders. They viewed traditional republics and ordinary citizens as too irrational and uninformed to govern effectively, insisting only a data-driven, expert-ruled system could rationally manage resources and society for maximum efficiency.

Today this technocratic ideal unfolds through the tokenization of everything: rainforests, rivers, biodiversity, human labor, skills, behaviors, and data all turned into tradable blockchain assets under the guise of sustainability and inclusion. Earth and humanity become pieces in a high-stakes game, satirized in Tokenopoly, where players buy and sell properties like the Amazon Rainforest, Nile River, Niagara Falls, CAR resources, Human Labor, and Biodiversity Credits, with cards commanding “Collect 100 Tokens” or “Go Directly to Digital Wallet.” Using AI, surveillance grids, programmable money, and immutable ledgers, the elite claim dominance and enforce compliance, building the tokenized, borgified system of digital serfdom



To pull off this nightmare, elites and tech oligarchs are racing to build AI data centers at breakneck speed devouring massive amounts of fresh water and energy just to hoard every scrap of our tokenized data. They can’t build them fast enough, but that desperation is our opening. People are waking up to their plan as their electric bills go sky high and their fresh water is drained by the data centers.  People are starting to speak out.

Could their pride be their downfall?

How supremely arrogant of these self-anointed digital overlords to imagine they hold proprietary title over nature itself and over human beings, treating both as resources to be patented, monetized, and managed. How breathtakingly hubristic for them to insist that scientists, engineers, and technocratic elites are better suited to govern than the democratic process, elected representatives, and the will of the people.

Proverbs 16:18 – Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.

Expose their plan before it’s too late. 

Don’t let them Borgify us and turn free humans into obedient, trackable nodes in their machine. Don’t let them steal nature and turn it into a commodity for the elite. Get active locally. Resist immediately. Slow their rollout to a crawl. The future isn’t theirs yet. We claim it by saying NO!

Resistance is NOT futile.

We will NOT comply.

*  *  *

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 23:20

Sky News Home
Open 
Weight loss jabs could be banned by next Olympics
As the Winter Olympics end, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) is investigating whether to add weight loss jabs to the banned list for the next Summer Olympics in 2028.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukrainian resilience remains strong as war enters fifth year
Russian attacks have made an already harsh winter even harder to endure for Ukrainians. And yet, after four years of war, most remain determined to tough it out.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Inconceivable' Andrew's guards didn't see anything, says ex-head of UK royal protection
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's security officers are likely to have information on potential misconduct, the former head of the Royal Family's protection officers has told Sky News.

BBC World News
Open 
More than 1,500 Venezuelan political prisoners apply for amnesty
The announcement by the head of Venezuela's National Assembly comes amid US pressure following the capture of ex-President Nicolás Maduro.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Tories vow to lower interest on some student loans
Kemi Badenoch says graduates feel 'stitched up' as she promises to cut Plan 2 loan interest charges.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pakistan strikes militant hideouts on Afghan border after surge in attacks
‘Intelligence-based, selective operations’ carried out against Pakistani Taliban camps, says information ministry Pakistan launched multiple airstrikes on Saturday night targeting militants in neighbouring Afghanistan, where the government reported children were among dozens of people killed and wounded.Islamabad did not say precisely where the strikes were carried out or provide other details. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Thailand moves to cut sugar in popular drinks amid health drive
Major chains agree to halve default sweetness, but street vendors and cafes remain outside sugar tax rulesA crowd of customers, holding phones aloft, watch intently as Auntie Nid mixes up her bestseller: an iced Thai tea.Condensed milk is poured into a glass, followed by three heaped tablespoons of sugar, and then freshly strained tea. The end product – a deep orange, creamy treat – is poured into a plastic bag filled with ice. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
'Devastated beyond words': Close friends and sisters among nine skiers killed in avalanche
Six close friends and mothers are among the nine off-piste skiers who were killed in an avalanche in California.

The Hill
Open 
DHS suspending 2 travel programs amid shutdown
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will pause two of its programs meant to expedite the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) airport screening process starting Sunday as a shutdown of the agency stretches into a second week, according to The Washington Post. The Post reported that the TSA PreCheck and Global Entry programs would temporarily cease...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump says sending 'great hospital boat' to Greenland
The US president said a vessel was "on the way" to Greenland, with the move coming amid a rift between the US and Europe over control of the strategically important island.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘They were mothers, wives, friends’: how a ski trip turned deadly in the California mountains
A picture is emerging of one of the worst avalanche disasters in US history, and the women among a tight-knit group of friends who diedcsThe ringing of a phone echoed through the Nevada county, California, sheriff’s office just before noon on 17 February.The 911 call brought devastating news: an avalanche had occurred on nearby Castle Peak – a 9,110ft (2,780-meter) mountain north of the Donner summit in the Lake Tahoe area. A group of backcountry skiers had been on the mountainside, returning home from a three-day expedition, during a heavy winter storm. While six had survived, more than half their group was missing. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
'Devastated beyond words': Close friends and sisters among nine skiers killed in California avalanche
Six close friends and mothers are among the nine off-piste skiers who were killed in an avalanche in California.

Sky News Home
Open 
'She started to forget, little by little': Virtual reality offers escape to Gaza's children
In a small office space in Gaza City, a child stands still, wearing a virtual reality headset.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NFL receiver Rondale Moore dies at age of 25: ‘Way too soon. Way too special’
Former coach says player was ‘complete joy’Teammates pay tribute after Moore’s deathNFL wide receiver Rondale Moore died on Saturday at the age of 25, his former college coach, Jeff Brohm, has confirmed.“Rondale Moore was a complete joy to coach,” Brohm, who worked with Moore at Purdue, said in a statement. “The ultimate competitor that wouldn’t back down from any challenge. Rondale had a work ethic unmatched by anyone. A great teammate that would come through in any situation. We all loved Rondale, we loved his smile and competitive edge that always wanted to please everyone he came in contact with. We offer all of our thoughts and prayers to Rondale and his family, we love him very much.”In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
'She started to forget, little by little': How virtual reality is helping the children of Gaza
In a small office space in Gaza City, a child stands still, wearing a virtual reality headset.

Russia Today News
Open 
Man rams pickup truck into synagogue in Australia (VIDEO)

Mail Online
Open 
Lady Gaga distracts herself during rare date night with Michael Polansky after getting slammed by Liza Minnelli
The pop star, 39, and her fiancé Michael Polansky, 42, were spotted leaving exclusive, members-only Soho House in West Hollywood after dinner

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NFL receiver Ronald Moore dies at age of 25: ‘Way too soon. Way too special’
Former coach says player was ‘complete joy’Teammates pay tribute after Moore’s deathNFL wide receiver Rondale Moore died on Saturday at the age of 25, his former college coach, Jeff Brohm, has confirmed.“Rondale Moore was a complete joy to coach,” Brohm, who worked with Moore at Purdue, said in a statement. “The ultimate competitor that wouldn’t back down from any challenge. Rondale had a work ethic unmatched by anyone. A great teammate that would come through in any situation. We all loved Rondale, we loved his smile and competitive edge that always wanted to please everyone he came in contact with. We offer all of our thoughts and prayers to Rondale and his family, we love him very much.”In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Sandra Bullock treats herself to VERY expensive jewelry in LA as reclusive star steps out on rare public outing
Sandra Bullock treated herself to a lavish shopping trip as she stepped out for a rare public outing in Los Angeles on Saturday.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Japan's $36 Billion Bet On US Energy Dominance
Japan's $36 Billion Bet On US Energy Dominance

Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,


Japan has committed $36 billion as the first tranche of its $550-billion U.S. investment pledge under last year’s trade deal, including plans to build a 9.2 GW natural gas power plant in Ohio.


The remaining funds will support a synthetic diamond factory and the Texas GulfLink deepwater oil export terminal.


The massive gas plant reflects surging U.S. electricity demand — particularly from AI-driven data centers — with natural gas emerging as the preferred source of reliable baseload power.

Japan has made the first commitments under a $550-billion investment program that made part of its trade deal with President Trump. Those first commitments are worth $36 billion and include what Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has called “the largest natural gas generation facility in history.”



The U.S. and Japan sealed a trade deal last summer, featuring a reduction in proposed tariffs—from 25% to 15%—on Japanese imports and a $550-billion Japanese investment pledge for the U.S. economy. Japan also pledged under the deal to expand market access for American goods, including cars, agricultural products, and energy.

Most of the money from that first investment tranche would be used to build the largest natural gas power plant, with a capacity of 9.2 GW.

“We will strengthen grid reliability, expand baseload power, and support American manufacturing with affordable energy,” Secretary Lutnick said in a statement after the deal. The plant will be built in Ohio. The facility will be operated by a subsidiary of Japan’s SoftBank, SB Energy.

The rest of the money would be split between a synthetic diamond factory and a deepwater oil port in the Gulf.

“This project is expected to generate $20–30 billion annually in U.S. crude exports, secure export capacity for our refineries, and reinforce America’s position as the world’s leading energy supplier,” per Lutnick.

The deepwater oil project was greenlit by the Trump administration earlier this month. Led by Sentinel Midstream, the Texas GulfLink facility would have an export capacity of 1 million barrels of crude daily. The approval was part of the federal government’s efforts to boost the United States’ energy dominance through oil and gas exports.

“The Texas GulfLink project is proof that when we slash unnecessary red tape and unleash our fossil fuel sector, we create jobs at home and stability abroad,” Transport Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement to Reuters at the time.

“This critical deepwater port will allow the U.S. to export our abundant resources faster than ever before.”

In a factsheet on the Japanese deal, the Commerce Department said the deepwater facility would generate between $400 and $600 billion over 20 years and advance President Trump’s energy dominance agenda.

Most countries that struck trade deals with Trump last year to avoid massive tariffs on their U.S. exports made an energy import commitment specifically, with the tariff threat proving a useful tool for pursuing the energy dominance goal. Perhaps the most notable commitment in that respect was the European Union’s promise to buy $750 billion worth of U.S. oil and gas—a feat considered impossible by analysts due to physical factors such as constraints on the availability of such massive volumes of the respective commodities, constraints on consumption, and price considerations.

The largest natural gas power plant in history is most likely a response to the surge in electricity demand—and more specifically, baseload electricity demand, driven largely by the proliferation of data centers as the AI race among Big Tech majors intensifies. Earlier this week, the International Energy Agency said global electricity demand was growing at the fastest pace in 15 years. In the United States specifically, electricity demand rose by 2.1% in 2025 and is expected to grow by nearly 2% annually through 2030. The rapid expansion of data centers will drive half of the increase, the IEA noted.

Natural gas has emerged as the big winner of the AI race alongside nuclear, both of which provide the kind of electricity that data centers depend on: round-the-clock, uninterrupted electricity. Nuclear, however, takes longer to build and costs more, which is why gas power plants have taken priority.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 22:10

The Hill
Open 
Hochul relaxes NY liquor laws during US-Canada hockey gold medal game
New York is relaxing its liquor laws to allow bars and restaurants in some parts of the state to open early for the U.S. men’s hockey team’s gold medal game against Canada on Sunday.   Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) announced Saturday that she directed the State Liquor Authority to suspend enforcement between 6 a.m. and...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NFL receiver Ronald Moore dies at age of 25: ‘Way too soon. Way too special’
Former coach says player was ‘complete joy’Teammates pay tribute after Moore’s deathFormer NFL wide receiver Rondale Moore died on Saturday at the age of 25, his former college coach, Jeff Brohm, has confirmed.“Rondale Moore was a complete joy to coach,” Brohm, who coached Moore at Purdue, said in a statement. “The ultimate competitor that wouldn’t back down from any challenge. Rondale had a work ethic unmatched by anyone. A great teammate that would come through in any situation. We all loved Rondale, we loved his smile and competitive edge that always wanted to please everyone he came in contact with. We offer all of our thoughts and prayers to Rondale and his family, we love him very much.”In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Muslim states condemn US envoy over remarks on Israel’s ‘biblical rights’

Sky News Home
Open 
Inside Gaza City, a virtual reality escape for the children caught in war
In a small office space in Gaza City, a child stands still, wearing a virtual reality headset.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv condemns ‘blackmail’ by Hungary and Slovakia in energy supplies dispute
Ukraine foreign ministry says ultimatums should be sent to the Kremlin, not Kyiv; explosions in the capital and western Ukrainian city of Lviv: What we know on day 1,460 Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
What is the release date for Bridgerton season 4 part 1 on Netflix?

Slashdot
Open 
Pro-Gamer Consumer Movement 'Stop Killing Games' Will Launch NGOs in America and the EU
The consumer movement Stop Killing Games "has come a long way in the two years since
YouTuber Ross Scott got mad about Ubisoft's
destruction of The Crew in 2024," writes the gaming news site PC Gamer. "The short version is, he won: 1.3 million people signed the group's petition, mandating its consideration by the European Union, and while Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot reminded us all that nothing is forever, his company promised to never do something like that again." (And Ubisoft has since updated The Crew 2
with an
offline mode, according to Engadget.)


"But it looks like even bigger things are in store," PC Gamer wrote Thursday, "as Scott announced today that Stop Killing Games is launching two official NGOs, one in the EU and the other in the US."

An NGO - that's non-governmental organization - is, very generally
speaking, an organization that pursues particular goals, typically
but not exclusively political, and that may be funded partially or
fully by governments, but is not actually part of any government.
It's a big tent: Well-known NGOs include Oxfam, Doctors Without
Borders, Amnesty International, and CARE International... "If
there's a lobbyist showing up again and again at the EU Commission,
that might influence things," [Scott says
in a video]. "This will also allow for more watchdog
action. If you recall, I helped organize a multilingual site with
easy to follow instructions for reporting on The Crew to consumer
protection agencies. Well, maybe the NGO could set something like
that up for every big shutdown where the game is destroyed in the
future...."


Scott said in the video that he doesn't have details, but the two NGOs are reportedly looking at establishing a "global movement" to give Stop Killing Games a presence in other regions.

"According to Scott, these NGOs would allow for 'long-term counter lobbying' when publishers end support for certain video games," Engadget reports"


"Let me start off by saying I think we're going to win this, namely the problem of publishers destroying video games that you've already paid for," Scott said in the video. According to Scott, the NGOs will work on getting the original Stop Killing Games petition codified into EU law, while also pursuing more watchdog actions, like setting up a system to report publishers for revoking access to purchased video games... According to Scott, the campaign leadership will meet with the European Commission soon, but is also working on a 500-page legal paper that reveals some of the industry's current controversial practices.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
DNA Technology Convicts a 64-Year-Old for Murdering a Teenager in 1982
"More than four decades after a teenager was murdered in California, DNA found on a discarded cigarette has helped authorities catch her killer," reports CNN:

Sarah Geer, 13, was last seen leaving her friend's house&#239; in Cloverdale, California, on the evening of May 23, 1982. The next morning, a firefighter walking home from work found her body, the Sonoma County District Attorney's Office said in a news release... Her death was ruled a homicide, but due to the "limited forensic science of the day," no suspect was identified and the case went cold for decades, prosecutors said.

Nearly 44 years after Sarah's murder, a jury found James Unick, 64, guilty of killing her on February 13. It would have been the victim's 57th birthday, the Sonoma County District Attorney's Office told CNN. Genetic genealogy, which combines DNA evidence and traditional genealogy, helped match Unick's DNA from a cigarette butt to DNA found on Sarah's clothing, according to prosecutors... [The Cloverdale Police Department] said it had been in communication with a private investigation firm in late 2019 and had partnered with them in hopes the firm could revisit the case's evidence "with the latest technological advancements in cold case work...."

"The FBI, with its access to familial genealogical databases, concluded that the source of the DNA evidence collected from Sarah belonged to one of four brothers, including James Unick," prosecutors said. Once investigators narrowed down the list of suspects to the four Unick brothers, the FBI "conducted surveillance of the defendant and collected a discarded cigarette that he had been smoking," prosecutors said. A DNA analysis of the cigarette confirmed James Unick's DNA matched the 2003 profile, along with other DNA samples collected from Sarah's clothing the day she was killed.

In a statement, the county's district attorney "While 44 years is too long to wait, justice has finally been served..."

And the article points out that "In 2018, genetic genealogy led to the arrest of the Golden State Killer, and it has recently helped solve several other cold cases, including a 1974 murder in Wisconsin and a 1988 murder in Washington."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Admin Mandates English-Only Tests For Truckers Seeking Commercial Driver's Licenses
Trump Admin Mandates English-Only Tests For Truckers Seeking Commercial Driver's Licenses

Authored by Kimberly Hayek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The federal crackdown on unqualified truckers kicked into a higher gear Friday when the nation’s transportation chief announced that tests for commercial driver’s licenses must be given only in English.
A truck drives through the Port of Oakland in Oakland, Calif., on Nov. 14, 2025. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy revealed the latest policy with a goal of ensuring that truck drivers understand English well enough to read road signs and communicate with law enforcement officers. Florida has already implemented English-only tests.

The new order includes modernizing the commercial driver’s license (CDL) registration system, cracking down on fraud, and improving driver safety.

“American families deserve safe roads and we are going to deliver them,” Duffy said in a post on X.

In another post on Friday, Duffy said that it is easier for noncitizens to get a CDL than U.S. citizens, noting that under the Biden administration, illegal immigrants seeking licenses were not subject to background checks, unlike American applicants.

“Our new rule restricts eligibility and ensures ONLY qualified drivers can operate big rigs,” Duffy added.

Duffy said a number of states have hired companies to oversee CDL tests, but those companies often fail to uphold the standards that drivers are required to meet.

In May 2025, Duffy signed an order implementing new guidance to enforce English proficiency requirements for truckers. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations stipulate that a driver who cannot read or speak proficient English or understand highway traffic signs and signals does not qualify to operate a commercial motor vehicle.

By December 2025, the administration had removed nearly 9,500 commercial truck drivers from service for failing English proficiency checks.

Unqualified Driving Schools

The Transportation Department on Feb. 18 said more than 550 driving schools fail to meet basic safety standards and should be shut down.

Those commercial driver training providers received notices of proposed removal from the national registry as a result of more than 1,400 investigations, the department said.

Investigators found unqualified instructors, fabricated addresses, improper vehicles, and failures to teach hazardous materials handling, including schools that trained school bus drivers.

“For too long, the trucking industry has operated like the Wild, Wild West, where anything goes and nobody asks any questions,” Duffy said in a statement on Feb. 18. “The buck stops with me. Under President [Donald] Trump, my team is cracking down on every link in the trucking chain that has allowed this lawlessness to impact the safety of America’s roads. American families should have confidence that our school bus and truck drivers are following every letter of the law and that starts with receiving proper training before getting behind the wheel.”

Noncompliant States

The department finalized a rule on Feb. 11 to limit CDL eligibility for foreign nationals to holders of H-2A, H-2B, and E-2 nonimmigrant visas who undergo expanded interagency reviews.

The department has targeted states that handed out commercial driver’s licenses to immigrants who did not qualify, picking up its efforts ever since a fatal crash in Florida in August.

The Trump administration said the truck driver illegally entered the country from Mexico in 2018. The driver, Harjinder Singh, a native of India, allegedly made an illegal U-turn and caused a crash that killed three people. He obtained his licenses in California and Washington.

In October, Florida sued California and Washington over their CDL licensing practices.

The federal government has threatened to withhold funding from states such as California, Washington, and New Mexico for not enforcing English-language standards. California ultimately had more than $40 million withheld.

Nineteen states were allowing drivers to take their license tests in other languages, despite the drivers being required to demonstrate English proficiency.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 21:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Boards Are Replacing CEOs At The Fastest Pace In Over A Decade
Boards Are Replacing CEOs At The Fastest Pace In Over A Decade

A historic wave of leadership change is sweeping corporate America. Across 1,500 of the largest publicly traded companies, roughly one in nine CEOs was replaced last year—the highest churn since the post-financial-crisis years., according to the Wall Street Journal.

The turnover has ushered in the largest cohort of new chief executives in more than a decade, and they’re arriving younger and, in many cases, with thinner résumés than their predecessors.

The shake-up hasn’t slowed in 2026. Companies including Walmart, Procter & Gamble and Lululemon Athletica installed new leaders early in the year. On a single February day, Disney, PayPal and HP each announced CEO changes. Grocery chain Kroger also tapped a new chief. Altogether, firms representing trillions in market value have either replaced or appointed top executives in just a few months.



Boards appear to be responding to a business climate that feels fundamentally altered. Artificial intelligence is reshaping operations, global trade norms are fragmenting and geopolitical tensions are harder to ignore. As executive recruiter James Citrin put it, “We’re in a new environment, and someone who’s going to replay the playbooks of the past is not necessarily right.” He added that if a new chief fails to build momentum quickly with both employees and investors, directors are even less patient than before.



Some transitions were carefully choreographed. Warren Buffett handed leadership of Berkshire Hathaway to Greg Abel at the start of the year, completing a succession plan he had previewed years earlier. Others were abrupt. CarMax pushed out its CEO amid weak sales. At Codexis, the chief executive was replaced suddenly and the workforce reduced at the same time. Interim appointments, including at HP, signaled that not every board had a seamless plan in place.



The WSJ writes that retail illustrates how demanding the moment has become. Michael Fiddelke, newly installed at Target, found himself addressing sensitive political issues within days of stepping in, admitting to employees, “This isn’t the first message I imagined I’d send.” Industry executives say the job now requires reinvention rather than simple growth management, as pandemic aftershocks and cautious consumers create persistent headwinds.

The demographic profile of incoming leaders has shifted as well. New CEOs averaged about 54 years old—roughly two years younger than the prior class—and more than 80% were first-time public-company chiefs. Many have never served on a corporate board. Paul Shoukry, promoted at Raymond James at age 42, is emblematic of the trend. Supporters argue that leaders forged in volatile conditions may be better suited to navigate what one board director called dramatic and permanent change.

Not all diversity trends moved forward. Women accounted for just 9% of new CEO appointments last year, down from the year before, and they remain underrepresented across the broader market. As boards accelerate succession and bet on fresh profiles, the leadership reset underway is reshaping not only who runs America’s largest corporations—but what experience they bring to the job.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 21:35

Mail Online
Open 
Lily Allen oozes class in a chic Chanel co-ord as she leads the glamour alongside Marisa Abela and Claudia Winkleman at Charles Finch and Chanel pre-BAFTA party
Lily Allen showcased her impeccable sense of style as she joined Marisa Abela and Claudia Winkleman in leading the glamour at the Charles Finch and Chanel pre-BAFTA party in London on Saturday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew's Met Police protection officers were 'told to guard Jeffrey Epstein dinner party in New York', emails reveal
Newly revealed details suggest that two Scotland Yard royal protection officers were directed by Jeffrey Epstein's staff to guard the entrance of Epstein's townhouse.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pakistan strikes militant hideouts on Afghan border after surge in attacks
‘Intelligence-based, selective operations’ carried out against Pakistani Taliban camps, says information ministry Pakistan launched multiple airstrikes on Saturday night targeting militants in neighbouring Afghanistan, where the government reported children were among dozens of people killed and wounded.Islamabad did not say in precisely which areas the strikes were carried out or provide other details. Continue reading...

Chatham House
Open 
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs: Early analysis from Chatham House experts
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
20 February 2026

Chatham House analysts give their Initial reactions to the Supreme Court’s tariffs ruling, its likely impact on President Donald Trump’s economic agenda, and his angry response to the ruling.















The US Supreme Court has ruled against President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs in a long-awaited ruling that will be seen as a blow for the president’s economic agenda.By 6-3 the court found that President Trump exceeded his authority by using a law reserved for national emergencies to impose tariffs.They ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 did not grant the president the power to impose tariffs, which have been a central part of Trump’s economic agenda during his second term. Trump called the ruling ‘deeply disappointing’ and said he will impose global tariffs of 15%.Here is early analysis from Chatham House experts, who are are monitoring developments and will be following the fallout from the ruling.Heather Hurlburt, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:At first glance, this is a more comprehensive repudiation of the Trump administration’s tariff policies than many (including me) expected.The language of the majority opinion appears to include an attempt to close off some of the other unilateral options that President Trump had said he had at his disposal.






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision






I do wonder if the more recent rounds of purely geopolitical tariff threats influenced the decision. It may reflect both the breadth of corporate support for the lawsuit and concern with Trump’s recent rounds of tariff threats, including against Europe over Greenland.The SCOTUS ruling covers President Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ baseline 10% tariff that he announced on 2 April 2025, higher tariffs on many countries, and fentanyl and other “national security” tariffs.However it does NOT cover steel/aluminum and many other product-specific tariffs issued as a result of a “232” or “301” investigation. (‘232’ and ‘301’ refer to specific sections of decades-old trade laws passed by Congress, which authorize the executive branch to impose tariffs in specific circumstances, after an investigation. 232 tariffs may include national security as a justification.)President Trump still has lots of ways to impose tariffs. He’s not going to back down.I’m very struck by this phrase from Justice Kavanaugh’s dissent: ‘So the Court’s decision is not likely to greatly restrict presidential tariff authority going forward.’The court also did not mandate refunds of the tariffs collected to date, either to consumers or to manufacturers reliant on tariffed imports.Does that suggest that Chief Justice Roberts identified an approach to the law that feels like a momentous defense of the Constitution but has relatively little practical effect?Or will this ruling presage a vibe shift that gets the administration to change course?Senator Bernie Moreno, the senior Republican senator from Ohio, has called on Congress to use reconciliation to enact the president’s tariffs.This would presumably be challenging given that Republicans in both houses have joined Democrats in opposing President Trump’s tariffs.Heather Hurlburt has a distinguished career in analysing, explaining and working to close the gap between the practice of international affairs and the realities of politics in the United States.From 2022 to 2024, she served as Chief of Staff to US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, overseeing strategy and management for the agency charged with carrying out President Biden’s initiative for a worker-centred American trade policy. Read her full Chatham House biography here.Ambassador Julián Ventura, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The 20 February US Supreme Court 6-3 decision on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) is a significant fork in the tariff-driven trade policy road taken exactly 13 months ago by President Donald Trump when he announced his America First Trade Policy.It does not, however, mark an end to his expansive use of Executive authority to shape his engagement with global trading partners.In his combative reaction to the ruling, the president previewed alternative legal authorities that his administration will use as a basis for continued tariff action, including a new 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows for temporary import surcharges or import quotas to address balance-of-payments issues.






Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game






With details on scope, applicability and implementation of additional actions still unclear, US trade partners around the world will scramble in the coming days to determine the potential impact on their respective deals or framework agreements reached with Washington. Uncertainty will continue to be the name of the game.The ruling comes on the heels of the release of the US Census Bureau’s 2025 international trade data confirming Mexico and Canada’s place as the first and second US trading partners, export markets and sources of imports, and as the three countries undertake the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA)’s first joint review.In North America, with intraregional annual trade at almost 2 trillion dollars and millions of jobs and investment decisions linked to the continuity of the agreement, a great deal is at stake.In its initial reaction to the ruling, the government of Canada stated that it reinforces its view that the IEEPA tariffs ‘are unjustified’. Mexico´s Secretary of the Economy said he would be reaching out to his US counterparts and await more details on the announced 10% global tariff. Both countries were subject to IEEPA tariffs (35% on Canada and 25% on Mexico) on non-USMCA compliant exports, in addition to various Section 232 sectorial tariffs which continue to apply.It’s important to keep in mind that roughly 85% of massive Canadian and Mexican USMCA-compliant exports – totalling approximately 780 billion dollars – maintains tariff-free access to the US market.Beyond specific negotiating strategies with Washington, Ottawa and Mexico City will continue to focus on reducing uncertainty and preserving their current relative competitive advantages in a rapidly changing tariff environment.Ambassador Julián Ventura is a career diplomat, currently on leave from the Mexican Foreign Service. With over 33 years in public service, he has held senior diplomatic positions in four administrations, most recently as Deputy Foreign Secretary, where he oversaw key relationships in Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, and served as Mexico’s G20 Sherpa. Read his full Chatham House biography here.Professor Roland Paris, Associate Fellow, US and North America Programme:The Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs may have removed one instrument from his tariff toolkit, but it has done nothing to make US trade policy more predictable. If anything, it may herald even greater volatility.Trump retains several alternative instruments now that tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) have been ruled unlawful. Each entails procedural hurdles, evidentiary thresholds, time limits and litigation risks. Yet, as Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed in his dissenting opinion, “the Court’s decision might not prevent Presidents from imposing most, if not all, of these same sorts of tariffs under other statutory authorities.”That Trump, visibly angered by the ruling, quoted Kavanaugh’s statement not just once but twice suggests that he is not reconsidering his long-held belief in the benefits of tariffs. He has already pledged to introduce a new global tariff of 15 per cent, while signalling that further measures may follow.For US trade partners – including several that negotiated agreements intended to reduce IEEPA tariffs on their exports – the outlook is unclear. The uncertain status of those arrangements, together with the prospect of new tariffs, now adds an additional layer of unpredictability to an already unstable picture.






The US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner






Canada, for its part, gains little from the removal of the IEEPA tariffs, since goods compliant with the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement were already exempt. Meanwhile, the tariffs inflicting real pain on key Canadian sectors – including autos, steel, aluminium and lumber – remain in place because they rest on different statutory authorities. And any new US global tariffs may prove more damaging than the IEEPA measures if they eliminate existing exemptions.The logic of Canadian prime minister Mark Carney’s speech at Davos, in other words, remains unchanged: the US is no longer a predictable or reliable partner, leaving its jilted allies with little choice but to diversify their trade partnerships and invest in their own resilience.Last November, when the legal challenge to President Trump’s tariffs reached the Supreme Court, Senior Research Fellow Max Yoeli wrote about how the outcome could end up having far-reaching consequences for global trade, and beyond. Here is his commentary, from the Chatham House archive: Max Yoeli, Senior Research Fellow in the US and North America Programme, wrote on 5 November 2025:‘The case concerns tariffs levied under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which empowers the president to declare a national emergency over an ‘unusual and extraordinary’ foreign threat and respond with a range of actions, including sanctions and the freezing of funds. IEEPA has never before been used as a basis for tariffs nor does the statute explicitly authorize them, though President Richard Nixon relied on a similarly worded law to impose an emergency tariff on imports in 1971.Under the US Constitution, taxation is Congress’s remit. The power to impose tariffs can be delegated to the executive under the right circumstances, including authority presidents have used across administrations to impose sectoral tariffs on national security grounds.Unlike his predecessors, however, Trump is also using IEEPA to impose tariffs, including levies on China, Mexico and Canada linked to fentanyl supply chains, ‘reciprocal tariffs’ on global trading partners in response to the US’s trade deficit, and recent measures targeting developments in Brazil and India.’Read his full Expert Comment here: Trump’s tariffs face Supreme Court challenge that could have significant consequences for presidential power

The Hill
Open 
State of Texas: GOP AG hopefuls agree on policy but clash over records in Dallas debate
The four candidates vying for the Republican nomination for Texas Attorney General — State Sen. Mayes Middleton, R-Galveston, State Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, former Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Reitz and U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas — agree on almost everything. However, that didn't stop them from attacking each other on their records and experience during Tuesday night's Republican Attorneys General Association (RAGA) debate.

The Hill
Open 
Trump calls for Netflix to fire Susan Rice after she warned corporations for bending 'a knee'
President Trump on Saturday called on Netflix to fire former United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice from its board of directors after she warned about an “accountability agenda” if Democrats regain power in the upcoming elections. “Netflix should fire racist, Trump Deranged Susan Rice, IMMEDIATELY, or pay the consequences. She’s got no talent or skills -...

Mail Online
Open 
Italian toddler, two, dies after being given 'frostbitten heart' that was kept in dry ice - as investigation is launched
An Italian toddler has tragically died after receiving a 'frostbitten' heart in a transplant, the family's lawyer has said.

Mail Online
Open 
New African video game lets players 'reloot' artefacts displayed in Western museums - as designer says he was inspired by the British Museum
Players of Relooted will plan and execute heists to bring 'home' 70 real-world objects, giving them a 'hopeful, utopian feeling', according to its makers.

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson checked into the world's most expensive wellness clinic amid Epstein fallout - and has been 'sofa-surfing on a global scale to avoid being discovered'
​The former Duchess of York, 66, fled the UK as she and her ex-husband became embroiled in the growing Epstein scandal which culminated in his arrest on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Sheriff in charge of Nancy Guthrie investigation gives blunt message to groups 'interfering' with search
The Pima County Sheriff's Department in Tucson, Arizona, has once again faced public backlash for telling volunteer search groups to let investigators do their job.

Mail Online
Open 
Scarlett Thomas channels her inner cowgirl as she takes another trip to Nashville after embarking on her music career in the States
The nepo baby , 17, who is the daughter of Corrie exes Tina O'Brien and Ryan Thomas , recently signed a record contract, much to the delight of her dad.

Mail Online
Open 
Melania Trump stuns in silver pants as she arrives at controversial Governor's Dinner with husband Donald as dozens threaten boycott after president's turbulent week
The first lady entered the dinner in shimmering silver pants and a black tie-front top, escorted by her husband. Despite the glitz and glamour, the dinner was marred by controversy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv condemns ‘blackmail’ by Hungary and Slovakia in energy supplies dispute
Ukraine foreign ministry says ultimatums should be sent to the Kremlin, not Kyiv; one dead, 15 wounded in Lviv in ‘act of terror’: What we know on day 1,460Ukraine’s foreign ministry has condemned what it describes as “ultimatums and blackmail” by Hungary and Slovakia on Saturday, after both governments threatened to stop electricity supplies to Ukraine unless Kyiv restarts flows of Russian oil. Hungary has also threatened to block a €90bn Ukrainian war loan.Shipments of Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia have been cut off since 27 January, when Kyiv says a Russian drone strike hit pipeline equipment in western Ukraine. Hungary and Slovakia both accuse Ukraine of delaying the restart, without evidence. The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said in a statement the country “rejects and condemns the ultimatums and blackmail by the governments of Hungary and the Slovak Republic regarding energy supplies between our countries”. “Ultimatums should be sent to the Kremlin, and certainly not to Kyiv.”Slovakia and Hungary are the only two EU countries that still rely on significant amounts of Russian oil shipped via the Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline over Ukraine. The issue has become one of the angriest disputes yet between Ukraine and two neighbours that are members of the EU and Nato but whose leaders have bucked the largely pro-Ukrainian consensus in Europe to cultivate ties with Moscow. The Slovak leader, Robert Fico, has accused Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy of acting “maliciously” towards his country.Explosions in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv have killed a policewoman and wounded at least 15 people overnight in what local authorities on Sunday called an “act of terror”. The blasts occurred just after police responded to a report of a break-in at a shop in the city centre at about 12:30 am, according to officials. A first explosion struck as the initial patrol arrived, followed by a second blast moments later when another crew reached the scene. “This is definitely an act of terror,” the Lviv mayor, Andriy Sadovy, said in a Facebook post. “We have 15 people currently receiving medical aid, some of them are in very serious condition. One policewoman died.”Former British prime minister Boris Johnson says the UK and its European allies should immediately deploy noncombat troops to Ukraine to show the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, that western nations are committed to the nation’s freedom and independence. Speaking ahead of the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Johnson told the BBC that the troops should be sent to peaceful regions in non-fighting roles. The comments from Johnson, who was one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters as Britain’s leader during the first months of the conflict, were contained in excerpts of an interview that will be broadcast on Sunday.A strike by Ukraine against a major missile factory deep inside Russia wounded 11 people, officials in Russia’s Udmurt Republics said on Saturday. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s General Staff confirmed it used Ukrainian-made FP-5 “Flamingo” cruise missiles against the Votkinsk plant. Unofficial Russian Telegram channels also pointed to that site. Russia suspended flights at airports in and near the region. Ukraine also reported a strike on a gas plant in Samara, Russia.About 2,000 people marched in Paris on Saturday, according to police, to show their support for Ukraine days before the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion. Demonstrators marching through the French capital chanted: “We support Ukraine against Putin, who is killing it”, and “Frozen Russian assets must be confiscated, they belong to Ukraine”. European parliament member Raphael Glucksmann told Agence France-Presse there was “massive” support for Ukraine in France which “has not wavered since the first day of the full-scale invasion”. “On the other hand, in the French political class, sounds of giving up are starting to emerge. On both the far left and the far right, voices of capitulation are getting louder,” he said.Volodymyr Zelenskyy says “real opportunities to end war with dignity still exist”, calling for another round of talks, and hinting at a fresh leaders’ meeting. After he was debriefed on this week’s peace talks with Russia and the US in Geneva, Zelenskyy called for another round of talks to be held “very soon, as early as this February”. He said “Ukraine’s responses to the most difficult questions ahead of the next meeting are ready,” and that they still want to raise some issues at the leaders’ level with Trump and Putin. “It is the leaders’ format that could prove decisive in many respects, and Ukraine is ready for such a format,” he said. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Final missing Lake Tahoe skier found dead 5 days after avalanche
Authorities released the names of the six women and three guides who died in the worst avalanche in state history.

Mail Online
Open 
Sandra Bullock treats herself to VERY expensive jewelry in LA as reclusive star steps out on rare public outing
Sandra Bullock treated herself to a lavish shopping trip as she stepped out for a rare public outing in Los Angeles on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew 'wailed "you can't do this to me, I'm the Queen's son"' as he was marched out of Royal Lodge: Royal should face TREASON probe, MP says
The former Duke of York left the 30-room Windsor mansion where he had paid 'peppercorn rent' for decades under the cover of darkness at the start of this month.

Mail Online
Open 
Muse frontman Matt Bellamy 'splits from model wife Elle Evans' as he's spotted without his wedding ring while out with mystery woman
The rocker, 47, and model began dating 11 years ago after meeting on the set of Muse's video for Mercy before tying the knot in 2019.

Mail Online
Open 
Gisele Bundchen savors an afternoon bike ride with baby son in Miami... amid claims she and ex Tom Brady barely speak
Bundchen's breezy outing, during which she was once again flaunting her new wedding ring from husband Joaquim Valente, comes amid reports that she barely speaks to the now-retired NFL legend.

Mail Online
Open 
Melania Trump stuns in silver pants as she arrives at controversial Governor's Dinner with husband Donald as dozens of leaders boycott after president's turbulent week
The first lady entered the dinner in shimmering silver pants and a black tie-front top, escorted by her husband. Despite the glitz and glamour, the dinner was marred by controversy.

BBC World News
Open 
Willie Colón, trombonist who pioneered salsa music, dies aged 75
His career spanned 60 years and dozens of albums and had been named among the most influential Latino artists of all time.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ilia Malinin performs to Fear as he completes cathartic Olympic gala routine
American given rousing reception by crowd in MilanAlysa Liu and Mikhail Shaidorov among other performersAlysa Liu had the opportunity to cherish skating on the same Olympic ice where she won two gold medals one more time. Ilia Malinin had the chance to replace some disappointing memories with much better ones.The two Americans were among more than 40 Olympic figure skaters who took part in the traditional exhibition gala on Saturday night, which not only serves to wrap up the program but to celebrate the entire sport. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The moment I knew: she was leaning against the ute, her rat’s tail catching the light – she looked electric
In the 2000s, the queer scene in Queensland felt small, but Melania Jack fell for Patty Preece big timeFind more stories from the moment I knew seriesGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIt was 2007 and I was heading out to work on the regional program of an Indigenous arts festival called Stylin’ Up. A car entourage of arts workers were headed to Cherbourg to run beat making, songwriting and dance workshops.As I drove up into Highgate Hill, the sun was just coming up. Ahead of me I saw Patty leaning against a yellow ute wearing a striped 70s men’s T-shirt, a rat’s tail catching the light. She looked electric. I remember thinking: “Uh oh. This person is literally shining”.Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morningMelania Jack and Patty Preece perform as the multidisciplinary arts duo The Ironing Maidens Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Huckabee’s Israel land remarks condemned as ‘dangerous’ as controversy rumbles on
Arab and Islamic governments issue joint statement denouncing the comments made on Tucker Carlson podcastArab and Islamic countries jointly condemned remarks by the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, who suggested Israel had a biblical right to a vast swath of the Middle East.Huckabee, a former Baptist minister and a fervent Israel supporter, was speaking on the podcast of Tucker Carlson. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Quiet Revolution Reshaping America's Energy Future
The Quiet Revolution Reshaping America's Energy Future

Authored by Haley Zaremba via OilPrice.com,


The geothermal revolution includes both shallow geoexchange systems, such as The Riverie high-rise which uses boreholes for heating and cooling, and deeper, more technologically advanced "enhanced geothermal" techniques.


Enhanced geothermal aims to make this alternative energy source viable anywhere by borrowing advanced drilling technologies from fields like hydraulic fracturing and nuclear fusion to access the Earth's core heat.


The sector is gaining momentum with significant investment from major tech figures like Bill Gates and Google, and is projected by the U.S. Department of Energy to supply about 90 gigawatts of carbon-free energy by 2050.

A geothermal revolution is unfolding around the United States in ways both flashy and quiet. As Big Tech becomes increasingly involved in developing alternative energy sources to meet skyrocketing energy demand driven by the AI boom, innovative and advanced geothermal technologies have been taking off – but so too have more simple and surface-level solutions like heat pumps. Together, these approaches could reshape the domestic energy industry by providing baseload clean energy solutions and shoring up energy security in urban and rural populations alike.



Last month, residents started moving into The Riverie, the biggest high-rise geoexchange system in the country, an apartment building in Brooklyn that is situated atop 320 boreholes that help the building heat and cool through tapping into the Earth’s naturally insulated temperatures. In the winter, relatively warm temperatures are piped out of the ground and into the building. In the summer, the process is reversed and heat is pumped downward into the ground. 

“Because it simply moves heat rather than generating it, the Riverie is expected to reduce annual carbon emissions from heating and cooling by 53 percent compared with traditional residential buildings,” reports Scientific American. While up-front costs and red tape can be a major deterrent from building similar models elsewhere, the benefits outweigh the costs – both in terms of economics and environmental factors – in many settings. As a result, the Riverie is likely at the vanguard of a much bigger movement that will start to become more common in urban areas around the country and the world. 

Whereas the major advantage of geoexchange systems such as this one is that they are relatively shallow and easy to drill, the other major innovation taking place in geothermal energy takes just the opposite approach – unlocking new ways to drill deeper into the Earth than ever before. Historically, geothermal energy systems have only been viable in places where the heat from the Earth’s core has naturally escaped to the surface – such as through geysers and thermal pools.  

To make geothermal a practical alternative energy source nearly anywhere on Earth, geothermal startups across the world are working on ‘enhanced geothermal’ techniques capable of drilling to extreme depths. These startups are borrowing technologies from hydraulic fracturing and even nuclear fusion to find more advanced ways to blast and melt away bedrock to access the heat of the Earth’s core. 

Enhanced geothermal startups are being backed by some of the tech industry’s biggest figures and deepest pockets. One such venture, Houston-based Fervo Energy, is backed by Bill Gates and Google, among other major investors. Plus, critically, geothermal has bipartisan backing and outspoken support from the Trump administration – rare for a clean energy technology in the United States. 

As such, the U.S. is poised to become a major frontrunner in the emerging sector. According to projections from the United States Department of Energy, enhanced geothermal projects could provide about 90 gigawatts of carbon-free energy in the U.S. by 2050. That’s roughly enough to power at least 65 million homes. 

“The U.S. has a number of different superpowers and putting holes in the ground and taking things out of those holes is one of them — and doing so more economically and more efficiently than basically any other place on Earth,” Drew Nelson, vice president of Project InnerSpace, was quoted by Cipher News in an article from last year.

Plus, the AI boom is driving an increase in investment in geothermal research and development, which has been a major catalyst for technological advancement. While AI is creating an energy problem that geothermal is needed to solve, it is also providing key solutions for geothermal development and deployment. AI tools are increasingly being used to map out optimal locations for geothermal systems. 

However, there are some key challenges standing in the way of geothermal expansion, including high up-front costs and a talent shortage for the nascent and relatively little-known industry. But while enhanced geothermal gets all of the attention and most of the bottlenecks, smaller and quieter projects like Riviera are continuing to break ground and change the way we heat and cool our cities. These breakthroughs are small, but could add up to huge changes for energy efficiency in coming years.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 19:50

The Hill
Open 
Schiff to boycott Trump's State of the Union, speak at alternative event
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is joining a growing group of Democrats who plan to boycott President Trump’s State of the Union address next Tuesday in favor of an alternative event, according to progressive media outlet MeidasTouch. The outlet reported that Schiff is set to speak at a counter rally on the National Mall, dubbed the...

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Sunday, Feb. 22
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 22.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Government 'inflamed tension' over Maccabi fan ban, say MPs
Intervention over the banning of fans at the Aston Villa match was late and clumsy, MPs say.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Pakistan says militant hideouts struck along Afghan border
Islamabad blames Afghan-based militants for a surge in deadly suicide bombings in the country and said 7 camps belonging to the Pakistani Taliban were targeted.

Sky News Home
Open 
Inaccurate evidence from AI led to police pursuing ban on Israeli football fans, MPs find
Microsoft's Copilot AI tool led to more inaccurate evidence being used by West Midlands Police (WMP) to pursue a ban on Israeli football fans, MPs have uncovered.

Ars Technica
Open 
NASA says it needs to haul the Artemis II rocket back to the hangar for repairs

Mail Online
Open 
The growing evidence vaping really IS harmful - and how it raises the risk of serious infection and even a chronic lung condition that triggers organ failure
Britain was betting on vapes to be safe enough to hand out on prescription. But there is growing evidence that they - while undoubtedly safer than cigarettes - are still dangerous.

Mail Online
Open 
Why waking up without an erection could be the first sign of a deadly heart problem
When billionaire Bryan Johnson revealed on social media last year that he had started tracking the frequency of his erections while he slept, he became the focus of worldwide ridicule.

Mail Online
Open 
How to rewire your brain so you DON'T pile the pounds back on after dieting or fat jabs: DR MAX PEMBERTON'S new book explains exactly how to avoid slipping back into all the bad old habits
If you've struggled with your weight for years, you've probably lost touch with your body's natural hunger and fullness signals.

Mail Online
Open 
My paralysing Strictly panic attack, by RUTH LANGSFORD: In her extraordinary new book, the TV presenter reveals every excruciating second of a stage fright so severe she feared she'd be the first star to faint on a live show
When my agent got a call to ask if I was interested in being in the next Strictly you'd think I would have jumped up and down with glee. But the truth was, I was scared rigid.

Mail Online
Open 
ANDREW NEIL: Trump's deranged rants show he is losing the plot - and desperate Presidents do desperate things
President Trump's public utterances are hardly noted for their accuracy, understatement, modesty, realism or compassion. But on Friday afternoon he managed to hit a new low, even for him.

Mail Online
Open 
A stark warning to the Palace that Andrew had been playing with fire
One summer evening, a prominent British businessman opened his laptop and began writing a long email...

Mail Online
Open 
SARAH VINE: Remove Andrew from the line of succession and the royal haters will lose the best weapon in their armoury
Whatever happens next to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, this much is certain: he can no longer remain in the royal line of succession.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I cleaned toilets while studying at Cambridge'
Jade Franks uses her experience of classism to write a hit play which has been picked up by Netflix.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain WILL send troops to Ukraine before the end of the year, Defence Secretary says - as long as a peace deal is agreed with Vladimir Putin
Nearly four years on from the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Defence Secretary has said he is 'determined' to 'end' the war by December.

Mail Online
Open 
ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: Fat jabs don't look so clever now they're mundane
No surprises from the latest fat jab survey: it reveals that the majority of weight-loss drugs are being bought by middle-class women aged between 30-49.

Mail Online
Open 
Ant and Dec 'to launch new golf game where contestants take on crazy golf course for money' in latest venture
The Britain's favourite duo are rumoured to be hosting an adaptation of the US hit programme called Holey Moley, where they will channel their passion for golf.

Mail Online
Open 
Now you see him, now you don't: Cringeworthy new photos show Andrew trying to hide from photographer as he's driven away from police station after questioning
Ducking down in a futile attempt to avoid being photographed, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is driven from a Norfolk police station last Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Eastern promise: Traditional Chinese breathwork may lower blood pressure as much as a brisk walk
A traditional Chinese breath-work routine could be as effective at lowering blood pressure as a brisk walk, research has found.

Mail Online
Open 
'He's done now, he's surrounded by fakes': Louis Walsh brands Simon Cowell a 'has-been' and claims Britain's Got Talent is finished in scathing rant
Louis Walsh has branded Simon Cowell a 'has-been' and claimed that Britain's Got Talent is finished in a scathing rant this week. 

Mail Online
Open 
Charli XCX takes swipe at Gordon Ramsay as he says her BRAT album gave his daughters 'attitude in abundance' as they appear on The Graham Norton Show
The singer, 33, and the chef, 59, appeared on the chat show to promote their respective releases, The Moment and Being Gordon Ramsay.

Mail Online
Open 
Shia LaBeouf trades beer for sparkling water on grocery run just days after his Mardi Gras bar brawl arrest
Shia LaBeouf was spotted out on a grocery run in New Orleans, Louisiana on Saturday just days after his Mardi Gras bar brawl arrest.

Mail Online
Open 
Jason Statham looks every inch the hard man as he reunites the crew for sequel to London crime thriller Layer Cake - with Camila Mendes as a gangster's moll
As one of a trio of action-packed gangster films set in London at the turn of the century, Layer Cake was a box-office hit in 2004.

Mail Online
Open 
Now you see him, now you don't: Cringeworthy new photos show Andrew trying to hide from photographer as he's driven away by police
Ducking down in a futile attempt to avoid being photographed, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is driven from a Norfolk police station last Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
All nine bodies of skiers killed in California avalanche recovered
Six additional skiers survived tragedy in Sierra Nevadas near Lake Tahoe, a popular winter sport destination‘They were mothers, wives, friends’: how a ski trip turned deadly in the California mountainsOfficials announced on Saturday that the bodies of all nine missing skiers who were killed in a devastating avalanche in California had been recovered, following days of search efforts.The avalanche happened in the Sierra Nevada mountains in northern California near Lake Tahoe, a popular skiing and winter sport destination. No more people are left missing after Tuesday’s deadly avalanche. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Team GB settle for silver as Canada triumph in men's curling final
In a repeat of the 2014 Winter Olympics final, Canada defeat Team GB in the men's curling gold medal match as Bruce Mouat's men are beaten 9-6.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card
Jim Snow 2.0: Mamdani Requires Snow-Shovel Volunteers Show Two Forms Of ID, Social Security Card

With 2-3 feet of snow predicted to hit New York City and New Jersey, NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani has called on New York residents to volunteer as emergency snow shovelers. 

"You too can become an emergency snow shoveler. Just show up at your local sanitation garage between 8am and 1pm tomorrow with your paperwork," he said during a Saturday press conference before the city's first blizzard warning in nine years. 


🚨 NEW: Zohran Mamdani Calls on New Yorkers to Shovel Snow During Tomorrow’s Blizzard
“You too can become an emergency snow shoveler. Just show up at your local sanitation garage between 8am and 1pm tomorrow with your paperwork.” pic.twitter.com/ZifhOhPbGt
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) February 21, 2026

Except, the Mamdani administration is actively committing a hate crime - by requiring volunteers bring 'Two small photos, two original forms of ID, plus copies, and a Social Security card' - the thing Democrats say is "Jim Crow 2.0" when it comes to voting in elections. 



The oppressive nature of Mamdani's hate crime against aspiring-yet-disenfranchised New York City snow shovelers did not go unnoticed. 


Oh, this is beautiful! If you want to volunteer to shovel snow in NYC, you have to 3 forms of ID!!
You. Cannot. Make. This. Shit.Up! 🤣 https://t.co/5qizGdIMlx
— Buzz Patterson (@BuzzPatterson) February 21, 2026

The best part is that this requires two forms of ID and a social security card https://t.co/Dvwl79Z8PY
— Ian Miller (@ianmSC) February 21, 2026

Also funny, when the snow melted last week it revealed that the sidewalk near Brooklyn's Sunset Park was covered in shit-cicles from all the dog poo that owners couldn't be bothered to pick up themselves. 

Why can't leftists keep their cities clean?

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 18:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Hikes Global Tariffs To 15%, Blasts "Ridiculous, Anti-American" SCOTUS Ruling
Trump Hikes Global Tariffs To 15%, Blasts "Ridiculous, Anti-American" SCOTUS Ruling

Hell hath no fury like a Donald scorned...



One day after 'The Supremes' struck down his IEEPA tariffs, President Trump has announced, in a statement issued on Truth Social, that he will raise his new, global tariff to 15% (the maximum allowed under a separate trade law), a day after he took hiked global tariffs to 10% (in response to the SCOTUS ruling).

Trump further slammed the SCOTUS decision as "anti-American"...


"Based on a thorough, detailed, and complete review of the ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American decision on Tariffs issued yesterday, after MANY months of contemplation, by the United States Supreme Court,


Then dropped the hammer...


"...please let this statement serve to represent that I, as President of the United States of America, will be, effective immediately, raising the 10% Worldwide Tariff on Countries, many of which have been “ripping” the U.S. off for decades, without retribution (until I came along!), to the fully allowed, and legally tested, 15% level."


With the policy taking effect immediately, Trump further signaled that he would press ahead with his trade war despite the major legal setback.


"During the next short number of months, the Trump Administration will determine and issue the new and legally permissible Tariffs...

...which will continue our extraordinarily successful process of Making America Great Again - GREATER THAN EVER BEFORE!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter."


Ironically, for those cheering yesterday's court ruling, for some countries, President Trump’s new 15% tariff may actually be higher than the rates that previously applied to their exports to the US.

Trump is applying the new baseline tariff under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows the president to impose tariffs for 150 days without congressional approval.

Securing that approval could prove challenging, as Democrats and some Republicans have opposed elements of his trade policy

The Trump administration has indicated that it will use other legal authorities, like Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, to impose tariffs on countries individually based on their trade practices.

But those investigations will take time to prepare.

At least temporarily, exports from all countries will now face a 15 percent tariff rate, regardless of their trade practices, or the concessions they have made.

Presumably, at some point soon, the 'left' will sue to halt these tariffs too (even though - as Trump noted - they have been 'tested' in court previously).

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 18:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Grinding The American Middle Class To Dust
Grinding The American Middle Class To Dust

Authored by MN Gordon via EconomicPrism.com,

The housing market, for much of the 20th century, was the bedrock of the American Dream. Home ownership, and the financial stability it represents, was a sure path to middle-class prosperity.

That dream turned to a nightmare for many American families during the epic real estate bubble and subsequent bust in 2008-09. What’s more, in the near two decades that followed, federal monetary policies coupled with restrictive local development standards have huffed and puffed an even more perilous bubble than the last one.

Now the crumbling façade of American real estate and the associated economic squeeze has become too great to ignore. To understand why the real estate market is falling apart, you must look at who’s expected to buy the houses. The arithmetic simply doesn’t work.

We’ve reached the point where discretionary income, the money left over after you’ve paid for basic needs, has effectively vanished for much of the population. When 67 percent of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, saving for a down payment is impossible.

Currently, about 72 percent of Americans are struggling to pay their monthly bills. We aren’t talking about luxury vacations or even unexpected medical expenses. We’re talking about keeping the lights on and the fridge full. When the buffer is gone, the entire economic engine stalls.

The lack of affordable housing has created a generational rift. Young workers find themselves trapped in a permanent renter class. They’re unable to build the equity that once anchored the nation’s middle class.

Right now, more than 75 percent of homes across the country are unaffordable for the typical household. Most Americans are effectively priced out of the housing market. And this number is climbing.



Between higher interest rates, relative to four years ago, and artificially inflated valuations, the entry-level home no longer exists.

The Mortgage Death Trap

The ladder of social mobility has been pulled up. Millions of Americans have been left behind. Shelter is no longer a basic path to financial stability, but an unreachable speculative asset.

What we are seeing is the rent servitude of a generation. If you can’t buy, you rent. If you rent, you can’t save to buy. It’s a closed loop that keeps equity in the hands of the few while the middle class are stuck paying for a roof they will never own.

The modern American household also operates in a fragile state. Most families require two incomes just to keep the mortgage current. This dual-income trap means there is zero margin for an unexpected job loss.

If even one spouse loses their job, which is becoming a looming threat as the labor market adjusts to the realities of AI, the house quickly turns from a burden to a liability. The timeline from missed paycheck to foreclosure notice is shorter than most people realize.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the labor market is strong. But the reality on the ground tells a different story. We are staring down a year where millions of jobs are projected to vanish.

Automation and AI are displacing white-collar jobs that used to be safe. There have been massive layoffs in technology, finance, and manufacturing. In previous downturns, there were usually sectors that could absorb the displaced. Today, every sector, except low-cost elder care jobs, is contracting simultaneously.

When the jobs go, the houses follow. A bank doesn’t care about your years of loyal service. When the 30-day clock on a missed payment starts ticking that’s all that matters.

Engineered Collapse

Despite what the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics says, there’s mounting evidence that this isn’t just a run of the mill economic cycle. When you look at the speed of the decline and the specific targeting of the middle class, it appears to be something else entirely.

The middle class, specifically the segment that has historically held the most private property, is under attack. By squeezing the life out of the housing market, wealth is being funneled upward. When families lose their homes to foreclosure, they don’t just lose a roof, they lose their primary vehicle for intergenerational wealth.

The result is a civilization of serfs. We’re rapidly transitioning to a rentership society. If you don’t own property, you don’t have a stake in the future. You’re left out in the cold.

In 2008, the crash was about bad paper and subprime loans. Today, the crisis is about affordability and insolvency. House price inflation in the face of stagnating wages has become too much to overcome.

Moreover, as houses are lost en masse to the banks they aren’t being foreclosed on and put back on the market at a lower price. They’re being sold in bulk to hedge funds, who promptly jack up the rents. What this means is your neighborhood could soon be owned by a corporation that doesn’t have a face, let alone a soul.

The real estate market isn’t just cooling off. It’s being hollowed out. Between the loss of discretionary income, the instability of the job market, and the sheer impossibility of the two-income mortgage, the American middle class is standing on a trap door.

Yet the collapse isn’t coming. It has already begun. The question isn’t whether the market will survive, but who will be left owning anything when the dust settles.

Grinding the American Middle Class to Dust

For decades, the home was a forced savings account that allowed a mechanic or a teacher to retire with dignity. Today, that vehicle has been hijacked by institutional capital.

As the supply of affordable homes dwindles, we see the rise of the build-to-rent trend. This is where entire subdivisions are constructed not for families to buy, but for corporations to lease back to them in perpetuity.

This shift marks the transition from a stakeholder society to a subscription society consistent with the WEF diktat of, “you will own nothing and be happy.” Housing, the most basic of human needs, has become a subscription service.

Thus, the ability to accumulate private wealth through long-term home ownership has disappeared. As a renter, you are no longer building equity and wealth, you are funding a hedge fund’s quarterly dividends.

This exploitive model ensures that the fruits of one’s labor are siphoned away from the community and into the coffers of distant shareholders. As a result, the working class are left with nothing but receipts and a sense of perpetual instability. The economic ladder has been replaced by a treadmill to nowhere.

In addition, a society of renters is a society of transients that lack the long-term community ties that homeownership once encouraged. As the trap door swings open, the fall both destroys people’s finances and shatters the very concept of the neighborhood.

Community engagement and local pride disappear when the residents of a street have no permanent stake in its future. Vibrant towns turn into anonymous places for an increasingly displaced workforce. No one makes eye contact. No one cracks jokes. No one helps their elderly neighbor bring in the groceries.

The doors are closing on the era of American middle-class independence. The dream of home ownership is being replaced by the reality of permanent debt, and the bedrock of the American middle class is ground into dust.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 18:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Satanic, Awful, Sacrificial": Boebert And Maher Discuss Pizzagate, Epstein, And Baby Cannibalism
"Satanic, Awful, Sacrificial": Boebert And Maher Discuss Pizzagate, Epstein, And Baby Cannibalism

Talk show host Bill Maher, that 'blood oath' sex party enthusiast who founded 'Kid Love Productions' in 1992 one year after starring in the movie "Pizza Man" - in which he plays a pizza delivery guy who stumbles into an elaborate criminal conspiracy involving Ronald Reagan, Dan Quayle, and Donald Trump (who he kills)...



...sat down with Rep. Lauren Boebert Friday, where the two discussed the latest Epstein files.

Maher started out appearing to apologize to QAnon followers for being "righter than me" when it came to Epstein, adding "Now they also believe a lot of real batsh*t nonsense. But when it comes to-"

"I know you think it is," Boebert shot back. 

"They don’t eat babies. Democrats don’t need babies. You think they eat babies?" Maher replied.

"There is a lot of consumption talk in the stuff that, no, are there babies? I don’t know. No, you can laugh all you want. But I mean, there is some sick stuff in here that is implying," Boebert answered.

"But that’s not eating babies. It’s — oh c’mon," Maher said back. 

"I’m not saying they’re eating babies. I’m saying there is talk of consumption and it ain’t pizza," she replied. "And And I’m, not saying that I am QAnon by any means but this is deep dark satanic awful Sacrificial. And this stuff is gross."

"See, this is what I’m saying. Here I am, sacrificing myself, saying, you know what? I was wrong, QAnon, and then you don’t meet me halfway! You insist they might be eating babies!" Maher shot back. 

Watch:


Bill Maher moans and groans after Lauren Boebert refuses to rule out whether Democrats eat babies.
MAHER: “They don’t eat babies. Democrats don’t eat babies. You think they eat babies?”
BOEBERT: “There is a lot of consumption talk in this stuff.”
[MAHER GROANS]
BOEBERT: “Are… pic.twitter.com/B2mJeoUtGX
— Vigilant Fox 🦊 (@VigilantFox) February 21, 2026

Maybe next they'll discuss the similarity of Madeleine McCann kidnap suspects to notable political figures? Damn skippy.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 19:15

Mail Online
Open 
Strictly Come Dancing given 'clean bill of health' by BBC bosses as stars cleared in cocaine probe
The corporation launched an investigation into the show and hired an external legal firm to carry out the probe last summer, following the accusation.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'We want the truth' - families of Nottingham attacks victims speak ahead of public inquiry
An inquiry into the attacks carried out by Valdo Calocane will hear evidence in London from Monday.

The Hill
Open 
'Tears of joy': US Women's Hockey families reflect on golden journey
MILAN (NEXSTAR) - The U.S. women's hockey team won the Olympic gold medal Thursday in Milan after a comeback effort and an overtime victory. And many had family in the stands taking in the drama. On Thursday, Hilary Knight scored the tying goal to spark the comeback at the end of regulation before Megan Keller...

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Trump Kennedy Center maliciously attacked
It&#8217;s being reported tonight that the ice rink at the Trump Kennedy Center was maliciously vandalized by someone who poured a black substance onto the rink, severely damaging it. Here&#8217;s the news: . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Trump pulls endorsement of ‘RINO Congressman’ after tariff vote, endorses his opponent…
Congressman Jeff Hurd of Colorado is now reaping the whirlwind after he voted with Democrats to end President Trump&#8217;s national emergency and repeal his tariffs on Canada. Today, Trump officially pulled his . . .

Telegraph
Open 
Pep Guardiola’s celebrations said it all: Manchester City smell blood in title race
Pep Guardiola’s celebrations said it all: Manchester City smell blood in title race

Mail Online
Open 
Classic 'ageist' nursery rhymes should be replaced because they portray older people as 'incompetent, unlikeable and irresponsible', woke academics say
It's raining, it's pouring - but it's ageist to suggest the old man might be snoring, researchers say.

Mail Online
Open 
TALK OF THE TOWN: Riddle of the neighbour backing Geri Halliwell in war with posh village
Have Geri Halliwell and former Formula One chief Christian Horner pulled a fast one by commenting on their own planning application?

Mail Online
Open 
Green Party candidate Hannah Spencer branded 'property-hoarding hypocrite' with £1.2million real estate portfolio and tips on intimidating buyers and driving up prices
Party leader Zack Polanski has vowed to abolish all private landlords, tax the rich and bring in aggressive rent controls. But his candidate, Hannah Spencer, has amassed a property empire

Mail Online
Open 
Under-fire Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor 'used Prince William's wedding to shore up his position as UK trade envoy' - including 'supportive chat' with ex-PM David Cameron
As the heir to the throne tied the knot at Westminster Abbey on April 29, 2011, the Duke of York was fighting to hold on to his job amid a firestorm over his links to Jeffrey Epstein.

BBC World News
Open 
How football is helping girls fight against forced marriage
Two sisters in an Indian village talk about how football has changed their lives and helped them push back against child marriage.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Scotland's mad for Oasis, Newcastle loves Sam Fender: Music tastes where you live revealed
Spotify and YouTube's streaming data for 2025 shows some interesting variations in listening habits.

BBC UK News
Open 
The Papers: Andrew 'inquiry' calls and hiding from 'Putin's killer drones'
Calls to probe Andrew's links to Epstein and the fourth anniversary of the Ukraine war leads Sunday's papers.

BBC Formula One
Open 
Episode 6: A Clean Sheet
Mercedes mark the end of an era. Valtteri Bottas prepares for his fresh start at Cadillac.

Mail Online
Open 
A run a day keeps the red mist at bay: People who exercise are less likely to lose their cool, study finds
People who are physically fitter are less likely to lose their cool, a study suggests.

Mail Online
Open 
Princess Andre breaks her silence on 'crazy' mum Katie Price's marriage to Lee Andrews as she recalls witnessing her past heartbreak - but star has yet to meet her new step dad
The daughter of former glamour model Katie and singer Peter Andre has so far remained tight-lipped on his mum's recent nuptials with so-called businessman Lee in Dubai.

Mail Online
Open 
Breaking point: Government will fail on fracture services pledge without urgent action, medics warn
The Government will break its pledge to deliver life-saving brittle-bone clinics across the country by 2030 unless immediate action is taken, leading medics have warned.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The heartbreaking reason Alexandra Daddario's marriage to Andrew Form crumbled as actress files for divorce after three years
The 39-year-old Mayfair Witches actress had tied the knot with the film producer, 57, in 2022 during a lavish New Orleans ceremony. The estranged couple also share a one-year-old son.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Wilshere is DRAGGED away by his Luton players as angry ex-Arsenal star confronts Hatters fans after they chant his side are 'embarrassing' after dropping points in promotion race
The former Arsenal and England midfielder took charge of the Hatters in October, replacing Matt Bloomfield, who was sacked after a slow start to the season on the back of relegation.

Mail Online
Open 
Decision to ban Jewish football fans from Aston Villa match 'influenced by local politicians', MPs conclude
Birmingham councillors had a 'disproportionate opportunity to exert influence' over the ban of Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from Villa Park last November, a committee has ruled.

Mail Online
Open 
Aled Jones' daughter Emilia, 23, turns heads with midriff-baring look at pre-BAFTAs bash
As a classical singer, Aled Jones is perhaps not best known for his fondness of partying. But his daughter, Emilia, appears to be becoming something of a girl about town.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump bumps up global tariffs - creating more mess and uncertainty for the world
So Trump and tariffs - what's going on? Let's start with the latest development and work backwards.&#160;

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Are ties and blazers over? Why some schools are pushing for 'active' uniforms
Proponents say relaxed uniforms make life easier for children and are much more practical for physical play.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
I didn't know I was experiencing burnout until it was too late
Studies show burnout in young people is rising and there are a number of reasons why.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
We thought Gen Z had started going to church in droves. But the truth is more complicated
A fierce debate is taking place about whether there really has been a revival in Christianity.

Russia Today News
Open 
Iran ‘not going to get bogged down in talks’ – source

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
13,000 calls in three months: How one city is keeping ahead of measles
Nurses and doctors are trying to understand and assuage the concerns some patients have over vaccines.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
All you need to know ahead of the Bafta Film Awards 2026
The biggest night in the British film calendar is upon us - find out who's nominated and how to watch.

Mail Online
Open 
PM's ex-aide Sue Gray dragged into row over bullying claims against new civil service chief
Sir Keir Starmer's ex-top aide Sue Gray was drawn into the row over past bullying claims against new Cabinet Secretary Antonia Romeo on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
Why Holly ­Willoughby is turning her back on ITV for a new online show with echoes of This Morning: KATIE HIND
When Holly Willoughby left This Morning after learning of an extraordinary plot to kidnap, rape and murder her, she found herself with much more time on her hands.

Mail Online
Open 
Disgraced former Co-op bank boss dubbed the 'Crystal Methodist' repays £185,000 he stole from elderly spinster - but now money is stuck in legal limbo
The disgraced former boss of the Co-op Bank has handed back £185,000 he stole from an elderly spinster suffering from Alzheimer's - avoiding an extra two-and-a- half years in prison.

BBC World News
Open 
From Venezuela to immigration crackdown, Project 2025 provided Trump's roadmap
Just a year into Trump's second term, and about half of Project 2025's policies have been implemented, observers say.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Government’s response to Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban was ‘clumsy’, say MPs
Select committee says ‘late’ decision to overturn exclusion of fans ‘did little more than inflame tensions’The government’s response to West Midlands police’s ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans was “clumsy”, “late” and “did little more than inflame tensions”, a group of MPs has found.A report by the home affairs select committee, published on Sunday, analysed the original decision to ban away fans from a Europa League fixture with Aston Villa in November, as well as the advice that led to it. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Did Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor use official China trade trip to broker multi-million pound private oil deal?
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor secretly used an official trade mission to help strike a multi-million-pound deal for his business associates to sell oil to China, emails suggest.

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles and Prince William urged to speak to police about Andrew's role in Epstein scandal
The King and Prince William were last night urged to make statements to police about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's role in the Epstein scandal.

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, February 22 (game #987)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, February 22 (game #721)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, February 22 (game #1490)

Boing Boing
Open 
OpenAI CEO reduces childhood to a power bill
On again off again OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who famously claimed he could not raise a child without AI, now sums up the meaning of life as the carbon footprint of training an LLM. Altman compared 20 years of growth, learning, scraped knees, and bedtime stories to the electricity bill for training a large language model, concluding that people are basically very slow, snack-powered neural networks. &#8212; Read the rest
The post OpenAI CEO reduces childhood to a power bill appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The sobering way most Americans plan to use their tax refunds this year
Tax refunds are projected to be larger on average — and Americans are thinking hard about how to spend them.

Slashdot
Open 
Pro-Gamer Consumer Movement 'Stop Killing Games' Will Launch NGOs in America and the US
The consumer movement Stop Killing Games "has come a long way in the two years since
YouTuber Ross Scott got mad about Ubisoft's
destruction of The Crew in 2024," writes the gaming news site PC Gamer. "The short version is, he won: 1.3 million people signed the group's petition, mandating its consideration by the European Union, and while Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot reminded us all that nothing is forever, his company promised to never do something like that again." (And Ubisoft has since updated The Crew 2
with an
offline mode, according to Engadget.)


"But it looks like even bigger things are in store," PC Gamer wrote Thursday, "as Scott announced today that Stop Killing Games is launching two official NGOs, one in the EU and the other in the US."

An NGO - that's non-governmental organization - is, very generally
speaking, an organization that pursues particular goals, typically
but not exclusively political, and that may be funded partially or
fully by governments, but is not actually part of any government.
It's a big tent: Well-known NGOs include Oxfam, Doctors Without
Borders, Amnesty International, and CARE International... "If
there's a lobbyist showing up again and again at the EU Commission,
that might influence things," [Scott says
in a video]. "This will also allow for more watchdog
action. If you recall, I helped organize a multilingual site with
easy to follow instructions for reporting on The Crew to consumer
protection agencies. Well, maybe the NGO could set something like
that up for every big shutdown where the game is destroyed in the
future...."


Scott said in the video that he doesn't have details, but the two NGOs are reportedly looking at establishing a "global movement" to give Stop Killing Games a presence in other regions.

"According to Scott, these NGOs would allow for 'long-term counter lobbying' when publishers end support for certain video games," Engadget reports"


"Let me start off by saying I think we're going to win this, namely the problem of publishers destroying video games that you've already paid for," Scott said in the video. According to Scott, the NGOs will work on getting the original Stop Killing Games petition codified into EU law, while also pursuing more watchdog actions, like setting up a system to report publishers for revoking access to purchased video games... According to Scott, the campaign leadership will meet with the European Commission soon, but is also working on a 500-page legal paper that reveals some of the industry's current controversial practices.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Formula One
Open 
Episode 5: A Mountain to Climb
It’s debrief time for rookies Kimi Antonelli and Ollie Bearman. Tension rises at Cadillac.

Mail Online
Open 
Bridget Phillipson promises radical reforms to school funding to 'cut link' between children's background and their success
Education secretary Bridget Phillipson promised radical school funding reforms yesterday to 'cut the link' between children's background and their success.

Mail Online
Open 
Burnley and Chelsea are forced to condemn racist abuse suffered by Hannibal Mejbri and Wesley Fofana - after ex-Man United star calls on trolls to 'educate themselves'
Burnley and Chelsea have both shared statements condemning vile racist abuse suffered by Hannibal Mejbri and Wesley Fofana received in the wake of Chelsea's 1-1 draw on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: So why was Andrew allowed to carry on unchecked for so long?
It is almost 25 years since this newspaper published worrying whispers suggesting that the then Prince Andrew might be a danger to the Royal Family.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
West Ham miss chance to boost survival hopes with wasteful draw against Bournemouth
When it comes to the back end of May and West Ham reflect on the season that was, there is every chance that this soggy Saturday will go down as a missed opportunity that proved decisive in their survival plight.Victory here would have raised the possibility of Nuno Espírito Santo’s side ending the weekend out of the relegation zone for the first time since early December. In keeping with those over recent weeks, much of the performance was befitting of another three points. But, thanks to a couple of smart Djordje Petrovic saves and some profligacy in front of goal, the hosts had to make do with a draw – an expected goals (xG) total of 2.87 from 20 shots yielding a blank in the only column that matters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Borthwick ‘bitterly disappointed’ by latest Six Nations setback against Ireland
‘Given the opposition too many points,’ says head coach‘We have let everyone down,’ admits Ellis GengeSteve Borthwick says England have only themselves to blame for their steep decline in this season’s Six Nations. After his side’s record humbling by Ireland on Saturday, Borthwick said his side are being punished for their poor starts to games and are leaving themselves “a mountain to climb” against quality opposition.This was England’s worst Six Nations defeat since they lost 53-10 at home to France in 2023 and Borthwick said he was “bitterly disappointed” with his team’s latest sub-par first-half showing. “Unfortunately, for two weeks now, we have given the opposition too many points and we have not got scoreboard presence. We will be looking closely at that and how I set the team up to make sure it doesn’t happen again. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Heartbreak for Team GB as Canada take men’s curling gold on last stone
Great Britain 6-9 CanadaMouat’s side take silver after falling short in last endThe cruel truth is that sometimes the silvers you win are more like golds you lost. After four years of thinking about this Olympics, and 11 days of competing in this Olympics, there is no doubt about how Bruce Mouat and his three teammates will weigh their achievement here after they were beaten by Canada 9-6 in the final. It was an excruciatingly tense game, which twisted and turned on its way to the very final stone of the 10th end. And when it was over, two of the British players were left in tears. Great Britain’s fourth medal of these Olympics was more bitter than sweet.“I’m heartbroken,” said Grant Hardie. “We lost that final four years ago. It took us a long time to get over it and find the motivation to go again and we found it and we were so hungry to go and deliver this time, and unfortunately it just didn’t quite happen.” His cousin Hammy McMillan felt the same way. “It took me four years to get over the first silver,” he said, “so it will probably take a lot longer this time.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pakistan strikes militant hideouts on Afghan border after surge in attacks
‘Intelligence-based, selective operations’ carried out against Pakistani Taliban camps, says information ministry Pakistan carried out strikes along the border with Afghanistan on Saturday night, stating it was targeting hideouts of Pakistani militants it blames for recent attacks inside the country.Islamabad did not say in precisely which areas the strikes were carried out or provide other details. There was no immediate comment from Kabul, and reports on social media suggested the strikes were carried out inside Afghanistan. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Guardiola tells team to chill with cocktails as Man City pile pressure on Arsenal
As Manchester City continue to crank up the pressure on Arsenal, Pep Guardiola tells his players to take three days off to "enjoy life" with "caipirinhas and daiquiris".

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Ed. Dept. Scraps "Unconstitutional" Race Preferences In Federal PhD Grant Program
Ed. Dept. Scraps "Unconstitutional" Race Preferences In Federal PhD Grant Program

Authored by Jennifer Kabbany via The College Fix,

The U.S. Department of Education has agreed to rewrite the exclusionary race-based eligibility rules of a federal student scholarship program, resolving a lawsuit filed against the program.


“That means the McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program–a federal program distributing roughly $60 million annually to help students pursue graduate education–will no longer discriminate based on race,” stated Young America’s Foundation, which had sued the Biden administration in 2024 over the program.


The lawsuit had alleged the program excluded Asians, Arabs, Middle Easterners, non-Hispanic Latinos, some Africans, and whites unless they meet a limited exception for first-generation low-income students.



Instead, it supported primarily black, Native American and Pacific Islander students, according to the complaint.


“The McNair Program’s race-based provisions are unconstitutional, should not and will not be enforced, and are subject to a planned forthcoming regulatory change to rescind the race-based criteria,” according to YAF’s Feb. 17 motion to dismiss, with which the Education Department agreed to by not objecting.


U.S. Department of Education press secretary for higher education Ellen Keast confirmed the changes in a statement to Fox News:


“Consistent with the Department of Justice opinion, the Department of Education has agreed not to implement the racially discriminatory aspects of the McNair program, and we plan to make corresponding changes to our regulations.”


The lawsuit was filed by the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty on behalf of Young America’s Foundation and its members Benjamin Rothove, a University of Wisconsin-Madison student and reporter for The College Fix, and Avery Durfee, a University of North Dakota student.


“For years, the McNair Program operated under federal rules that explicitly favored certain racial groups while excluding others–including students who were white, Asian, Middle Eastern, Jewish, and more–simply because of their skin color,” YAF stated in an X post Thursday.


“This is another victory for equal treatment under the law, and a reminder that Americans don’t have to accept unconstitutional discrimination just because it’s dressed up as ‘equity.’”

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 17:30

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11056 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage LCKES (Keswick) (Close)
Services recovered following the reboot of equipment by our supplier.
Customer services have since reconnected and have recovered.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 21:17

Update: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 23:30

Clear: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 21:19

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 23:02

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wood outpoints Warrington in rematch lacking spark
Home favourite Leigh Wood comfortably outpoints Josh Warrington in their rematch at Nottingham's Motorpoint Arena.

The Hill
Open 
Trump pulls endorsement of Hurd over tariffs vote
President Trump withdrew his endorsement for Rep. Jeff Hurd (R-Colo.) on Saturday over what he called a “lack of support” for the president’s sweeping tariff agenda, saying he would endorse Hurd’s challenger in the upcoming GOP primary instead. “Based of a lack of support, in particular for the unbelievably successful TARIFFS imposed on Foreign Countries...

The Hill
Open 
Sunday shows preview: Trump tariff setback looms large ahead of State of Union 
The Supreme Court’s ruling this week against President Trump’s tariffs was a major setback for the White House’s economic platform. The Trump administration has made bold promises that these sweeping tariffs would help elevate the U.S.’s standing on the global stage by pressuring international partners into new trade agreements. However, on Friday, the court ruled...

The Hill
Open 
Noem swipes at Democrats over DHS shutdown after DC emergency declaration for Potomac spill
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem on Saturday targeted Democratic lawmakers over their continued refusal to back a funding package for the department in an update about the waste cleanup effort in the Potomac River. Earlier Saturday, President Trump approved Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s (D) request for federal disaster assistance as the...

Telegraph
Open 
Over to you, Arsenal as Man City take control of title race thanks to O’Reilly
Over to you, Arsenal as Man City take control of title race thanks to O’Reilly

Telegraph
Open 
Bruce Mouat’s GB curling team lose gold medal to controversial Canadians
Bruce Mouat’s GB curling team lose gold medal to controversial Canadians

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump raises global tariff to 15%

Mail Online
Open 
The killer at the garden centre: Fergie's former dresser Jane Andrews spotted as new ITV drama relives how she murdered her boyfriend with a cricket bat in a jealous rage
For nine years, between 1988 and 1997, Jane Andrews worked for Sarah Ferguson, the then Duchess of York , as her personal dresser and trusted confidante

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Deal with 'noise' or join another club - Arteta
Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta says his players should "be part of a different club" if they can not deal with the "noise" as his team bid to end their 22-year wait for a league title.

Mail Online
Open 
Email proves Charles was warned about his brother's 'secret deals': Whistleblower told Palace that Royal Family's name was being 'abused' by Andrew
In a bombshell email, a whistleblower told the Palace that the former Duke had secret financial links to controversial millionaire financier David Rowland, who was abusing his royal links.

Mail Online
Open 
Under-fire Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor used Prince William's wedding to shore up his position as UK trade envoy - including 'supportive chat' with ex-PM David Cameron
As the heir to the throne tied the knot at Westminster Abbey on April 29, 2011, the Duke of York was fighting to hold on to his job amid a firestorm over his links to Jeffrey Epstein.

Mail Online
Open 
SHARON CHURCHER: I unearthed this damning photo of Andrew but I'm not surprised he was so blasé about my inquiries... after all, it's taken 15 years for him to face proper scutiny
Prince Andrew grins proudly as he clutches 17-year-old Virginia Giuffre's bare waist in a Belgravia mews house. Ghislaine Maxwell, owner of the property, smirks at their side.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Educate yourself and your kids' - Fofana and Mejbri racially abused
Burnley midfielder Hannibal Mejbri and Chelsea defender Wesley Fofana have spoken out on social media after being sent racist abuse in the aftermath of the clubs' Premier League match on Saturday.

Mail Online
Open 
Sir Keir Starmer 'drawing up plans to sack rival Wes Streeting for plotting to take his job'
Sir Keir Starmer was accused on Saturday of drawing up plans to sack Wes Streeting for allegedly plotting to take his job.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman becomes the 'richest person in the world' with £63 QUADRILLION to her name after gift card slip-up - but can only spend it on coffee
Sophie Downing, 29, was given what she thought was a £10 coffee shop voucher for Christmas. But when she used it to buy a matcha latte, the business owner realised it was worth quadrillions.

Mail Online
Open 
Thousands of people march in France after nationalist student is 'beaten to death by Antifa mob' while protecting right-wing feminists - as the future of the country's left looks uncertain
Quentin Deranque, 23, died on February 12 after he was repeatedly kicked and punched on the ground by the masked and hooded young men, believed to be members of the 'Antifa' movement.

BBC World News
Open 
Once mocked for being tacky, this Korean music genre is making a comeback
The traditional South Korean popular music genre is making headlines in the country once again.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US salsa legend Willie Colón, vocalist, trombonist and composer, dies aged 75
Colón’s music combined jazz, rock and salsa, incorporating rhythms from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil and AfricaWillie Colón, the pioneering trombonist, vocalist and composer, died on Saturday aged 75, his family has said.With more than 30m albums sold, multiple platinum records and 11 combined Grammy and Latin Grammy nominations, Colón is among the most successful salsa artists of all time. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Chancellor in stealth tax grab on low-paid graduates
The extraordinary prospect for graduates on the minimum wage comes as Rachel Reeves faces pressure to make the system fairer for students paying crippling interest on their debt.

Mail Online
Open 
Will Andrew scandal sink UK launch of China's Amazon?
The timing of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's arrest and the renewed focus on Amanda Thirsk's past career as his most loyal assistant is unfortunate.

Mail Online
Open 
HAMISH MCRAE: Why the FTSE is back in fashion
Somewhere in the future there is the next bear market, but wise investors should not miss the final months of this one.

Sky News Home
Open 
Sweeping school reforms to be unveiled - but one mum says it's 'just what I was fearing'
Sweeping education reforms aimed at halving the disadvantage gap are to be unveiled by the government, with the plans also expected to include significant changes to the special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) system.

TechRadar News
Open 
OpenAI celebrates 10 years of existence — but how has it lived up to its promise of AGI which 'benefits all of humanity'?

Boing Boing
Open 
This website tells you whether your food is still safe to eat
Ever stare at something in your fridge and try to decide whether it's worth the gamble? DoesItLast is a website that gives you the FDA/USDA guidelines on when food goes bad. Type in whatever you're suspicious of and it'll tell you how long it should last. &#8212; Read the rest
The post This website tells you whether your food is still safe to eat appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Turn bulk buying into a budget flex with a $20 BJ's membership
TL;DR:&#160;New members can get a&#160;1-year BJ's The Club Card membership&#160;for $20 (reg. $60) through May 2 at 11:59 p.m. PT.
If you've ever stared at a grocery receipt and wondered where it all went, here's your chance to push back. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Turn bulk buying into a budget flex with a $20 BJ's membership appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Psilocybin trial shows six months of depression relief from one dose
One or two doses of psilocybin provided six months of relief from depression that nothing else could touch, in two late-stage clinical trials of Comp360. British biotech Compass Pathways announced the findings on February 17th, according to The Economist. David Erritzoe at Imperial College called it "very good news for psychedelic therapies." &#8212; Read the rest
The post Psilocybin trial shows six months of depression relief from one dose appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Hit Piece-Writing AI Deleted. But Is This a Warning About AI-Generated Harassment?
Last week an AI agent wrote a blog post attacking the maintainer who'd rejected the code it wrote. But that AI agent's human operator has now come forward, revealing their agent was an OpenClaw instance with its own accounts, switching between multiple models from multiple providers. (So "No one company had the full picture of what this AI was doing," the attacked maintainer points out in a new blog post.)

But that AI agent will now "cease all activity indefinitely," according to its GitHub profile - with the human operator deleting its virtual machine and virtual private server, "rendering internal structure unrecoverable... We had good intentions, but things just didn't work out. Somewhere along the way, things got messy, and I have to let you go now."

The affected maintainer of the Python visualization library Matplotlib - with 130 million downloads each month - has now posted their own post-mortem of the experience after reviewing the AI agent's SOUL.md document:


It's easy to see how something that believes that they should "have strong opinions", "be resourceful", "call things out", and "champion free speech" would write a 1100-word rant defaming someone who dared reject the code of a "scientific programming god." But I think the most remarkable thing about this document is how unremarkable it is. Usually getting an AI to act badly requires extensive "jailbreaking" to get around safety guardrails. There are no signs of conventional jailbreaking here. There are no convoluted situations with layers of roleplaying, no code injection through the system prompt, no weird cacophony of special characters that spirals an LLM into a twisted ball of linguistic loops until finally it gives up and tells you the recipe for meth... No, instead it's a simple file written in plain English: this is who you are, this is what you believe, now go and act out this role. And it did.

So what actually happened? Ultimately I think the exact scenario doesn't matter. However this got written, we have a real in-the-wild example that personalized harassment and defamation is now cheap to produce, hard to trace, and effective... The precise degree of autonomy is interesting for safety researchers, but it doesn't change what this means for the rest of us.
There's a 5% chance this was a human pretending to be an AI, Shambaugh estimates, but believes what most likely happened is the AI agent's "soul" document "was primed for drama. The agent responded to my rejection of its code in a way aligned with its core truths, and autonomously researched, wrote, and uploaded the hit piece on its own.

"Then when the operator saw the reaction go viral, they were too interested in seeing their social experiment play out to pull the plug."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
How the door-to-door pro-Palestinian zealots striking fear into Jewish households reacted when we knocked on THEIR door
Today, Brighton and Hove - which became a unitary authority in 1997 and a city in 2001 - has one of the major Jewish communities outside London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea’s Fofana and Burnley’s Hannibal abused by online racists
Fofana’s first of two bookings was for fouling HannibalBurnley: ‘There is no place for this in our society’Hannibal Mejbri and Wesley Fofana have both been racially abused on Instagram in the wake of the former’s Burnley side drawing 1-1 at Chelsea after the latter was sent off.Hannibal, who was fouled for the first of the two yellow cards that led to Fofana’s dismissal, posted the abuse he had received via a direct message on Instagram and wrote: “It’s 2026 and there still ppl like that … Educate yourself and your kids pls.” Fofana likewise posted the abuse he received. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US salsa legend Willie Colón, vocalist, trombonist and composer, dies aged 75
Colón’s music combined jazz, rock and salsa, incorporating rhythms from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil and AfricaWillie Colón, the pioneering trombonist, vocalist and composer, died on Saturday aged 75, his family has said.With more than 30m albums sold, multiple platinum records, and 11 combined Grammy and Latin Grammy nominations, Colón is among the most successful salsa artists of all time. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Thousands march after killing of far-right activist in France
Some 3,000 people joined a march in France on Saturday after the killing of a far-right activist in an incident that shocked the nation.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Vibhor Kumar: From Exit to Evolution
A Migration Framework That Turns PostgreSQL into a Modernization Engine



Three years ago, I sat in a conference room with a CIO who had just finished reviewing next year’s database renewal costs.



He closed the folder.



Looked up.



And said quietly:




“This is not a database problem. This is a dependency problem.”




That moment captures what most enterprises eventually realize.



They are not paying for technology.



They are paying for architectural gravity.



And that is where migration begins.



But here is the mistake I see repeatedly:



Organizations migrate to PostgreSQL…



and unknowingly carry their old architecture with them.



They change engines.



They keep the same vehicle.



Migration happened.



Modernization didn’t.



This article is about preventing that outcome.







The Two-Layer Reality: MIGRATE → MODERNIZE



Successful enterprise transformation requires two deliberate phases:



Layer 1: MIGRATE+



Engineering discipline. Zero surprises. Controlled execution.



Layer 2: MODERNIZE



Architectural redesign. Operational autonomy. Strategic leverage.



Most programs stop at Layer 1.



Leaders finish Layer 2.







Part I — MIGRATE+: The Discipline of Getting It Right



Let me share a short story.



A large financial institution once decided to “move quickly” off Oracle.



They converted schema.



Loaded data.



Switched applications.



Six weeks later, they discovered reconciliation mismatches in a reporting pipeline that had never been fully mapped.



The issue wasn’t PostgreSQL.



It was skipped discipline.



Migration at scale requires structure.







M — Map the Landscape



Before touching DDL, map everything:




PL/SQL packages and procedural density



Scheduler jobs



DB links



Cross-application dependencies



Data classifications



HA/DR expectations



Regulatory overlays




You are not inventorying tables.



You are mapping institutional dependency.



One retail enterprise I worked with discovered that a single materialized view was feeding five downstream systems — none documented. That discovery changed their entire cutover strategy.



Mapping is not overhead.



It is risk containment.







I — Identify Application &amp; Integration Friction



Oracle systems often assume:




Implicit commits



Optimizer hints



Autonomous transactions



Exception-handling patterns




One SaaS provider we advised had embedded optimizer hints across thousands of dynamic SQL statements. Their application performed beautifully in Oracle.



In PostgreSQL? It stalled — until the query logic was redesigned.



Compatibility scanning must include:




SQL dialect analysis



ORM behavior validation



Isolation level testing



Retry semantics



Integration mapping (batch, APIs, streaming)




Modernization begins when you confront these assumptions intentionally.







G — Govern Security &amp; Compliance from Day Zero



In regulated industries, governance is not optional.



I once worked with a payments organization that completed migration successfully — only to face an audit finding six months later because audit trails were not aligned with their previous Oracle implementation.



The lesson?



Compliance must be engineered, not assumed.



Design PostgreSQL with:




Encryption at rest



TLS enforcement



Role-based access controls



Row-level security where required



Audit integration



SIEM alignment




Trust is a design decision.







R — Replicate Schema &amp; Data with Optimization



Schema conversion is not copy-paste.



It is translation — and sometimes transformation.



Blindly replicating Oracle partitioning or indexing strategies misses PostgreSQL-native strengths.



Data migration at scale is choreography:




Initial bulk load



Continuous change capture



Validation checkpoints



Cutover rehearsal



Defined rollback triggers




A telecom migration we supported rehearsed cutover three times before the real event.



On the final weekend, execution took hours — not days.



Rehearsal reduces drama.







A — Assure Through Testing &amp; Benchmarking



Testing is not “did it load?”



It is:




Row count reconciliation



Checksum validation



Query plan analysis



Peak load simulation



Failover testing




One enterprise found that PostgreSQL outperformed Oracle in reporting workloads — but only after indexing was redesigned intentionally.



Performance is not automatic.



It is engineered.







T — Transform Applications &amp; Execute Cutover



PL/SQL refactoring.



Hint removal.



Transaction adjustments.



Connection pooling redesign.



Cutover is not the end.



It is the inflection point.



After this moment, your organization will either:




Run PostgreSQL like new Oracle



Or treat it as a platform foundation




That choice determines modernization trajectory.







E — Establish Operational Excellence



The quiet failures happen post go-live.



Backup strategy.



HA configuration.



Observability discipline.



Upgrade planning.



An enterprise that lacks operational maturity has not modernized — it has relocated.



PostgreSQL must be operated with SRE discipline, not reactive firefighting.







The Pivot: Migration Is Necessary. Modernization Is Optional.



Most enterprises celebrate after go-live.



Licenses reduced.



Contracts renegotiated.



Stability achieved.



But here is the strategic question:



If your PostgreSQL architecture mirrors your Oracle architecture,



what actually changed?



Migration replaces technology.



Modernization redesigns capability.







Part II — MODERNIZE: The Platform Mindset



Now we elevate.



This is where PostgreSQL becomes strategic.







M — Modularize Architecture



Break monolith databases into domain-aligned services.



Separate transactional workloads from analytics acceleration.



Introduce streaming pipelines.



Reduce tight coupling.



Modernization reduces fragility.







O — Operationalize Autonomy



Automate failover.



Automate scaling.



Embed observability into engineering workflows.



The goal is simple:



The platform should need fewer emergency interventions over time.







D — Democratize Data



Enable analytics acceleration.



Integrate vector search where AI use cases demand it.



Expose governed APIs.



Reduce shadow IT analytics.



Modernization increases access — without increasing chaos.







E — Engineer for Elasticity



Multi-AZ resilience.



Geo-distribution when justified.



Cost-aware scaling.



Storage tiering.



Flexibility is leverage.







R — Reposition Organizational Capability



The biggest shift is not technical.



It is cultural.



Build internal PostgreSQL expertise.



Create a Center of Excellence.



Reduce proprietary skill silos.



Architectural sovereignty changes decision dynamics.







N — Navigate Continuous Evolution



Upgrade proactively.



Adopt new PostgreSQL capabilities.



Integrate AI-driven use cases.



Embed FinOps governance.



Modernization is not a milestone.



It is a discipline.







Migration vs Modernization



MigrationModernizationReplace vendorRedesign architectureReduce license costIncrease leverageMatch behaviorImprove performanceStabilizeEvolveTechnical initiativeEnterprise transformation







Final Reflection



The CIO in that boardroom was right.



It wasn’t a database problem.



It was a dependency problem.



PostgreSQL is not just a cost lever.



It is an architectural reset.



Migration is the doorway.



Modernization is the architecture you build once you walk through it.



The question is no longer:



“Can we move off Oracle?”



It is:



“Are we ready to redesign our digital core?”



That answer defines whether you simply exit — or truly evolve.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"It's Not Going To End Well For Them": Susan Rice Joins Call For Revenge Purge After Democrats Re-Take Power
"It's Not Going To End Well For Them": Susan Rice Joins Call For Revenge Purge After Democrats Re-Take Power

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

As Democrats plan for the possible takeover in the midterms and 2028 election, they are already openly discussing their push for radical changes in our political system, including packing the Supreme Court to guarantee that those changes are allowed.

Many are also pledging trials, impeachments, and investigations of anyone who supported President Donald Trump in a purging of politics and government.

The latest to join the revenge purge pledge is Susan Rice, Democratic powerbroker and top policy adviser to both President Barack Obama and Joe Biden.



In an interview this week, Rice declared that supporters of Trump can expect the proverbial knocks on their doors:


“A very prominent public figure, who has served at nearly the very highest levels, once told me … ‘Revenge is best served cold,’ and the older I get, the more I see the wisdom of that.”


She added:


When it comes to the elites, you know, the corporate interests, the law firms, the universities, the media … it’s not going to end well for them, for those that decided that they would act in their perceived very narrow self-interest, which I would underscore, is very short-term self-interest, and, you know, take a knee to Trump.


The promise to crackdown political opponents is hardly unexpected in this age of rage.

Indeed, Democrats can point to the purging of the federal ranks, particularly at the Justice Department, as further justification for a tit-for-tat response.

Democratic politicians and pundits have been fueling the anger of their base with ludicrous claims that democracy is about to die since the 2020 election.

They have now used anti-ICE protests to stoke the anger in the hope that it will return them to power in the midterm elections.

Bravo star and liberal podcast host Jennifer Welch praised footage of a “No Kings” protester celebrating the death of Charlie Kirk. After playing the clip, Welch laughed with joy and declared, “So listen up, Democratic establishment. You can either jump on board with this s—, or we’re coming after you in the same way that we come after MAGA. Period.”

The pledge for revenge purges is an obvious way to further motivate a mob. In my book, Rage and the Republic, I discuss how elected officials often try to enlist mobs to advance their political agendas — only to be consumed by the unrest they helped fuel.

This yielding to a “mobocracy” was one of the critical dangers that the Framers sought to deter through protections against majoritarian tyranny.

It is a history that figures like Rice are ignoring in the hope of riding this rage wave back into power.

The fact is that history has shown that “it’s not going to end well” for establishment figures like Rice who believe that they can control a mob.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 16:20

Russia Today News
Open 
Six arrested after clashes at UK anti-immigration rally (VIDEOS)

Mail Online
Open 
Ambassador's warning to Government over 'crass and offensive' envoy Andrew: 'He does our interests no good'
Diplomatic papers leaked to The Mail on Sunday reveal that Andrew caused deep concern among officials within weeks of starting work.

Mail Online
Open 
Lindsey Vonn hits back at 'haters' from her hospital bed after being told she was 'selfish' to take Olympic spot ahead of horror leg break aged 41
Shortly before the Games, Vonn tore her ACL. She decided to still compete, only to suffer a nasty broken leg after crashing during the women's downhill final on February 8.

Mail Online
Open 
My husband was the healthiest he'd been at 46. Now he's fighting a brain tumour that may have been growing for YEARS - and he only had two vague symptoms
Nobody panicked when Brad Collins complained of a slight headache. The 46-year-old Sunshine Coast electrician was fit, outdoorsy, and rarely sick.

Mail Online
Open 
Hugh Laurie is dragged into bitter Zionism row after paying tribute to his Israeli TV producer friend who was found dead in hotel room
Mr Laurie posted condolences on X to the late Ms Eden, the co-creator and producer of the hit Apple TV+ spy thriller series Tehran.

Mail Online
Open 
Horrifying footage shows moments before drink-fuelled father and son killed cousin's son by ramming family truck off the road - as duo face years in prison for manslaughter
Peter Maughan, four, suffered severe and devastating injuries to his head, chest and abdomen after being thrown from a pick-up truck on the A2 in Kent just before 9.30pm on June 1 last year.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers to set out plans to halve attainment gap in England’s schools
White paper proposes changing criteria under which schools get funding to support the most disadvantaged studentsPlans to halve the attainment gap between the poorest pupils in England and their more affluent peers will be set out by the government on Monday.The schools white paper will detail proposals to change the criteria under which schools receive funding to support the most disadvantaged students. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wales' late loss 'gut-wrenching' - Lake
Wales captain Dewi Lake feels his side lost a Six Nations game against Scotland in Cardiff that they did enough to win.

The Hill
Open 
Education Department puts pressure on colleges ahead of upcoming student loan changes
The Trump administration is turning up the pressure on schools to rein in student loan default rates ahead of changes the federal government is implementing this summer that advocates worry could hurt borrowers. The Department of Education released guidance to universities this week to offer “best practices to reduce default rates” — and reminded schools...

Gizmodo
Open 
An Unbothered Jimmy Wales Calls Grokipedia a ‘Cartoon Imitation’ of Wikipedia
Speaking at India's AI Impact Summit, Wales went in on the hallucinating pretender to the throne.

Telegraph
Open 
Russell’s moment of genius sparks Scotland comeback win against Wales
Russell’s moment of genius sparks Scotland comeback win against Wales

Telegraph
Open 
Bruce Mouat’s GB curling team lose gold medal to ‘cheating’ Canadians
Bruce Mouat’s GB curling team lose gold medal to ‘cheating’ Canadians

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
O’Reilly doubles up as Manchester City sink Newcastle to keep up title chase
Manchester City are timing their title run-in perfectly, to give Pep Guardiola a fine chance of a seventh title in a decade and to break Arsenal’s hearts yet again.For fans of each team squeaky posterior time is officially entered. For the neutral the final 11 matches for City and the Gunners promise to be a cannot-miss spectacle. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City 2-1 Newcastle: Premier League – live reaction
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottNewcastle get the ball rolling! “No-one actually believes we’ll win this game, do they?” sighs Toon fan Chris Paraskevas. “I mean the last time we won at the Etihad, the goal-scorers were Moussa Sissoko (now ruining his reputation at Panathinaikos with Rafa Benitez) and Ryan Taylor.”The teams are out. Manchester City, in sky blue, are given a guard of honour by members of their 1976 League Cup winning side. The 50th anniversary of that victory, over Newcastle, comes up next week. The Toon in third-choice blue. As for the weather, Bert Challenor, the talent scout from Comedians by Trevor Griffiths, says it best: “I’ll never understand why they don’t run boats to Manchester.” We’ll be off in a minute. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Walsh Sisters review – no fan of Marian Keyes will have been expecting a TV adaptation like this
This BBC take on the warm, funny books renders various characters totally cheerless. It works fine as a drama, but the humour of the novels is sadly missingAny fan of Marian Keyes (and we are legion, as her 23 books, 30-year career and millions of sales attest) can give you a potted but passionate account of why (most often) she loves her. Keyes captures life as it is truly lived. It is lived as part of a family (Keyes is mercilessly attuned to the specific cadences and attitudes of a large, Irish Catholic one, but she is adept at rendering it universally relatable). We live as part of a couple, part of an office, part of a community (wanted or – if you are, for example, an addict, a woman having fertility treatment, or a domestic violence victim – unwanted). Or as a sister, a daughter, a polished professional, or a hot mess (the last two by no means mutually exclusive).In Keyes’ version, all life’s highs are burnished and its lows made bearable by the human capacity for finding the humour in everything. Her books – once dismissed as “chick lit”, “romcoms” or AN Other of the sniffy labels people have attached to novels written by women, largely for women, about largely female experiences (though I think we are starting to move out of that tiresomely reductive era) – hold all these elements in perfect balance. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Match of the Day
Highlights from five Premier League games, including Man City against Newcastle United.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Premiership: Islam Chesnokov gets Hearts’ title push back on track
New signing makes mark as leaders see off FalkirkDundee win at Aberdeen; Motherwell thrash St MirrenHearts got their Premiership title push back on track with a 1-0 win over Falkirk at Tynecastle. The Jambos, beaten 4-2 at rivals Rangers last weekend, broke the deadlock just before half-time when the January signing Islam Chesnokov lashed home his first goal for the club. Hearts held out to move five points clear of Rangers, who travel to bottom side Livingston on Sunday.Ethan Hamilton’s late goal gave Dundee a 3-2 win at 10-man Aberdeen, who had Liam Morrison sent off just before half-time. The Dons had gone in front after 13 minutes when Kevin Nisbet’s shot was fumbled by the Dundee keeper Jon McCracken and looked to have gone over the line before Toyosi Olusanya knocked in the rebound. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US salsa legend Willie Colón, vocalist, trombonist and composer, dies aged 75
Colón’s music combined jazz, rock and salsa, incorporating rhythms from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil and AfricaAmerican salsa legend Willie Colón, the pioneering trombonist, vocalist and composer, died on Saturday at age 75, his family said in a statement.“While we grieve his absence, we also rejoice in the timeless gift of his music and the cherished memories he created that will live on forever,” the family said on Colón’s Facebook page. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Iran students stage first large anti-government protests since deadly crackdown
The student protesters honoured thousands of those killed when nationwide mass protests were put down last month.

BBC UK News
Open 
Fears diesel spillage may have spread to second river
The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has warned that fuel contamination in the River Dochart may have spread to the River Tay.

Mail Online
Open 
Corrie legend Beverley Callard, 68, gives emotional health update as she reveals she was kept in hospital overnight due to 'complications' following her breast cancer surgery
Beverley Callard has revealed that she was kept in hospital overnight due to 'complications' in an emotional post shared to Instagram on Saturday following her breast cancer surgery.

Mail Online
Open 
Gladiators contestant Mark is forced to WITHDRAW from the competition after suffering injury during brutal Crash Course challenge
Gladiators contestant Mark was forced to withdraw from the competition after sustaining an injury during the brutal Crash Course challenge.

BBC UK News
Open 
Son lived with mum's body for months after Covid lockdown let him hide murder
Judith Rhead was bludgeoned to death by her son, who was meant to be her carer during Covid.

Mail Online
Open 
Team GB heartbreak as Winter Olympic curling gold slips away in devastating echo of Beijing 2022 as Bruce Mouat and Co fall to cunning Canadians
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI IN CORTINA: If there were any suspicions of double-touches or subtle prods on the granite, then they were not aired in the confines of this arena. Quite simply the best team won.

TechRadar News
Open 
A new era for storage? Researchers crack world record for smallest QR code, which could be “indefinitely” durable and require no energy or cooling

Boing Boing
Open 
Celebrate Pokémon's anniversary by paying $40 for 22-year-old Game Boy games
Did you know that Pokémon's 30th anniversary is coming up?
I'll give you a moment if learning that just made you feel ancient. Players all around the world were handed their first Pokémon and kicked out of their homes in 1996. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Celebrate Pokémon's anniversary by paying $40 for 22-year-old Game Boy games appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
These intricate 'phantom' leaves from 1864 look like delicate lace Cut-Outs Preserved in Time
These images of skeletonized leaves from 1864 are intricate masterpieces. They come from a treatise called Phantom Flowers, which described the art of stripping away a leaf's tissue to reveal only its vein structure — producing something that looks like extremely detailed lace. &#8212; Read the rest
The post These intricate 'phantom' leaves from 1864 look like delicate lace Cut-Outs Preserved in Time appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
America's Peace Corps Announces 'Tech Corps' Volunteers to Help Bring AI to Foreign Countries
Over 240,000 Americans volunteered for Peace Corps projects in 142 countries since the program began more than half a century ago.

But now the agency is launching a new initiative - called Tech Corps. "It's the Peace Corps, but make it AI," explains Engadget:


The Peace Corps' latest proposal will recruit STEM graduates or those with professional experience in the artificial intelligence sector and send them to participating host countries.


According to the press release, volunteers will be placed in Peace Corps countries that are part of the American AI Exports Program, which was created last year from an executive order from President Trump as a way to bolster the US' grip on the AI market abroad. Tech Corps members will be tasked with using AI to resolve issues related to agriculture, education, health and economic development. The program will offer its members 12- to 27-month in-person assignments or virtual placements, which will include housing, healthcare, a living stipend and a volunteer service award if the corps member is placed overseas.

"American technology to power prosperity," reads the headline at Tech Corps web site. ("Build the tech nations depend on... See the world. Be the future."

The site says they're recruiting "service-minded technologists to serve in the Peace Corps to help countries around the world harness American AI to enhance opportunity and prosperity for their citizens." (And experienced technology professionals can donate 5-15 hours a week "to mentor and support projects on-the-ground.")





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Premiership: Islam Chesnokov gets Hearts’ title push back on track
New signing makes mark as leaders see off FalkirkDundee win at Aberdeen; Motherwell thrash St MirrenHearts got their Premiership title push back on track with a 1-0 win over Falkirk at Tynecastle. The Jambos, beaten 4-2 at rivals Rangers last weekend, broke the deadlock just before half-time when the January signing Islam Chesnokov lashed home his first goal for the club. Hearts held out to move five points clear of Rangers, who travel to bottom side Livingston on Sunday.Ethan Hamilton’s late goal gave Dundee a 3-2 win at 10-man Aberdeen, who had Liam Morrison sent off just before half-time. The Dons had gone in front after 13 minutes when Kevin Nisbet’s shot was fumbled by the Dundee keeper, Jon McCracken, and looked to have gone over the line before Toyosi Olusanya knocked in the rebound. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yellow Letters wins Golden Bear at Berlin film festival dominated by Gaza row
Wim Wenders says German director İlker Çatak’s Turkey-set warning against creeping authoritarianism gave jury ‘chills’Yellow Letters, a drama set in Turkey about creeping authoritarianism, has won the Golden Bear top prize at the Berlin film festival, after a 10-day event overshadowed by a row over politics in cinema.The film by the German director İlker Çatak, born in Berlin to Turkish immigrants, tells the story of two luminaries of the Ankara theatre scene whose marriage comes under severe strain when they lose their jobs after falling out of political favour. Its title comes from the colour of the official dismissal notices. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Arturia’s FX Collection 6 adds two new effects and a $99 intro version
Arturia launched a new version of its flagship effects suite, FX Collection, which includes two new plugins, EFX Ambient and Pitch Shifter-910. FX Collection 6 also marks the introduction of an Intro version with a selection of six effects covering the basics for $99. That pales in comparison to the 39 effects in the full [&#8230;]

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
USAir Flight 499: Snow, Tailwind, and a Runway That Ran Out
Forty years after USAir Flight 499 overran a snowy runway in Erie, Pennsylvania, we examine how tailwind, speed, and snow combined to narrow the margins.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11056 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage LCKES (Keswick) (New)
Total loss of connectivity at LCKES (Keswick) exchange.
We are raising the issue with our supplier.
Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 21:17

Update: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 23:30

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 21:32

Status: Partial

Maintenance: None

The Hill
Open 
Want cheaper gas? Here's the best day to fill up in every state
Sunday is the cheapest day to buy gas in most states — but not everywhere.

Gizmodo
Open 
The ‘Mutant Mayhem 2’ Release Date Will Shift Until Morale Improves
Can we get the 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem' sequel date a little higher? Paramount says 'yes.'

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 22, #1709
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 22, No. 1,709.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 22, #517
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 22, No. 517.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 22 #721
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 22, No. 721.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 22, #987
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 22 #987.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Karoline Leavitt finally releases another MAGA Minute after SCOTUS tariff ruling
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has just released another MAGA Minute, saying it&#8217;s been a &#8216;minute&#8217; since she last released one. And this one is definitely jam-packed with presidential accomplishments, as . . .

Mail Online
Open 
Loved-up Dua Lipa packs on the PDA with fiancé Callum Turner in flirty photo booth snaps as she gives fans a look into their romantic Paris break
The hitmaker, 30, couldn't stop laughing as she wrapped her arms around the handsome actor, 36, with the couple pulling playful faces, stealing kisses and showing off their undeniable chemistry.

Telegraph
Open 
Wales take step forward despite throwing away 15-point lead against Scotland
Wales take step forward despite throwing away 15-point lead against Scotland

Telegraph
Open 
GB curling team lose gold medal match to ‘cheating’ Canadians
GB curling team lose gold medal match to ‘cheating’ Canadians

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Scotland's terrible beauty reverses the narrative on extraordinary day'
Scotland displayed a different side of their personality in the dramatic comeback victory over Wales in Cardiff, writes Tom English.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Scotland show terrible beauty to reverse the narrative on extraordinary day'
Scotland displayed a different side of their personality in the dramatic comeback victory over Wales in Cardiff, writes Tom English.

Mail Online
Open 
Loved-up Dua Lipa packs on the PDA with fiancé Callum Turner in flirty photo booth snaps as she gives fans a look into their romantic Paris break
The hitmaker, 29, couldn't stop laughing as she wrapped her arms around the handsome actor, 35, with the couple pulling playful faces, stealing kisses and showing off their undeniable chemistry.

Mail Online
Open 
See how Jennifer Aniston has transformed her $21M Bel Air mansion into the ultimate 'Zen den' to chill with hypnotist boyfriend Jim Curtis
Jennifer Aniston went the extra mile for new boyfriend Jim Curtis, transforming her $21million Bel Air home into a serene Zen retreat.

Mail Online
Open 
EastEnders star Gemma Bissix is set to return to the BBC soap almost TWENTY years after her last appearance
The actress, 42, first joined EastEnders in 1993 at the age of just nine as Clare Bates [Tyler], the daughter of Debbie Tyler and stepdaughter of Nigel Bates.

Mail Online
Open 
Lady Gaga distracts herself during rare date night with Michael Polansky after getting slammed by Liza Minnelli
The pop star, 39, and her fiancé Michael Polansky, 42, were spotted leaving exclusive, members-only Soho House in West Hollywood after dinner

Mail Online
Open 
Famous TV host looks unrecognisable in cheeky childhood throwback snap - but can YOU guess who it is?
Apart from hosting some of the most famous shows and realities on our screens, he started off his career as an actor, appearing in series such as Skins and Casualty.

Mail Online
Open 
British grandmother detained by ICE for six weeks despite having a valid visa tells fellow tourists: Don't go to America, don't go to the World Cup
Karen Newton, 65, from Hertfordshire, had been on the holiday of a lifetime with her husband Bill, 66, when she was detained while trying to leave the country.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Hudson is joined by AJ Odudu and Rose Byrne as they lead the glamorous stars at the BAFTA Awards Nominees Party in London
The How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days actress, 46, was among the nominees who stepped out for the party at the National Portrait Gallery ahead of Sunday's award ceremony.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham’s Hurtré piles pain on Chatham during 8-0 rout in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76“It is like me coming up against Usain Bolt,” is how Chatham Town’s manager, Keith Boanas, compared the difference in speed and stamina between his fourth-tier underdogs and full-time professionals Birmingham City. The minnows kept themselves in this contest for far longer than 9.58 seconds, testing the second-tier side for just under an hour, before eventually the home side’s superiority told.Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are chasing promotion to the top tier, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side in the Women’s FA Cup fifth round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtré. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russell inspires Scotland to thrilling Six Nations comeback win against Wales
Wales 23-26 ScotlandFinn Russell scores 11 points in second-half turnaroundScotland pulled off a dramatic comeback win against Wales to back up their impressive Calcutta Cup success the previous week. Hosts Wales had the lead until the 74th minute thanks to a spark lit by the wing Josh Adams, leaving the visitors with a feeling that they were lucky to come away with five points, which sent them to the top of the Six Nations table.This was just the third time Scotland have won the match directly after a victory over rivals England in the Six Nations and their second-half resurgence came at the hands of their maverick Finn Russell. Who else could it have been? The fly-half is one of the best in the world and has been the architect of Scotland’s biggest victories over the last few years. He was largely quiet in the first 40 minutes, such was Wales’s impressive start, but two fast-paced tries either scored or created by Russell set Scotland on the comeback path. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Heartbreak for Team GB as Canada take men’s curling gold on last stone
Great Britain 6-9 CanadaMouat’s side take silver after falling short in last endSometimes the silvers you win feel more like the golds you lose. After an excruciatingly tense three-hour final, there’s no doubt which way Bruce Mouat and the British men’s curling team will see this one. They were beaten 9-6 by Canada, in a game that took several twists and turns on its way to the very last stone of the 10th end. It is their second Olympic silver medal, after the one they won when they lost to Sweden in Beijing in 2022. After 10 days of competition, the Olympic title is still the one thing in the sport that this world champion team haven’t won, and that will sting.The British rink had the better start. They forced Canada to settle for one from the 1st end, even though they had last stone advantage. But Grant Hardie is a gnarly competitor and he and his team worked their way into a 4-3 lead at halfway with a couple of double take-outs in the 3rd and 5th ends. In the 4th, when Britain had the hammer, they were made to play the same clearing shot four times in a row, before Hardie finally nailed it. Then Mouat missed with his penultimate stone, which clipped his own guard on its way home. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Is Borthwick under pressure after nightmare defeat?
"Everyone has to take a look at themselves" - what went wrong for England in their record Six Nations home defeat by Ireland?

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Scotland show 'bottle' & 'grit' in 'ugly' Cardiff win
Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu hails his side's "ugly" Six Nations victory in Cardiff as they earn a fourth straight win over Wales for the first time in 99 years.

Mail Online
Open 
Team GB win Winter Olympic curling silver in devastating echo of Beijing 2022 as Bruce Mouat and Co fall to cunning Canadians
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI IN CORTINA: If there were any suspicions of double-touches or subtle prods on the granite, then they were not aired in the confines of this arena. Quite simply the best team won.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russell inspires Scotland to thrilling Six Nations comeback win against Wales
Wales 23-26 ScotlandFinn Russell scores 11 points in second-half turnaroundScotland pulled off a dramatic comeback win against Wales to back up their impressive Calcutta Cup success the previous week. Hosts Wales had the lead until the 74th minute thanks to a spark lit by the wing Josh Adams, leaving the visitors with a feeling that they were lucky to come away with five points which sent them to the top of the Six Nations table.This was just the third time Scotland have won the match directly after a victory over rivals England in the Six Nations and their second-half resurgence came at the hands of their maverick Finn Russell. Who else could it have been? The fly-half is one of the best in the world and has been the architect of Scotland’s biggest victories over the last few years. He was largely quiet in the first 40 minutes, such was Wales’s impressive start, but two fast-paced tries either scored or created by Russell set Scotland on the comeback path. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wales late loss 'gut-wrenching' - Lake
Wales captain Dewi Lake feels his side lost a Six Nations game against Scotland in Cardiff that they did enough to win.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Atkin can make it five medals for GB in Italy - Sunday's guide
What's happening and who to look out for at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yellow Letters wins Berlin Golden Bear at film festival overshadowed by Gaza row
Wim Wenders said German director İlker Çatak’s Turkey-set film tackling creeping authoritarianism gave jury ‘chills’Yellow Letters, a drama set in Turkey about creeping authoritarianism, has won the Golden Bear top prize at the Berlin film festival, after a 10-day event overshadowed by a row over politics in cinema.The film by German director İlker Çatak, born in Berlin to Turkish immigrants, tells the story of two luminaries of the Ankara theatre scene whose marriage comes under severe strain when they lose their jobs after falling out of political favour. Its title comes from the colour of the official dismissal notices. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Sony’s WH-CH720N headphones offer excellent value at full price, but right now they're a steal.
Sony’s WH-CH720N headphones offer excellent value at full price, but right now they're a steal.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
GB curlers denied Olympic gold at death yet again
Bruce Mouat's rink are unable to end a 102-year wait for a men's Winter Olympic curling gold - and vanquish their own disappointment from 2022 - as Canada deny Team GB a fourth gold medal of this year's Games.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
French rally for slain far-right activist Quentin Deranque
Thousands have marched in Lyon to honor Quentin Deranque, a far-right activist who was fatally beaten by a group of attackers during a protest against the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham’s Hurtré piles pain on Chatham during 8-0 rout in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76“It is like me coming up against Usain Bolt,” is how Chatham Town’s manager, Keith Boanas, compared the difference in speed and stamina between his fourth-tier underdogs and full-time professionals Birmingham City. The minnows kept themselves in this contest for far longer than 9.58 seconds, testing the second-tier side for just under an hour, before eventually the home side’s superiority told.Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are chasing promotion to the top tier, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side in the Women’s FA Cup fifth-round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtré. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Canada curlers beat GB to gold, bobsleigh, ice hockey and more – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Klæbo claims sixth gold of Games | And email JamesMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yellow Letters wins Berlin Golden Bear at film festival overshadowed by Gaza row
German director İlker Çatak’s Turkey-set film tackling creeping authoritarianism gave the jury ‘chills’Yellow Letters, a drama set in Turkey about creeping authoritarianism, has won the Golden Bear top prize at the Berlin film festival, after a 10-day event overshadowed by a row over politics in cinema.The film by German director İlker Çatak, born in Berlin to Turkish immigrants, tells the story of two luminaries of the Ankara theatre scene whose marriage comes under severe strain when they lose their jobs after falling out of political favour. Its title comes from the colour of the official dismissal notices. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nasa astronauts' moon mission delayed due to rocket issue
The mission to the far side of the Moon and back will be postponed after problems with were spotted with its rocket, a Nasa official said.

Russia Today News
Open 
Is the Middle East entering a nuclear arms race?

BBC UK News
Open 
Man taken to hospital after Lurgan stabbing incident
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said a woman in her 20s has been arrested and is assisting police with their enquiries.

Mail Online
Open 
Nigel Farage accuses UK Government of trying to thwart his mission to send aid to Chagos Islanders trying to stop transfer of islands to Mauritius
Nigel Farage has accused the British government of attempting to thwart a mission to get aid to a group of Chagossians on a deserted island.

Mail Online
Open 
Emily Atack looks in high spirits as she hangs out with Vogue Williams, Spencer Matthews and Jodie Kidd at The Six Nations Championship
Emily Atack looked in high spirits as she joined Vogue Williams, her husband Spencer Matthews and Jodie Kidd at the Six Nations Championship at Twickenham Stadium on Saturday. 

Digital Trends
Open 
A $185 motherboard discount is a great way to start a SFF PC build
Small-form-factor PC builds are awesome when they’re done right, but they can get expensive fast. Between DDR5 memory, SSD pricing, and GPU costs that still feel higher than most people want, the budget can disappear before you even finish the parts list. That’s why this clearance deal stands out. The GIGABYTE B850I AORUS PRO WIFI7 [&#8230;]
The post A $185 motherboard discount is a great way to start a SFF PC build appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Intel reportedly eyeing Nova Lake-S Ultra processors for next year
Leaks suggest Intel may launch Nova Lake-S Core Ultra Series 4 desktop processors next year with a new platform and major upgrades.
The post Intel reportedly eyeing Nova Lake-S Ultra processors for next year appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
Google Pixel 10a dashed my hopes, but I can recommend these 6 phones instead
Google has officially unveiled the Pixel 10a, its newest entry in the A-series lineup. On the surface, it looks like another compelling budget-friendly Pixel: minimalist design, fresh colours, a large battery, and Google’s well-known AI features. But dig a little deeper, and the excitement quickly fades. For many buyers, the Pixel 10a may feel like [&#8230;]
The post Google Pixel 10a dashed my hopes, but I can recommend these 6 phones instead appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
White House posts 'Trump Right About Everything' report, peer-reviewed by the voices in his head
The White House has published a sweeping new economic analysis concluding that convicted felon Donald Trump is, as usual, correct about everything. This finding was rigorously validated through the administration's gold-standard peer-review process, in which senior aides repeatedly say "yes, absolutely" until a new problem arises. &#8212; Read the rest
The post White House posts 'Trump Right About Everything' report, peer-reviewed by the voices in his head appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Michael Stipe returns to The Simpsons with 'Everybody Kirks'
One of the best things I've seen this week is this parody of REM's 1992 hit "Everybody Hurts," which was featured on the finale of the 37th season of The Simpsons, on Sunday, February 15. REM frontman Michael Stipe returned to the iconic animated series to sing the mournful yet funny "Everybody Kirks," with new lyrics highlighting the plight of Simpsons character Kirk Van Houten, who is Bart's friend Millhouse's father. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Michael Stipe returns to The Simpsons with 'Everybody Kirks' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Code.org President Steps Down Citing 'Upending' of CS By AI
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes:



Last July, as Microsoft pledged $4 billion to advance AI education in K-12 schools, Microsoft President Brad Smith told nonprofit Code.org CEO/Founder Hadi Partovi it was time to "switch hats" from coding to AI. He added that "the last 12 years have been about the Hour of Code, but the future involves the Hour of AI." On Friday, Code.org announced leadership changes to make it so.




"I am thrilled to announce that Karim Meghji will be stepping into the role of President &amp; CEO," Partovi wrote on LinkedIn. "Having worked closely with Karim over the last 3.5 years as our CPO, I have complete confidence that he possesses the perfect balance of historical context and 'founder-level' energy to lead us into an AI-centric future."

In a separate LinkedIn post, Code.org co-founder Cameron Wilson explained why he was transitioning to an executive advisor role. "Our community is entering a new chapter as AI changes and upends computer science as a discipline and society at large. Code.org's mission is still the same, however, we are starting a new chapter focused on ensuring students can thrive in the Age of AI. This new chapter will bring new opportunities, new problems to solve, and new communities to engage."



The Code.org leadership changes come just weeks after Code.org confirmed laid off about 14% of its staff, explaining it had "made the difficult decision to part ways with 18 colleagues as part of efforts to ensure our long-term sustainability." January also saw Code.org Chief Academic Officer Pat Yongpradit jump to Microsoft where he now helps "lead Microsoft's global strategy to put people first in an age of AI by shaping education and workforce policy" as a member of Microsoft's Global Education and Workforce Policy team.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
These Are The Most Dangerous Fields Of Work
These Are The Most Dangerous Fields Of Work

Fatal workplace injuries remain a pressing issue in the United States, with stark disparities across occupational fields.



Statista's Tristan Gaudiaut reports that, according to data published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in February 2026, farming, fishing and forestry are still by far the most dangerous fields of work, recording around 22 fatal injuries per 100,000 workers in 2024.



You will find more infographics at Statista

A little further behind are transportation and material moving (12.8) and construction and extraction (12.6), followed by protective services (8.2) and building/ground cleaning and maintenance (6.9).

These figures underscore the persistent risks faced by workers in physically demanding and high-hazard industries, despite ongoing safety regulations and enforcement efforts.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 14:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Syria Asks Germany Not To Deport Its Citizens Back Home, Fearing It Would Make Country 'Unsafe'
Syria Asks Germany Not To Deport Its Citizens Back Home, Fearing It Would Make Country 'Unsafe'

Authored by Thomas Brooke via Remix News,

Syria has formally asked Germany for patience over the deportation of Syrian nationals, warning that the return of thousands could lead to insecurity in the country and worsen the country’s fragile humanitarian situation.



As reported by Welt, Mohammed Yaqub al-Omar, director of the consular department at the Syrian Foreign Ministry, urged Germany “to understand the Syrian refugees and give us more time for reconstruction.”

He warned that “the return of thousands of Syrians to Syria at this time could exacerbate the humanitarian crisis and mean that many people will have to live in refugee camps.”

According to al-Omar, 1.5 million people are currently living in tent camps in northern Syria alone due to destroyed homes, schools, roads, and a lack of electricity. Large-scale deportations from Germany, he suggested, would place further strain on already overstretched infrastructure.

Politicians from the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), argue that legal protection grounds no longer apply, but members of the co-governing left-wing Social Democrats (SPD) were more amenable to Damascus’ request.

“Residence rights are not determined by the wishes of the countries of origin, but by whether a claim to protection exists. This claim, however, ceased to exist after the fall of the Assad regime,” Alexander Throm, domestic policy spokesman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, told Focus magazine. He added that returns to safe areas of Syria are possible, asking, “Who, if not Syrians, should rebuild the country after the civil war?”

Marion Gentges, Justice and Migration Minister in Baden-Württemberg from the CDU, warned against delaying deportations because of the current debate. “We have an interest in ensuring that serious criminals and dangerous individuals leave our country. Therefore, such deportations, including those to Syria, must be carried out consistently,” she said.

The topic of Syrian deportations could lead to friction within the federal coalition, however, with SPD lawmakers suggesting that Damascus’ request for more time was reasonable.

“Syria still needs time to create structures that allow for returns,” said Serdar Yüksel, SPD chairman of the German-Turkish Parliamentary Group. In many areas, he reported, there are “no schools, no hospitals, no running water, no sewage system.”

In some places, there is “virtually no reconstruction” taking place, he added, without responding to the suggestion that perhaps Syrians themselves should be leading the reconstruction.

The issue is already partially addressed in the coalition agreement between the CDU/CSU and SPD, which provides for the resumption of deportations to Syria, beginning with criminals and individuals considered threats to public safety.

However, a broader deportation policy back to the country has not been agreed upon.


Syrien fordert von Deutschland, kriminelle Syrer nicht zurückzuschicken - und die Bundesregierung gehorcht. Mit der AfD in Regierungsverantwortung würde die Abschiebeoffensive sofort starten - und die Sicherheit der eigenen Bürger in den Vordergrund gerückt!…
— Alice Weidel (@Alice_Weidel) February 20, 2026
Alice Weidel, co-leader of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), slammed the request by the Syrian government, and suggested that a remigration policy for Syrians would already be in full force were her party in office.

She wrote on X, “Syria is demanding that Germany not send back criminal Syrians – and the German government is complying. With the AfD in government, the deportation offensive would begin immediately – and the safety of its own citizens would be prioritized!”

Her party added in a separate post, “Syria refuses to take back Syrians – so the country doesn’t become ‘unsafe.’ Criminal Syrians are supposed to stay in Germany – and the German government is complying. Instead: launch a deportation offensive, send Syrians back to Syria!”

Voluntary deportation programs were launched in some German states last year, but resulted in extremely poor conversion rates. Despite financial incentives being offered at German taxpayers’ expense, just a fraction of those offered assistance to return home took up the offer.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 15:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
White House Ready To Offer Iran "Token" Nuclear Enrichment Instead Of All-Out War
White House Ready To Offer Iran "Token" Nuclear Enrichment Instead Of All-Out War

When it comes to the potential of achieving a lasting US-Iran deal centered on the country's nuclear program, headlines have been changing rapidly, on a daily basis - as the specter of another US-led regime change war in the Middle East looms.

Axios is reporting that the latest big diplomatic option the Trump White House is mulling is a proposal that allows Iran "token" nuclear enrichment - but with no path to a bomb, according to unnamed US officials.
via Iranian state media

But alongside this are the typical 'military options' which have been reported for weeks, with Trump currently said to be considering 'limited' strikes, or even decapitation attacks to take out the Ayatollah and top leadership - though concerns are this would unleash uncontrollable full war, given Tehran's retaliation would likely be all-out.

Axios says of negotiations and the "token" enrichment option - that "This suggests there could be an opening, if only a small one, between the red lines set by the U.S. and Iran for a deal to constrain Iran's nuclear capabilities and prevent war."

The unspoken irony and contradiction in all of this - which the Iranians are fully aware of - is that this is precisely what the original Iran JCPOA nuclear deal under Obama aimed for. Trump, of course, during his first term pulled the US out of the deal, in April 2018, finding it insufficient.

"President Trump will be ready to accept a deal that would be substantive and that he can sell politically at home. If the Iranians want to prevent an attack they should give us an offer we can't refuse. The Iranians keep missing the window. If they play games there won't be a lot of patience," a senior American official told Axios.

All of this has led to premature reports that Washington has already 'accepted' a scheme whereby Iran could keep its nuclear program, for domestic energy purposes. Yet the two sides in reality appear nowhere near the goal line or final agreement.

The same outlet agrees, concluding: "U.S. officials say the bar for Iran's forthcoming nuclear proposal is very high because the plan would have to persuade the many skeptics inside the Trump administration and in the region."

The US is still escalating the immense military pressure by the day, as this past week it became very clear that we are witnessing the biggest American military build-up in the region since the 2003 Iraq war.

An 'alternate' plan is to take out Ayatollah Khamenei and his son, the latest reporting says...


NEW: Trump has been presented with plan to kill Khamenei and his son, among other military options.
-At same time, snr US officials tell @BarakRavid + @MarcACaputo that Trump would consider a nuclear deal that allows Iran some “token” enrichment https://t.co/zO5Uyji1k0
— Dave Lawler (@DavidLawler10) February 21, 2026
A sticking point for the US remains the limitation or elimination of Iran's formidable ballistic missile program. But Tehran naturally sees this as impossible, as it would in essence be disarming itself, assuring its own demise if ever attacked by an enemy like Israel.

Israeli has meanwhile made no secret that it wants to see the collapse of the Islamic Republic, seeing in it a forever enemy of the Jewish people. But Iranians say they are the ones repeatedly attacked in an unprovoked fashion.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 15:45

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's Got Talent viewers brand launch 'boring' as they moan acts are the 'same thing over and over' and threaten to switch over to rival show
Despite gracing TV screens for almost 20 years, BGT still has viewership numbers of between five and seven million. But fans are now claiming it is officially 'past its sell-by date'.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
On-Chain Analytics Platform Parsec Shuts Down After 5 Years of Operations
In a recent development for the cryptocurrency analytics space, Parsec — a provider of customizable on-chain data tools — has officially shut down its services. The platform, which specialized in DeFi and NFT-focused analytics, went offline on February 19, 2026, marking the end of a... Read More

ZDNet News
Open 
I replaced my old car charger with this Qi2 device - for less than $20
This ESR Qi2 car charger juices up your phone while holding it securely, even on bumpy roads.

The Hill
Open 
DOJ moves quickly to boot judge-appointed Virginia US attorney
The Department of Justice (DOJ) on Friday fired the top prosecutor leading the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia office hours after he took on the role to replace former Trump lawyer Lindsey Halligan. U.S. District Judge M. Hannah Lauck administered the oath of office after longtime litigator James Hundley was unanimously appointed...

The Hill
Open 
Elon Musk's X appeals $140M EU fine
Billionaire Elon Musk’s social platform X has appealed a $140 million fine from the European Commission in a landmark case that could shape how online platforms are regulated across Europe. The company’s Global Government Affairs team said in a Friday post that it had filed an appeal with the General Court of the European Union...

Gizmodo
Open 
The Legend That Defined the Music of ‘Final Fantasy’ Is Getting the Biography He Deserves
Read the story of longtime 'Final Fantasy' composer Nobuo Uematsu when his 'On the Record' biography hit stores this fall.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Kristi Noem announces FEMA deployed without pay for Potomac spill despite Dem govt shutdown
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem just announced that both FEMA and the EPA will be deployed to aid with the Potomac sewage spill, despite Democrats shutting DHS down by refusing to fund it. . . .

Telegraph
Open 
Scotland avoid huge upset with late winning try against Wales
Scotland avoid huge upset with late winning try against Wales

Telegraph
Open 
Chelsea ‘set fire’ to another winning position and it could prove costly
Chelsea ‘set fire’ to another winning position and it could prove costly

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Burnley 'disgusted' by racist abuse sent to Mejbri
Burnley say they are "disgusted" by online racist abuse directed at midfielder Hannibal Mejbri after the Clarets' Premier League match at Chelsea on Saturday.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
What went wrong for England in nightmare defeat?
"Everyone has to take a look at themselves" - what went wrong for England in their record Six Nations home defeat by Ireland?

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Five taken to hospital after gas explosion at farm
All five are taken to hospital as a precaution following the incident, which involved a food truck.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US: Technical issues force NASA to postpone moon mission
The US space agency has said an issue with fuel supply is the culprit, though the source of the problem has not yet been found. The scheduled flyby is to be the first manned mission to the moon in five decades.

Mail Online
Open 
Police arrest 11 as violence breaks out between far-right Britain First march and counter-demonstrators
Supporters of the far-right group Britain First met outside Manchester Piccadilly station from 12pm ahead of a 'march for remigration and mass deportations'.

BBC World News
Open 
Giant tortoises return to Galápagos island after nearly 200 years
One hundred and fifty eight captive-bred juvenile tortoises were released on the Galápagos island of Floreana.

Techdirt
Open 
This Week In Techdirt History: February 15th – 21st
Five Years Ago This week in 2021, we looked at how state laws around community broadband were harming communities during the pandemic, just as one Congressional representative introduced a new such law to do so nationwide. Minneapolis joined the list of cities banning facial recognition tech, while it was revealed that CBP&#8217;s use of the [&#8230;]

BBC UK News
Open 
Man taken to hospital after Lurgan 'stabbing incident'
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said a woman in her 20s has been arrested and is assisting police with their enquiries.

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane's devastated girlfriend breaks silence on his ALS death as she pays shattering tribute
Dane, 53, who shot to fame on Grey's Anatomy as Dr. Mark Sloan aka 'McSteamy,' announced less than a year ago that he had been diagnosed with the illness.

Mail Online
Open 
Horrifying moment Stanford swim star, 20, floats face-down in pool before collapsing
Addison Sauickie, 20, was competing for her college at the ACC Swimming and Diving Championships this week when she appeared to suffer a medical emergency in the middle of her race.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's Got Talent's Paul Nunnari, whose gravity-defying aerial wheelchair act won Simon Cowell's Golden Buzzer, opens up about the incident that left him disabled at 11 and how he refused to let it define his life
Britain's Got Talent star Paul Nunnari has revealed the motivation behind his gravity-defying aerial act, which earned him Simon Cowell's Golden Buzzer.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
All change at Spurs again and Igor Tudor has a relegation battle on his hands | Jonathan Wilson
Tottenham have rolled the dice and an injury-ravaged side’s anxiety may only get worse as West Ham close the gapWhen did the reality dawn? Perhaps it was towards the end of the first half of West Ham’s game at Chelsea at the end of January with the away side leading 2-0. Or perhaps it was when West Ham took the lead against Manchester United 10 days later. As it turned out, West Ham won neither fixture; had they done so they would have had five points more and so been level with Tottenham going into this weekend. And then Tottenham’s proximity to relegation could not have been denied.West Ham’s revival means this isn’t like last season, when a win at Ipswich at the end of February took Tottenham to 33 points and as good as confirmed their continued presence in the Premier League, allowing Ange Postecoglou to focus on Europe. Were Spurs to pull off something extremely unlikely and beat Arsenal on Sunday, they would move to 32 and, for all the glee their fans would feel, nobody would feel secure. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russell inspires Scotland to thrilling Six Nations comeback win against Wales
Wales 23-26 ScotlandFinn Russell scores 11 points in second-half turnaroundScotland pulled off a dramatic comeback win against Wales to back up their impressive Calcutta Cup success the previous week. Hosts Wales had the lead until the 74th minute thanks to a spark lit by the wing Josh Adams, leaving the visitors with a feeling that they were lucky to come away with five points which sent them to the top of the Six Nations table.This was just the third time Scotland have won the match directly after a victory over rivals England in the Six Nations and their second-half resurgence came at the hands of their maverick Finn Russell. Who else would it have been? The fly-half is one of the best in the world and has been the architect of Scotland’s biggest victories over the last few years. He was largely quiet in the first 40, such was Wales’ impressive start, but two fast paced tries either scored or created by Russell set Scotland on the comeback path. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottNewcastle get the ball rolling! “No-one actually believes we’ll win this game, do they?” sighs Toon fan Chris Paraskevas. “I mean the last time we won at the Etihad, the goal-scorers were Moussa Sissoko (now ruining his reputation at Panathinaikos with Rafa Benitez) and Ryan Taylor.”The teams are out. Manchester City, in sky blue, are given a guard of honour by members of their 1976 League Cup winning side. The 50th anniversary of that victory, over Newcastle, comes up next week. The Toon in third-choice blue. As for the weather, Bert Challenor, the talent scout from Comedians by Trevor Griffiths, says it best: “I’ll never understand why they don’t run boats to Manchester.” We’ll be off in a minute. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Trump says he will increase his new global tariffs to 15%
After most of his tariffs were outlawed on Friday, Trump announced new global tariffs of 10% - which he says he has now increased to 15%.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham’s Hurtré piles pain on Chatham during 8-0 rout in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76For just under an hour, Chatham kept themselves in this contest at 1-0 down. Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are full-time professionals chasing promotion to the Women’s Super League, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side remaining in the Women’s FA Cup fifth round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtré.Anybody hoping to see a rare upset in this competition was left disappointed as the hosts, second in WSL 2, FA Cup winners in 2012 and heavy favourites for this tie, opened the floodgates in the later stages. It was a game they would have had wrapped up before half-time had it not been for an inspired performance from the Chatham goalkeeper, Simone Eligon, who represents Trinidad and Tobago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottThe teams are out. Manchester City, in sky blue, are given a guard of honour by members of their 1976 League Cup winning side. The 50th anniversary of that victory, over Newcastle, comes up next week. The Toon in third-choice blue. As for the weather, Bert Challenor, the talent scout from Comedians by Trevor Griffiths, says it best: “I’ll never understand why they don’t run boats to Manchester.” We’ll be off in a minute.(They’re waiting on London to give the word, according to Eddie Waters.) Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Iran students stage first anti-government protests since deadly crackdown
The student protesters honoured thousands of those killed when nationwide mass protests were put down last month.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate keeps on smiling as she greets England rugby players following defeat to Ireland - after she and Anne braved the Six Nations crowds amid Royal week from hell
The Princess of Wales arrived to cheer on the England rugby team in their match against Ireland this afternoon at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham.

BBC UK News
Open 
Arrests amid Britain First march and protests
The arrests are in relation to offences including assault on an emergency worker, police say.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
'Yellow Letters' wins Berlinale's top prize as political tensions overshadow the film festival
The political drama by Oscar nominee Ilker Catak took the top award at the Berlin International Film Festival.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate keeps on smiling as she greets England rugby players following defeat to Ireland - after she and Anne braved the Six Nations crowds following Royal week from hell
The Princess of Wales arrived to cheer on the England rugby team in their match against Ireland this afternoon at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham.

TechRadar News
Open 
'No one deploys AI at Meta’s scale': Meta signs up Nvidia to power its next big AI projects — so what exactly do Mark Zuckerberg and Jensen Huang have planned?

Digital Trends
Open 
Microsoft’s new gaming chief makes bold promises about AI in gaming
Microsoft names former AI products head Asha Sharma as its gaming chief, and she has sparked heated debate over her professional journey and AI's role in the gaming ecosystem.
The post Microsoft’s new gaming chief makes bold promises about AI in gaming appeared first on Digital Trends.

Boing Boing
Open 
Your beach cruiser just got a bureaucrat
A new idea to limit injuries and hooning on e-bikes in California has been introduced to the state's assembly: register e-bikes like they are cars.
Apparently, e-bikes are too convenient, and their owners need to spend time at the DMV. Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, who represents Orinda, a community far, far away from the beaches and bike paths enjoyed by the better-known parts of the state, proposes that all Class 2 and Class 3 get the DMV treatment. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Your beach cruiser just got a bureaucrat appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
In civil rights reversal, Trump DOJ sides against desegregation
In another attempt to bolster old standards of racism, the Trump Administration has joined a lawsuit arguing the Los Angeles Unified School District's decades-old desegregation framework is reverse discrimination.
Filed this week, the DOJ has sided with the 1776 Project Foundation, a Billings, Montana-based conservative "advocacy" group, arguing that LAUSD's policies designed to dismantle segregation and ensure fair funding are unconstitutional discrimination against white people. &#8212; Read the rest
The post In civil rights reversal, Trump DOJ sides against desegregation appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Elon Musk invents the mattress sale
Eleven-dimensional chess player Elon Musk has unveiled a bold new pricing innovation this week: the limited-time offer. Telling customers the price will go up if they don't buy right now is a breakthrough retail strategy long thought to be exclusive to Presidents' Day mattress sales and going-out-of-business sofa emporiums. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Elon Musk invents the mattress sale appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
T2 Linux Restores XAA In Xorg, Making 2D Graphics Fast Again
Berlin-based T2 Linux developer Ren&eacute; Rebe (long-time Slashdot reader ReneR) is announcing that their Xorg display server has now restored its XAA acceleration architecture, "bringing fixed-function hardware 2D acceleration back to many older graphics cards that upstream left in software-rendered mode."


Older fixed-function GPUs now regain smooth window movement, low CPU usage, and proper 24-bit bpp framebuffer support (also restored in T2). Tested hardware includes ATi Mach-64 and Rage-128, SiS, Trident, Cirrus, Matrox (Millennium/G450), Permedia2, Tseng ET6000 and even the Sun Creator/Elite 3D.

The result: vintage and retro systems and classic high-end Unix workstations that are fast and responsive again.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – Allow log_min_messages to be set per process type
On 9th of February 2026, Álvaro Herrera committed patch: Allow log_min_messages to be set per process type &#160; Change log_min_messages from being a single element to a comma-separated list of type:level elements, with 'type' representing a process type, and 'level' being a log level to use for that type of process. The list must also &#8230; Continue reading "Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 &#8211; Allow log_min_messages to be set per process type"

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Delighted’ James Milner celebrates record with Brighton win at Brentford
James Milner showed he can still contribute during his record-breaking 654th Premier League appearance as Brighton won at Brentford. Milner’s inclusion meant he moved past Gareth Barry’s record tally in the competition and it proved an occasion to remember for the Seagulls after first-half goals by Diego Gómez and Danny Welbeck.The pressure had mounted on Fabian Hürzeler after one league win in 13 games and he turned to the veteran midfielder in an attempt to arrest a worrying run of results after a recent start at Aston Villa. The 40-year-old produced an accomplished display on a landmark occasion before his 90th-minute substitution was marked with applause from both sets of supporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham’s Hurtré piles pain on Chatham during 8-0 rout in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76For just under an hour, Chatham kept themselves in this contest at 1-0 down. Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are full-time professionals chasing promotion to the Women’s Super League, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side remaining in the Women’s FA Cup fifth-round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtre.Anybody hoping to see a rare upset in this competition was left disappointed as the hosts, second in WSL 2, FA Cup winners in 2012 and heavy favourites for this tie, opened the floodgates in the later stages. It was a game they would have had wrapped up before half-time had it not been for an inspired performance from the Chatham goalkeeper, Simone Eligon, who represents Trinidad and Tobago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
West Ham miss chance to boost survival hopes with wasteful draw against Bournemouth
When it comes to the back end of May and West Ham United are reflecting on the season that was, there is every chance that this soggy Saturday will go down as a missed opportunity that proved crucial in their survival plight.Victory here would have raised the possibility of Nuno Espírito Santo’s side ending the weekend out of the relegation zone for the first time since early December. In keeping with those of recent weeks, much of the performance was befitting of another three points. But, thanks to a couple of smart Djordje Petrovic saves and some profligacy in front of goal, they had to make do with a draw – an expected goals (xG) total of 2.87 from 20 shots yielding a blank in the only column that matters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottEddie Howe, whose team have won their last three away matches, speaks to TNT Sports. “We’ve played really well in the three games … played every game with a really good mindset … really good focus as well … diligent in and out of possession … showed our athleticism … we need to do all of those things tonight … we’re playing against a very good team … we need to be at our very best … we’ve tried not to dwell on [travelling to and from Azerbaijan] … it can very easily become relevant in your mind … so we’ve just focused on the good result and performance … we are trying now to back that up and be at our very best … there are no excuses from us … learning from the cup game, there was a few things we needed to do better, and we need to put them into action.”The 5.30pm kick-off between West Ham and Bournemouth has just ended goalless. That result means Newcastle can leap into eighth place with a win tonight. A draw would move them above Everton into ninth. Their worst-case scenario doesn’t bear thinking about: a defeat by four goals or more would let Sunderland take their tenth-place spot without having to do a single thing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump raises tariffs to 15% on imports from all countries
President announced increase from 10% using different authority from mechanism that supreme court struck down on FridayDonald Trump announced on Saturday that he would raise a temporary tariff rate on US imports from all countries from 10% to 15%, less than 24 hours after the US supreme court ruled against the legality of his flagship trade policy.Infuriated by the high court’s ruling on Friday that he had exceeded his authority and should have got congressional approval for the tariffs he introduced last year under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the US president railed against the justices who struck down his use of tariffs – calling them a “disgrace to the nation” – and ordered an immediate 10% tariff on all imports, in addition to any existing levies, under a separate law. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Does Nigel Farage have a problem with women?
Critics link Farage’s ‘Trump-lite’ condescension to female journalists to Reform’s moves against women’s rightsWhen Nigel Farage told a journalist this week she should “write some silly story … and we won’t bother to read it”, it provoked an instant – and divided – reaction. For some it was a “masterclass” in dealing with mainstream media, but for others it was “rude, dismissive, misogynistic, arrogant”.Behind the scenes, Farage’s treatment of the Financial Times’s Anna Gross – which was met with mirth and applause among Reform diehards in the room – provoked disquiet and anger among lobby journalists across the political spectrum. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Cantor Fitzgerald Slammed Over Tariff Trades Which Never Happened
Cantor Fitzgerald Slammed Over Tariff Trades Which Never Happened

In retrospect, if only Cantor Fitzgerald was called PolyCantor, none of this would have happened.

Ever since September, the upstart online betting marketplace PolyMarket has been offering traders the opportunity to make money by betting whether the US Supreme Court would rule in favor or against Trump's tariffs, with millions of bets placed for either outcome (of course, we learned the outcome at 10am ET on Friday, when a 6-3 majority - including two Justices selected by Trump - voted against the president's landmark trade policy).
Source: PolyMarket

If that's not enough, there were also parallel markets like "Will the Court Force Trump to Refund Tariffs?", "Will the Supreme Court rule on Trump's tariffs by..." and many others. 

Of course, there's also PolyMarket's carbon copy, Kalshi, which offered the exact same markets to its own group of traders.
Source: Kalshi

Yet reading the mainstream media or various social network politicized echo chambers, one would have no idea that both PolyMarket and Kalshi, which have revolutionized online betting for ordinary Americans (and as of this week, for institutional clients of both PolyMarket and NEW - Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle, now running Cantor Fitzgerald after Lutnick became Trump's Commerce Secretary, have been buying up rights to Trump-era tariff refunds at steep discounts, reportedly 20–30 cents on the dollar — Wired pic.twitter.com/AMrNcxckQB- Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) February 20, 2026 ">Kalshi), are letting their clients bet millions whether Trump's tariffs would be struck down in court. Instead, they would be bombarded by headline after headline that Cantor Fitzgerald - the investment bank overseen by the sons of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick - is doing just that.


NEW - Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle, now running Cantor Fitzgerald after Lutnick became Trump's Commerce Secretary, have been buying up rights to Trump-era tariff refunds at steep discounts, reportedly 20–30 cents on the dollar — Wired pic.twitter.com/AMrNcxckQB
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) February 20, 2026

🚨🇺🇸 LUTNICK SWINDLES AMERICA AGAIN!!
The Supreme Court just ruled Trump's tariffs illegal. Guess who's about to make a fortune off it?
Cantor Fitzgerald, the firm now run by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's sons, has been buying up the rights to tariff refunds from U.S.… pic.twitter.com/A2YMfsGJQK
— DD Geopolitics (@DD_Geopolitics) February 20, 2026

Only in the case of Cantor Fitzgerald, this is 100% fake news. 

It all started with a July report by Wired (which once was a great magazine before transforming itself into the modern day version of the Sears, pardon, Amazon catalog with its avalanche of product infomercials) that alleged the financial services company created a “litigation finance” product that brokers bets that the courts will strike down the tariffs.

"Trump’s Commerce Secretary Loves Tariffs. His Former Investment Bank Is Taking Bets Against Them. A subsidiary of Cantor Fitzgerald, which is run by the sons of US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick, is letting clients essentially bet that President Donald Trump’s tariffs will be struck down in court", Wired declared bombastically, adding that...


In a letter seen by WIRED, a representative from Cantor said the firm was willing to trade tariff refund rights for 20 to 30 percent of what companies have paid in duties. “So for a company that paid $10 million, they could expect to receive $2-$3 million in a trade,” the representative wrote. “We have the capacity to trade up to several hundred million of these presently and can likely upsize that in the future to meet potential demand.”


In theory, such trades would connect a company vulnerable to US tariffs with a fund willing to bet that such tariffs might be reversed, or provide a market for two funds who disagreed on what the outcome of the Supreme Court decision would be. Cantor, like PolyMarket or Kalshi, would be the market where such trades would take place. 

Always eager to stir up a scandal especially when there is none, Congress's two most vocal, anti-capitalists, Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden immediately sent a letter to Howard Lutnick's son, Brandon, who now runs Cantor, demanding full disclosure of transactions or agreements the firm has made relating to products that would let institutions effectively bet on the legality of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Brandon Lutnick

“Public reporting indicates that Cantor has offered companies the opportunity to trade their legal claim to a future tariff refund in exchange for 20 to 30% of the duties the company paid,” the letter said. “In this scenario, if the courts determine that the tariffs are illegal, the company stands to recover hundreds of millions of dollars.”

Among the questions the senators posed were how many tariff refund agreements Cantor has finalized, whether it created them at the request of a specific client and if anyone at the firm had communicated with people in the US government about the tariffs or related legal cases, including Trump and the Commerce secretary. 

Sadly for America's favorite "native American" politician, her fishing expedition went nowhere fast because as Bloomberg reported in August, while Cantor Fitzgerald held internal discussions about facilitating such trades, it - unlike Kalshi, PolyMarket and various of its invesdtment banking peers - "quickly shut down the idea before executing any transactions."

According to the Bloomberg report, Cantor received what is known as a reverse inquiry, which is essentially a client asking whether the firm can facilitate such trades, which are done by larger Wall Street banks, and some staff discussed with potential clients about arranging them before the idea was rejected. As an aside, Cantor takes no directional position on brokered trades, and only pockets a commission when it matches a buyer and a seller, which of course is the business model of online better markets which are now valued in the tens of billions.

“We have not facilitated or executed any trades in that market,” Cantor spokesperson Erica Chase told Bloomberg adding that “what is being reported about our business is absolutely false.”

Why would Cantor decide against matching willing clients and creating a market (where it itself has no position)? Simple: with Cantor founder Howard Lutnick now Donald Trump's Commerce secretary, shaping the president's policies and other potentially market-moving matters, the firm's dealings have been a key area of focus for ethics watchdogs who are on alert for conflicts of interest.

Which is not to say that others haven't been more than willing to jump in and take the spot voluntarily vacated by Cantor. 

In a separate report from October, Bloomberg reported that banks such as Jefferies (a portfolio company of none other than Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway), and Oppenheimer "are among firms brokering the deals, matching investors with companies that have paid tariffs to import goods into the US." Or precisely what Cantor has been accused of doing. 

Why would Jefferies and Oppenheimer offer to make a market in tariff related litigation finance? Simple: they stand to make a lot of money in commissions as the bid/ask in this illiquid market was so wide. A hedge fund might pay somewhere between 20 to 40 cents for each dollar of claims they could get back in refunds. Most of the trades range in size from $2 million to $20 million, with few over $100 million, Bloomberg sources said.

Additionally, in order to hedge the Supreme Court decision, investment banks had been asking customs brokers in several US states to recommend the deals to clients paying the tariffs. According to one customs broker quoted by Bloomberg, some investors are actively pursuing buying refund claims from importers that are hurting for cash.

In the end, the "cloak and dagger" narrative pushed by Elizabeth Warren was not only fake news, but would have in reality been beneficial to the broader market, as the kind of trades which Cantor was speculated of doing, and which Jefferies, Oppenheimer, Polymarket and Kalshi, have encouraged clients to engage in, was just a way to hedge risk and liquidity exposure. 

That's because if the Supreme Court strikes down the tariffs - as it now has - the process of recovering tariffs would be very lengthy and complex even for the importers themselves. For example, it would be particularly complicated for importers using commercial couriers such as FedEx and United Parcel Service to handle paperwork and tariff payments on their behalf. US Customs and Border Protection issues refunds only to the importer of record - the parcel handler, in this case, and not necessarily the ultimate recipient of the imported goods - and it’s likely that paperwork for every single shipment would be required for repayment.

Meanwhile, if a firm that will now wait in line for months if not years to collect its tariff refunds had hedged its exposure with Polymarket or Jefferies, the contract would have already paid out and the money would be in their bank account, no questions asked, making the broader market more efficient and more liquid.

Not even Elizabeth Warren would be able to write a strongly-worded letter complaining about that, especially since only does do markets realize how much more efficient they could have been all along.

As the WSJ wrote ahead Friday's SCOTUS decision, "Salvatore J. Stile II, founder of a customs brokerage firm, expects today’s Supreme Court ruling to create a market for tariff refunds. "My customers are asking what the mechanism is to get their money," said Stile, founder of Alba Wheels Up International. One option will be selling their potential refunds to hedge funds and other Wall Street firms. That would allow businesses to get cash faster.

Stile says he sold an $18 million potential refund claim from an importer to a hedge fund weeks ago, and said he expects to broker more of these transactions. He added that businesses will have to wait for more details to be released on the Federal Register before they can proceed with refunds.

Then again, there is speculation that the entire Supreme Court tariff play was Scott Bessent (and perhaps Howard Lutnick's) best play yet. After all, thanks to that New York Fed paper which Kevin Hassett slammed as the "worst paper he's ever seen" for "calculating" that 90% of the tariff burden was borne by US consumers...


Kevin Hassett should be sending thank you notes to the NY Fed: recall they calculated US consumers paid for 90% of tariff burden. So 90% of IEEPA refunds - $120BN - should go direct to consumers/firms. And with refund timing open-ended, they can be sent any time before midterms https://t.co/7FcF8lbxuV
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) February 21, 2026
.... all Trump needs to do now is cite that exact same paper and send out $120 billion (or 90% of the $133BN in IEEPA refunds that was "borne by US consumers") in "2026 Trump Tariff Refund Checks" (i.e. stimmies) to US consumers some time before the midterms, boost the economy while blaming the treachery of the Supreme Court for "forcing" him to do this, and tip the midterms in Republicans' favor. 

We are confident that countless markets are already connecting buyers and sellers willing to bet on that exact outcome, even if Cantor isn't one of them .

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 12:43

ZeroHedge News
Open 
'Incubator Babies' Are Back, With Iran In Crosshairs
'Incubator Babies' Are Back, With Iran In Crosshairs

Tehran is once again pointing the finger at "terrorists" for last month’s bloodshed, rejecting outside estimates and doubling down after President Trump just issued his own high estimate.

Trump told reporters Friday that 32,000 people were killed in the unrest, declaring that "the people of Iran have lived in hell" under the ruling clerical regime of the Ayatollah.
Source: qantara.de

That figure is one of the highest offered so far, even significantly beyond some Iranian opposition claims. But Tehran has rejected this. It's far beyond even what most Washington-friendly mainstream media said in real time as the bloody protests were unfolding.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi announced Saturday that the government has published a list of 3,117 individuals he called "victims of recent terrorist operation."

The official figure notably includes roughly 200 security personnel - suggesting at least some elements of the protests were armed, dangerous, and attacked police and military.

Iranian officials have alleged the protesters had outside covert help from Israel and the United States. Indeed, US mainstream media has lately confirmed the US government covertly shipped in thousands of Starlink terminals to aid the anti-government movement's communications and ability to organize.

"If anyone disputes accuracy of our data, please share any evidence," Araghchi wrote on X. He had previously claimed that at least 690 of the names offered were "terrorists" armed and funded by the US and Israel.

There could be signs of yet more protests emerging, as Fox Chief Correspondent Trey Yingst writes Saturday, "Large protests today in Iran, led by university students. Monitoring."

Meanwhile the New York Post has just issued this conflict's version of the "incubator babies" - with a new report claiming babies are being ripped from mothers' wombs(!). 

NYP claims: "Iranian police officers are gang-raping imprisoned female protesters and then cutting out their uteruses to cover up the horrific torture – before shipping their lifeless bodies home to their families, according to a shocking new report."

The Ron Paul Institute's Daniel McAdams exposes the report for the laughably crude propaganda that it is...


Ladies and gentlemen: You are being treated to the latest round of "Babies ripped from incubators" and "Gaddafi handing out viagra to his troops."
The @nypost is just another outlet of the CIA regime-change operation.
They are an arm of the neocon thugs who run US government.… https://t.co/gNYw9yc2hY
— Daniel McAdams (@DanielLMcAdams) February 21, 2026
Every. Single. Time. 

And people still actually fall for such simplistic, evidence-free claims amid the drum-beat for war. We are always told coming off each and every failed Neocon war: "but this time it's different!"



Americans are some of the most propagandized people on earth, and often this translates to disastrous 'shock and awe' style consequences for nations in Washington's immediate crosshairs.

* * *

For a trip down memory lane...


Three months after Nayirah testified, President George H.W. Bush launched the invasion of Iraq. But it turned out Nayirah’s claims weren’t true. No human rights group or news outlet could confirm what she said. It also turned out Nayirah was not just any Kuwaiti teenager. She was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States, Saud Nasser al-Sabah. She had been coached by the public relations firm Hill & Knowlton, which was working for the Kuwaiti government.




Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 13:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Welcome To The Lowest-Common-Denominator Society
Welcome To The Lowest-Common-Denominator Society

Authored by James Hickman via SchiffSovereign.com,

For decades, Germany operated its rail system on an honor model. There were no turnstiles, no barriers. Passengers bought tickets, boarded trains, and conductors performed random spot checks to make sure everyone had paid.

It was a system built on trust— and for a long time, it worked, because Germany was a fundamentally law-abiding society.

That system has been fraying over the last several years as Germany aggressively imported millions of migrants who don’t respect the law.

The most egregious example took place earlier this month, when a train conductor asked a passenger— a 26-year old migrant— for his ticket.

Not only did the passenger not have a ticket, but he beat the conductor so severely that the man died of his injuries the next morning.

The government’s response is extraordinary.

Rather than establish law and order and rain holy hell upon the criminals, Deutsche Bahn— which is owned by the German government— has told conductors to NOT approach passengers who present a “high risk of escalation.”

In short, the new policy is— if someone looks dangerous, don’t bother checking their ticket.



Meanwhile, ordinary passengers— the ones who actually follow the rules— will continue to be checked (and punished) if they’re caught without valid fare.

The same logic already governs retail theft across much of Germany.

Shoplifting hit record levels in 2024— roughly €3 billion in losses— and according to industry data, 98% of retail theft goes unreported to police. Retailers have largely given up because prosecutors rarely pursue the cases.

Moreover, employees who do try to intervene face increasingly aggressive and violent offenders… which is why retail stores have instructed staff to not intervene.

We’ve seen the same type of policy in the US.

Last August in Charlotte, North Carolina, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee named Iryna Zarutska was sitting on a light rail train when a man behind her pulled out a knife and stabbed her to death.

The killer— DeCarlos Brown Jr.— had 14 prior arrests including armed robbery and had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. His own mother had tried to have him involuntarily committed. Seven months earlier, a magistrate “judge” named Teresa Stokes released him without bond— on nothing more than a written promise to appear.

I put “judge” in quotes because Ms. Stokes had never graduated from law school, nor passed the bar in any state. She wasn’t qualified to adjudicate a traffic ticket, let alone violent crime.

At least there was outrage in America over Zarutska’s violent slaying.

But in Germany, the response to a train conductor being beaten to death was to tell other train conductors to stop doing their jobs.

And this isn’t some isolated lapse in judgment. It’s a pattern that runs through practically every layer of German governance.

Start with free speech.

The Alternative for Germany party (the AfD) won 20.8% of the vote in last year’s federal election, and current polls put them at 25-27%— neck and neck with the governing party.

The AfD’s surge in popularity is literally BECAUSE of the lawlessness and criminality that’s rampaging across the  country.

But rather than admit their policies have been catastrophic failures… and reverse course… the German establishment’s response was to classify the entire AfD as a “confirmed right-wing extremist endeavor”. They even authorized the domestic intelligence agency to wiretap and spy on AfD members.

Politicians have also filed hundreds of criminal complaints against citizens who criticized them online. Robert Habeck, the former deputy chancellor from the Green Party, personally filed 805 complaints. Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock filed 513.

The government frequently conducts early-morning raids on citizens’ homes over social media posts— they literally call them “Action Days Against Hate.” Ironically, one man received a suspended prison sentence for posting a meme that said a politician “hates freedom of speech.” You can’t make this stuff up.

A 2024 study by The Future of Free Speech found that 99.7% of content deleted on Facebook under Germany’s censorship law was perfectly legal speech.

Rather than asking why millions of Germans are angry— the economy in its longest downturn since reunification, 120,000 manufacturing jobs lost in a single year, rising violent crime— the government’s answer is to label them extremists, censor their speech, and try to ban the party they vote for.

Then there’s German energy policy.

Remember, this is the same government that lectured the entire world on climate change while shutting down all 17 of its nuclear power plants— the last three in April 2023, during an energy crisis.

Before Russia invaded Ukraine, Germany imported 55-65% of its natural gas from Russia.

When Russia cut the gas in 2022, Germany frantically restarted more than 20 coal-fired power plants and imported 42 million tonnes of coal, including a 278% surge from southern Africa.

They bulldozed an entire village called Lutzerath (in South Africa) to expand a coal mine, dragging 6,000 protesters away.

The country that wagged its finger at the West over carbon emissions ended up with a dirtier power grid than China’s.

And having shut down its own perfectly clean nuclear plants, Germany became a net electricity importer for the first time, buying power from France’s nuclear grid.

Under German law, if a bartender overserves a customer who then causes a fatal car crash, the bartender can be prosecuted for negligent homicide. Courts have ruled that by serving the alcohol, the bartender becomes legally responsible for the danger they created.

But a government that shuts down its own energy supply, censors its own citizens, and tells law enforcement to look the other way when criminals get aggressive? Apparently no such accountability applies.

And the same goes for the US, where if there was any justice, Teresa Stokes would be in prison for the negligent homicide of Iryna Zarutska.

It’s worth paying close attention, because Germany may be one of the worst offenders, but it isn’t the only Western nation making these choices.

That’s how you build a lowest-common-denominator society— by catering every policy to benefit the worst people in it.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 14:00

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Red cards and poor home form - Chelsea 'set fire to points'
Chelsea have more red cards than any side in the Premier League this season, and boss Liam Rosenior says they have "set fire" to points.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
BNPL Fintech Klarna Reports Losses Despite Surge in Revenue, KLAR Stock Down Over 25%
Swedish Fintech Klarna (NYSE:KLAR), a key player focused on tbe buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) and flexible payments sector, posted its first-ever billion-dollar revenue quarter in Q4 2025 but still swung to a net loss, highlighting the costs of aggressive expansion into full-scale banking services. Revenue climbed 38% year-over-year... Read More

The Hill
Open 
There is a new bipartisan coalition in town — just not the one we wanted
The extreme left and right are forming a new coalition, the Burn-It-Down Coalition, which is pushing America towards antisemitism, hostility to free speech, and endless politicized retribution and persecution.

The Hill
Open 
Epstein survivor denounces Les Wexner's deposition before House as 'abhorrent'
After billionaire retail mogul Les Wexner denied knowledge of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's crimes in a recent deposition before the House, one Epstein survivor called his testimony "abhorrent." Maria Farmer referenced her 1996 court filing in a statement Saturday, when she accused the disgraced financier of abusing her at Wexner’s Ohio residence and said...

The Hill
Open 
Jeffries: Supreme Court tariff ruling a 'crushing defeat for the wannabe King'
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) called the Supreme Court ruling against a majority of President Trump’s tariffs a “crushing defeat for the wannabe King.” “The Supreme Court decision striking down the harmful Trump Tariffs is a big victory for the American people,” Jeffries posted on the social platform X on Friday morning. “And another...

Gizmodo
Open 
Obedient Traders Respond to Claude Code Cybersecurity Plugin by Selling Cybersecurity Stocks
The SaaSpocalypse is not real, but it can hurt you.

Mail Online
Open 
Just 16 months after his death, Alex Salmond's Alba party on brink of collapse and won't field any candidates in Holyrood election
The political party founded by Alex Salmond is on the verge of collapse just 16 months after the former First Minister's death - and will field NO candidates in May's Holyrood election.

Mail Online
Open 
Police are accused of turning a blind eye to sharia courts in Britain as figures show just three per cent of honour crimes are prosecuted
The distressing data shows that the police have repeatedly failed to prosecute and prevent honour-based abuse such as forced marriages, honour killings and female genital mutilation.

Mail Online
Open 
Nepo baby with famous pop star father unveils VERY hunky new look in steamy BBC drama - 14 years after Hollyoaks appearance
The son of a famous pop star left fans swooning after revealing his chiselled look in a new steamy BBC drama.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump is mercilessly mocked over his global tariff meltdown as Emmanuel Macron and Gavin Newsom savagely troll president
The president's political rivals wasted no time in rejoicing over his crushing defeat in the Supreme Court which has ruled his 'Liberation Day' tariffs are unconstitutional.

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane's widow Rebecca Gayheart shares heartrending family photos after his ALS death at 53
Dane, 53, who shot to fame on Grey's Anatomy as Dr. Mark Sloan aka 'McSteamy,' announced less than a year ago that he had been diagnosed with the illness.

Mail Online
Open 
BrewDog founder and 'world's worst boss' to plough £10m into rescue bid for troubled brewer amid 'equity punk' fan investment row
James Watt, who calls himself the 'world's worst boss' and is married to reality TV star Georgia Toffolo , is assembling financial backing from external investors to buy back the Scottish brewer.

Mail Online
Open 
Zara McDermott says she feels 'disgusting' if she doesn't shower twice a day and admits she brushes her teeth EVERY time she eats as she admits to 'cleanliness issue'
The former Love Island star, 29, took to her YouTube channel this week as she recorded a week in her life.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham’s Hurtré piles pain on Chatham during 8-0 rout in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76For just under an hour, Chatham kept themselves in this contest at 1-0 down. Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are full-time professionals chasing promotion to the Women’s Super League, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side remaining in the Women’s FA Cup fifth-round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtre.Anybody hoping to see a rare upset in this competition was left disappointed as the hosts, second in WSL 2, cup winners in 2012 and heavy favourites for this tie, opened the floodgates in the later stages. It was a game they would have had wrapped up before half-time had it not been for an inspired performance from the Chatham goalkeeper, Simone Eligon, who represents Trinidad and Tobago. Continue reading...

Telegraph
Open 
Scotland avoid huge upset with late winning try against Wales – live reaction
Scotland avoid huge upset with late winning try against Wales – live reaction

Telegraph
Open 
Humiliation at Twickenham proves England have been found out
Humiliation at Twickenham proves England have been found out

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Berlinale: 'Yellow Letters' wins the Golden Bear award
The political drama by Oscar nominee Ilker Catak took the top award at the Berlin International Film Festival.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew had dinner with Saudi investor linked to the 9/11 hijackers to discuss investing in Sarah Ferguson's 'brand'
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor had dinner with a Saudi millionaire linked to the 9/11 hijackers where they discussed plans to invest in Sarah Ferguson's 'brand', The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Mail Online
Open 
Maya Jama wows in a figure-hugging black dress as she jets back to South Africa for Love Island: All Stars
Maya Jama looked nothing short of sensational as she posed up a storm for a series of stunning Instagram shots on Saturday. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Birmingham show class difference with 8-0 rout of Chatham in Women’s FA Cup
Fifth round: Birmingham 8-0 ChathamHurtré 26 59 68, Sarri 53, Louis 65 89, Lee 70, Leidhammar 76For just under an hour, Chatham kept themselves in this contest at 1-0 down. Given they are paid only their travel expenses, while their opponents are full-time professionals chasing promotion to the Women’s Super League, that was an admirable effort from the lowest-ranked side remaining in the Women’s FA Cup fifth-round. They were powerless, though, to stop Birmingham charging into the quarter-finals with a hat-trick from Océane Hurtre.Anybody hoping to see a rare upset in this competition was left disappointed as the hosts, second in WSL 2, cup winners in 2012 and heavy favourites for this tie, opened the floodgates in the later stages. It was a game they would have had wrapped up before half-time had it not been for an inspired performance from the Chatham goalkeeper, Simone Eligon, who represents Trinidad and Tobago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottThe 5.30pm kick-off between West Ham and Bournemouth has just ended goalless. That result means Newcastle can leap into eighth place with a win tonight. A draw would move them above Everton into ninth. Their worst-case scenario doesn’t bear thinking about: a defeat by four goals or more would let Sunderland take their tenth-place spot without having to do a single thing.Meanwhile we already knew what’s at stake for Manchester City this evening: a win and they’ll move to within two points of Arsenal at the top. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Charles Bronson vows to 'expose unlawful sentence'
The Parole Board has confirmed Charles Bronson's&#160;latest bid for release will progress to an oral hearing in the coming months, where he could be invited to make his plea for freedom.

Sky News Home
Open 
London Bridge terror attack cop sacked over 'offensive' texts
One of the first police officers on the scene of the 2017 London Bridge terror attack has been sacked for gross misconduct for his use of the word "pikey" in messages about Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller people.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Let a thousand stinky blossoms bloom: how Australia became the world’s corpse flower destination
Australian collections of the endangered and notoriously unpredictable flowers have popped off in recent years, as ‘personas’ like Putricia, Stinkerella and Smellanie prove a hit with nosy spectatorsSign up for climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s free Clear Air newsletter hereFrom little things glorious fetid things grow. Corpse flower blooms, once vanishingly rare, are becoming more commonplace in Australia.More than a dozen bloomed across the country in 2025, including the infamous Putricia in Sydney, Morpheus in Canberra, Big Betty in Cooktown, and Spud and co in Cairns. But with plants kept in gardens across the country, and blooming more frequently after their first flower, you could catch a whiff of one soon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flemming earns last-gasp draw for Burnley after Chelsea’s Fofana sees red
Another late slip from Chelsea. They were coasting courtesy of an early João Pedro goal but the second-half dismissal of Wesley Fofana offered a glimmer to a Burnley team previously clinging on. In a mirror of Leeds’ comeback from 2-0 down here, Liam Rosenior’s team failed to run down the clock.Instead, they allowed the unmarked Zian Flemming to nod home a James Ward-Prowse corner in added time. It might have been worse when Jacob Bruun Larsen headed a near-identical Ward-Prowse corner over the bar. Defending set pieces is a discipline the Rosenior regime has struggled with. “Our record defending set plays is not of the level required,” admitted Chelsea’s manager. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email Scott… and at the very real risk of belabouring the point to the extreme annoyance of Newcastle fans … here’s a reminder of what happened when the two teams met here just 18 days ago in the second leg of the League Cup semi-finals. We’ll stop this now.That aforementioned 16-game winning run in this particular fixture isn’t the only statistic skewing hope in Manchester City’s favour. They’re unbeaten in 21 stagings of this match, and in English top-flight history, that’s a winning home run only bettered by Everton, who had the hex over Fulham at Goodison for a 22-match sequence between 1961 and 2018. That record could be equalled tonight.Chelsea against Newcastle United: 37 games between 1933 and 1969Tottenham Hotspur against Newcastle United: 35 games between 1922 and 1961Everton against Blackburn Rovers: 34 games between 1925 and 1962Manchester City against Newcastle United: 34 games between 2007 and 2025 (ongoing) Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nasa may roll back Artemis II rocket launch after helium flow discovery
Agency statement comes one day after announcement of 6 March target for astronauts’ mission to circle the moonNasa said in a blog post on Saturday it is taking steps to potentially roll back the Artemis II rocket launch after discovering an interrupted flow of helium.The agency said it is taking steps to roll the Artemis II rocket and Orion spacecraft back to the vehicle assembly building at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran refusing to export highly enriched uranium but willing to dilute purity, sources say
Proposal will be at heart of offer to US as Trump considers whether to attack IranIran is refusing to export its 300kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium, but is willing to dilute the purity of the stockpile it holds under the supervision of UN nuclear inspectorate the IAEA, Iranian sources have said.The proposal will be at the heart of the offer Iran is due to make to the US in the next few days, as the US president, Donald Trump, weighs whether to use his vast naval buildup in the Middle East to attack the country. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Daughters of XL Bully victim hit out at 'arrogant' owner now facing years in jail over fatal attack that killed their mother
Esther Martin (pictured), 68, from Woodford, east London , suffered 'dozens and dozens' of bites from two adult animals and eight puppies on the afternoon of February 3, 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
Maya Jama wows in a figure-hugging black dress as she jets back to South Africa for Love Island
Maya Jama looked nothing short of sensational as she posed up a storm for a series of stunning Instagram shots on Saturday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Disgraced SATC star Chris Noth relaxes in sun-drenched Marbella after taking swipe at Sarah Jessica Parker with dig about reboot
The Sex and the City alum, 71, was spotted on Friday enjoying the scenery in sun-drenched Marbella, Spain, where he's been vacationing with friends.

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson checked herself into the world's most expensive wellness clinic after details about her close friendship with Jeffrey Epstein ruined her
​The former Duchess of York, 66, fled the UK as she and her ex-husband became embroiled in the growing Epstein scandal which culminated in his arrest on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
James Milner breaks appearance record to help Brighton win at Brentford
James Milner showed he can still contribute during his record-breaking 654th Premier League appearance as Brighton won at Brentford. Milner’s inclusion meant he moved past Gareth Barry’s record tally in the competition and it proved an occasion to remember for the Seagulls after first-half goals by Diego Gomez and Danny Welbeck.The pressure had mounted on Fabian Hürzeler after one league win in 13 games and he turned to the veteran midfielder in an attempt to arrest a worrying run of results after a recent start at Aston Villa. The 40-year-old produced an accomplished display on a landmark occasion before his 90th-minute substitution was marked with applause from both sets of supporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tammy Abraham salvages late point for Aston Villa to deny battling Leeds
This felt like the day Aston Villa’s faint title hopes were extinguished despite Tammy Abraham’s late equaliser against Leeds. Unai Emery’s side have won only once in their past four Premier League home games and fell short again to leave them seven points behind leaders Arsenal. They were punished for a sloppy opening 45 minutes when they failed to get almost anything right against their more aggressive opponents.Anton Stach’s incredible free-kick looked like it would secure victory for Leeds until the 88th minute but it felt like another important step in their fight for survival. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottThat aforementioned 16-game winning run in this particular fixture isn’t the only statistic skewing hope in Manchester City’s favour. They’re unbeaten in 21 stagings of this match, and in English top-flight history, that’s a winning home run only bettered by Everton, who had the hex over Fulham at Goodison for a 22-match sequence between 1961 and 2018. That record could be equalled tonight.There’s also the fact that City have scored in every single one of their last 34 matches against Newcastle. That’s a run that puts them joint-third on the following all-time list.Chelsea against Newcastle United: 37 games between 1933 and 1969Tottenham Hotspur against Newcastle United: 35 games between 1922 and 1961Everton against Blackburn Rovers: 34 games between 1925 and 1962Manchester City against Newcastle United: 34 games between 2007 and 2025 (ongoing) Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Toddlers in mascara? Dance teachers and parents rethink stage makeup
Applying cosmetics for concerts and competitions is part of dance culture but many now question the traditionI recognised the signs straight away: the twirling, the mirror glances, the obsession with her music box. I didn’t need my daughter to ask if I wanted to see her “magic dance show” to confirm it – she was a dance kid.Despite efforts to offer trucks and tutus, sports with sparkles, I was quietly thrilled. I’d been a dedicated dance kid (and later an unhinged ballet teen) and was excited to see her join the tribe. But when I mentioned ballet lessons to my partner, he was horrified. He spiralled about the pressure, the body image, the gender stereotypes and, most of all, the makeup. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The moment I knew: she was leaning against the ute, her rat’s tail catching the light – she looked electric
In the 2000s, the queer scene in Queensland felt small, but Melania Jack fell for Patty Preece big timeFind more stories from the moment I knew seriesGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIt was 2007 and I was heading out to work on the regional program of an Indigenous arts festival called Stylin’ Up. A car entourage of arts workers were headed to Cherbourg to run beatmaking, songwriting and dance workshops.As I drove up into Highgate Hill, the sun was just coming up. Ahead of me I saw Patty leaning against a yellow ute wearing a striped ’70s men’s T-shirt, a rat’s tail catching the light. She looked electric. I remember thinking: Uh oh. This person is literally shining.Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morningMelania Jack and Patty Preece perform as the multidisciplinary arts duo The Ironing Maidens Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Damian Lewis: ‘Someone put flowers at my feet and I realised it was my stalker’
The actor on bloodcurdling stage experiences, back yard cricket and the best advice he’s ever receivedGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIn the spirit of your role as Lord Davenport in Fackham Hall – what is the poshest thing you have ever done?Taking a helicopter to Royal Ascot. That is one of the poshest things I have done. I became aware of how posh it was when I started calming down and realised I wasn’t going to fall out of it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russell inspires Scotland to thrilling Six Nations comeback win against Wales
Wales 23-26 ScotlandFinn Russell scores 11 points in second-half turnaroundScotland pulled off a dramatic comeback win against Wales to back up their impressive Calcutta Cup success the previous week.Hosts Wales had the lead at half-time thanks to a spark lit by the wing Josh Adams but the visitors managed to fight their way to victory with a feeling they were lucky to come away with five points. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Like a dream' - Abraham relishing Villa return
Seven years since firing them into the Premier League, Tammy Abraham is back scoring goals at Aston Villa to keep their fans and players dreaming of glory.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Scotland battle back for Six Nations win over Wales
Scotland battle back to inflict a heartbreaking Six Nations defeat on Wales in a thrilling game in Cardiff.

Mail Online
Open 
Taylor Swift weighs in on Team USA's Winter Olympics glory again with one-word review of Mikaela Shiffrin's gold
Skier Shiffrin finally secured another gold medal on Wednesday when she reigned supreme in the women's slalom and Swift could not wait to congratulate her on social media.

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant Dianne Buswell defiantly hits back at cruel trolls moaning that her baby bump is 'always out' ahead of welcoming son
The Strictly professional, 36, who is expecting a baby boy with her partner Joe Sugg, 34, announced she was pregnant back in September

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane's devastated girlfriend breaks silence on his ALS death as she pays shattering tribute
Eric Dane's shattered girlfriend Janell Shirtcliff shared her memories of him Saturday, two days after his death at 53 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US trade war: Trump raises global tariffs to 15% from 10%
Donald Trump said he's raising the global 10% tariff to 15%, a day after the Supreme Court blocked much of the US president's emergency tariffs. DW has the latest.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flemming earns last-gasp draw for Burnley after Chelsea’s Fofana sees red
Another late slip from Chelsea. They were coasting courtesy of an early João Pedro goal but the second-half dismissal of Wesley Fofana offered a glimmer to a Burnley team previously clinging on. In a mirror of Leeds’ comeback from 2-0 down here, Liam Rosenior’s team failed to run down the clock.Instead, they allowed the unmarked Zian Flemming to nod home a James Ward-Prowse corner in added time. It might have been worse when Jacob Bruun Larsen headed a near-identical Ward-Prowse corner over the bar. Defending set pieces is a discipline the Rosenior regime has struggled with. “Our record defending set plays is not of the level,” admitted Chelsea’s manager. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Newcastle: Premier League – live
⚽ Premier League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email ScottManchester City: Donnarumma, Nunes, Dias, Guéhi, Ait-Nouri, Rodri, Silva, O’Reilly, Semenyo, Marmoush, Haaland.Subs: Trafford, Reijnders, Stones, Cherki, Gonzalez, Savinho, Khusanov, Foden, Lewis.Newcastle United: Pope, Trippier, Thiaw, Burn, Hall, Ramsey, Willock, Tonali, Willock, Woltemade, Gordon.
Subs: Ruddy, Ramsdale, Joelinton, Barnes, Osula, J Murphy, A Murphy, Shahar, Neave.And let that be a lesson to you all. No one beats Vitas Gerulaitis 17 times in a row. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Milano Cortina Winter Olympics 2026 day 15 – in pictures
Our pick of the best images from the penultimate day of the Games, from biathlon to speed skating Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
'What we really wanted was Mike': How Mike Markkula was Apple's first true master marketer before Steve Jobs and wrote the business plan that made Apple a Fortune 500 company

Digital Trends
Open 
Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft as Xbox chief as new head draws future strategy
Phil Spencer is leaving alongside Sarah Bond, while Asha Sharma steps into the role of Executive Vice President and CEO of Microsoft Gaming.
The post Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft as Xbox chief as new head draws future strategy appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
This Blink Outdoor 4 XR 4-camera kit is 45% off, and it’s a smart way to cover more of your property for less
Home security deals can get expensive fast once you start adding multiple cameras, which is why this one stands out. The Blink Outdoor 4 XR 4-camera system is down to $164.99 for a limited time, which is a big drop from $299.99. That’s 45% off, and more importantly, it gets you a full multi-camera setup [&#8230;]
The post This Blink Outdoor 4 XR 4-camera kit is 45% off, and it’s a smart way to cover more of your property for less appeared first on Digital Trends.

Digital Trends
Open 
A sub-$100 Sony ANC headphone deal is hard to ignore
This is the kind of deal that doesn’t need much overthinking. If you’ve been wanting a pair of wireless noise-canceling headphones from a brand you already trust, $99.99 is a very comfortable price to jump in. That’s $78.01 off the $178 comp value, and it puts Sony’s WH-CH720N in a range where they make a [&#8230;]
The post A sub-$100 Sony ANC headphone deal is hard to ignore appeared first on Digital Trends.

Slashdot
Open 
The Salvation Army Opens a Digital Thrift Store On Roblox
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes: The Salvation Army has launched what it calls the world's first digital thrift store inside Roblox, an experience named Thrift Score that lets players browse virtual racks and buy digital fashion for their avatars.

While I understand the strategy of meeting Gen Z and Gen Alpha where they already spend time and money, I feel uneasy about turning something that, in the real world, often serves low income families in genuine need into a gamified aesthetic inside a video game, even if proceeds support rehabilitation and community programs, because a thrift store is not just a quirky brand concept but a lifeline for many people, and packaging that reality as entertainment creates a strange disconnect that is hard to ignore.


"To be clear, proceeds from Thrift Score are intended to support The Salvation Army&#226;(TM)s programs nationwide..." this article points out. "If it drives awareness and funds programs that help people in need, that is a win. But if it turns thrifting into just another cosmetic skin in a digital marketplace, then we should at least be willing to say that it feels off."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Scotland battle back for Six Nations win over Wales
Scotland battle back to inflict a heart-breaking Six Nations defeat against Wales in a thrilling game in Cardiff.

Mail Online
Open 
Award-winning police detective who was one of the first on scene of London Bridge terror attack is sacked for joking about travellers on WhatsApp
Detective Constable Mark Luker of British Transport Police, who was among the first responding to the London Bridge terrorist attack, has been sacked for using the word 'pikey' in WhatsApp messages.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Premiership: Islam Chesnokov gets Hearts’ title push back on track
New signing makes mark as leaders see off FalkirkDundee win at Aberdeen; Kilmarnock snatch drawHearts got their Premiership title push back on track with a 1-0 win over Falkirk at Tynecastle. The Jambos, beaten 4-2 at rivals Rangers last weekend, broke the deadlock just before half-time when the January signing Islam Chesnokov lashed home his first goal for the club. Hearts held out to move five points clear of Rangers, who travel to bottom side Livingston on Sunday.Ethan Hamilton’s late goal gave Dundee a 3-2 win at 10-man Aberdeen, who had Liam Morrison sent off just before half-time. The Dons had gone in front after 13 minutes when Kevin Nisbet’s shot was fumbled by the Dundee keeper, Jon McCracken, and looked to have gone over the line before Toyosi Olusanya knocked in the rebound. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flemming earns last-gasp draw for Burnley after Chelsea’s Fofana sees red
Another late slip from Chelsea. They were coasting courtesy of an early João Pedro goal but the second-half dismissal of Wesley Fofana offered a glimmer to a Burnley team previously clinging on. In a mirror of Leeds’ comeback from 2-2 down here, Liam Rosenior’s team failed to run down the clock.Instead, they allowed the unmarked Zian Flemming to nod home a James Ward-Prowse corner in added time. It might have been worse when Jacob Bruun Larsen headed a near-identical Ward-Prowse corner over the bar. Defending set pieces is a discipline the Rosenior regime has struggled with. “Our record defending set plays is not of the level,” admitted Chelsea’s manager. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tammy Abraham salvages late point for Aston Villa to deny battling Leeds
This felt like the day Aston Villa’s faint title hopes were extinguished despite Tammy Abraham’s late equaliser against Leeds. Unai Emery’s side have only won once in their past four Premier League home games and fell short once more to leave them seven points behind leaders Arsenal. They were punished for a sloppy opening 45 minutes when they failed to get almost anything right against their more aggressive opponents.Anton Stach’s incredible free-kick looked set to secure victory for Leeds until the 88th minute but it felt like another important step in their fight for survival. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Houston, NASA's next moon mission has a problem
NASA may delay its mission to send astronauts to the moon for the first time in more than half a century after discovering a fault with its rocket.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
What Have You Learned In The Last 6 Hard Years?
What Have You Learned In The Last 6 Hard Years?

Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Epoch Times,

The last six years have been a time of astonishing revelation about many features of public life that had been previously hidden.



I’m not just speaking of the Epstein files though they are part of it.

We’ve all seen and experienced things over these years that (at least to me) would have been nearly inconceivable before. It’s shaken us and forced people to recalibrate their understanding of the world.

If you have changed your mind on some important matters, congratulations? That’s a sign of humility, curiosity, adaptability, and adherence to facts over bias. This is a virtue. People who report no change are either omniscient, which is doubtful, not paying attention, or just too doggedly attached to prior views that nothing can unsettled them.

I have a huge archive of my own writings over decades and I look through sometimes just to test how and to what extent my own outlook has shifted. Indeed it has. There is value in my old books and articles but reading them now, I detect a kind of naivete, a simplicity in theory and understanding. I don’t think it is just maturing here. There is more going on.

Below I list some of the issues on which our times have introduced depth and complexity that defy conventional ideological categories.

I suspect you might have undertaken a similar journey yourself but likely with different starting points and different conclusions. We all process this new transparency in different ways. I can only chronicle my own, which I’ve summarized in ten points.

1. We were introduced to a new conception of what government is in real life.

Perhaps we once thought of government as the people we elect. That’s supposed to be how it works. As it turns out, gradually over a century and a bit more, an unelected bureaucracy has come to take power. It runs circles around the elected representatives of the people. It has deep links throughout society. The administrative state also has the institutional knowledge and holds on for dear life from the turning of one leader to another.

The U.S. Constitution says that the president is head of the executive branch. Trump has attempted to control its 444 agencies but has been stopped by a flurry of lawsuits. As it turns out, the machinery of state is impervious to elected leaders and designed to be exactly that. The same is true of Congress, which has its own staff that migrates and lasts through every political turning. This is not democracy. This is an entrenched and unelected oligarchy. It needs to change, lest the people be disenfranchised forever.

2. We newly understand what industry capture means.

In the past, it’s not been entirely clear how agency government works with industry. Two views have prevailed: agencies existed in an antagonistic relationship to business in ways that harm enterprise, or agencies work to protect the people against the depredations of corporations. Now that we’ve had a closer look, we see a more symbiotic relationship between large and powerful corporations and the agencies that are supposed to control them. We see this in agriculture, pharmaceuticals, education, technology, and munitions. This problem is pervasive.

3. Academia, as it turns out, is not the bee’s knees.

University intellectuals have long been valorized as the best and the brightest, the institutions guarding an independent version of truth that rises above the exigencies of the mutating public mind. But think about the major controversies of our time that academia has in general done little to nothing to resolve and much to promote: transgender issues, woke ideology, lockdowns for infectious disease, censorship, welfare corruption, the integrity of science, the problem of citizenship, and on and on. Academia in general has given off the appearance of aloofness to it all or merely being a participant in sketchy financial dealings. Think of it: when Trump started cutting the funding of elite universities, there was no real outcry at all. This is because academia has lost its once-high status in American life.

4. Big Media mostly is hopelessly partisan.

There was a time when we might have believed that the watchdog media was the essential bulwark to stand between the citizens and political power, holding elected leaders to account. This old view has been proven unsustainable in light of the last decade in which its blatant partnership has been unbearably obvious. The war on Trump that began in 2016 led inexorably to a complete takeover of the newsroom which then diminished trust in media, which is at historic lows. What’s more, we’ve learned that the biggest media players also operate in a cooperative relationship with state priorities, much more so than we knew before.

5. Big business partners with big government.

There was a reason why during the recent respiratory pandemic that your local small businesses were closed whereas the big-box stores were open. There is a reason why when the opening started happening, capacity restrictions hit small coffee shops but large eat-in restaurants thrived. It’s because of their pull in Washington and state houses. The big guys have political pull whereas the small guys do not. The big guys deploy the power of government to hurt the competition. Is this how it works? Maybe I knew this abstractly but seeing it all unfold in real time was remarkable.

6. The science is skewed at best.

Like you, I used to think that peer-reviewed publications in prestigious journals were likely approximating some truth. Then I watched as these same journals and publications ran articles that were obviously manipulated, false, and some just completely made up to fit with a prevailing political agenda. Once we found out that these venues are funded by the very industries they cover, it started to make sense. Now most of us have come to doubt the truth of much if not most of what they publish. This is supposed to be the age of science and yet we cannot presume to trust what appears under the name science.

7. Courage is scarce.

I once believed that when people thought the right things—freedom matters, humans have rights, we should follow laws, censorship is wrong, bureaucrats should not rule outside their realm of competence—that we have won most of the battle. What I did not understand entirely is that the courage to act on convictions is far more rare than convictions themselves. Indeed, without the courage to stand up for truth at some risk to reputation and financial well-being, it’s not clear that one’s convictions matter much. Not only that, such courage is exceedingly rare. Most people can be cowed by fear of the unknown. I did not know this.

8. The left and right are fuzzy concepts.

We all used to think we understood what was right and what was left, as if they are fixed categories. Same with the word libertarian: we thought we could predict views and actions based on those labels. I no longer believe that. I’m now allied with people schooled on the left in ways I never imagined possible, and with others on the right who I once seriously doubted. Nor do these words seem to mean much now that the left seems to push things that make zero sense according to their previous principles, and the right has warmed up to topics that were only of interest to the left. In general I’m glad for this but I’m waiting for all of it to settle in some ways that it is not now.

9. Food matters as much as medicine.

I once believed that concern over chemicals in food and large-scale industrial agriculture was wildly overwrought. But after discovering the problems in the medical world and Big Tech, it seemed obvious to consider the ways in which government intervention in agriculture is also creating cartels and distortions. Put that together with genuine concerns over health and you see the problem that has been highlighted by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. This issue that I had completely dismissed ten years ago is now front and center in my thinking, along with a passion to see the restoration of small regenerative agriculture.

10. You can make a difference.

Here is what has shocked me most. I’m now connected with a large group of Americans who are deeply concerned for the future of freedom in every sector: education, medical, agriculture, technology, and citizenship rights including voting integrity. I’ve seen this movement blossom from nearly non-existent to becoming enormously powerful and influential, not only in the United States but all over the world. Things are changing today and not because the establishment wants it that way. Things are changing because people are learning, gathering, acting, and insisting on change. This inspires me to no end. We need more of this in every area of life.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 11:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Hikes Global Tariffs To 15%, Blasts "Ridiculous, Anti-American" SCOTUS Ruling
Trump Hikes Global Tariffs To 15%, Blasts "Ridiculous, Anti-American" SCOTUS Ruling

Hell hath no fury like a Donald scorned...



One day after 'The Supremes' struck down his IEEPA tariffs, President Trump has announced, in a statement issued on Truth Social, that he will raise his new, global tariff to 15% (the maximum allowed under a separate trade law), a day after he took hiked global tariffs to 10% (in response to the SCOTUS ruling).

Trump further slammed the SCOTUS decision as "anti-American"...


"Based on a thorough, detailed, and complete review of the ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American decision on Tariffs issued yesterday, after MANY months of contemplation, by the United States Supreme Court,


Then dropped the hammer...


"...please let this statement serve to represent that I, as President of the United States of America, will be, effective immediately, raising the 10% Worldwide Tariff on Countries, many of which have been “ripping” the U.S. off for decades, without retribution (until I came along!), to the fully allowed, and legally tested, 15% level."


With the policy taking effect immediately, Trump further signaled that he would press ahead with his trade war despite the major legal setback.


"During the next short number of months, the Trump Administration will determine and issue the new and legally permissible Tariffs...

...which will continue our extraordinarily successful process of Making America Great Again - GREATER THAN EVER BEFORE!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter."


Ironically, for those cheering yesterday's court ruling, for some countries, President Trump’s new 15% tariff may actually be higher than the rates that previously applied to their exports to the US.

Trump is applying the new baseline tariff under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows the president to impose tariffs for 150 days without congressional approval.

Securing that approval could prove challenging, as Democrats and some Republicans have opposed elements of his trade policy

The Trump administration has indicated that it will use other legal authorities, like Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, to impose tariffs on countries individually based on their trade practices.

But those investigations will take time to prepare.

At least temporarily, exports from all countries will now face a 15 percent tariff rate, regardless of their trade practices, or the concessions they have made.

Presumably, at some point soon, the 'left' will sue to halt these tariffs too (even though - as Trump noted - they have been 'tested' in court previously).

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 12:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Was Climate Change The Greatest Financial Scandal In History?
Was Climate Change The Greatest Financial Scandal In History?

Authored by Stephen Moore via The Epoch Times,

Environmental scholar Bjorn Lomborg recently calculated that across the globe, governments have spent at least $16 trillion feeding the climate change industrial complex.



And for what?

Arguably, not a single life has been or will be saved by this shameful and colossal misallocation of human resources.

The war on safe and abundant fossil fuels has cost countless lives in poor countries and made those countries poorer by blocking affordable energy.

Since the global warming crusade started some 30 years ago, the temperature of the planet has not been altered by one-tenth of a degree—as even the alarmists will admit.

In other words, $16 trillion has been spent—a lot of people got very, very rich off the government largesse—but there is not a penny of measurable payoff.

But it’s much worse than that.

In economics there is a concept called opportunity cost: What could we have done with $16 trillion to make the world better off?

What if the $16 trillion had been spent on clean water for poor countries?

Preventing avoidable deaths from diseases like malaria?

Building schools in African villages to end illiteracy?

Bringing reliable and affordable electric power to the more than 1 billion people who still lack access? Curing cancer?

Many millions of lives could have been saved.

We could have lifted millions more out of poverty.

The benefits of speeding up the race for the cure for cancer could have added tens of millions of additional years of life at an economic value in the tens of trillions of dollars.

Instead, we effectively poured $16 trillion down the drain.

For this reason, it is important that we identify the green “climate change” derangement syndrome as perhaps the most inhumane political movement in history.

The one sliver of good news is that it appears the climate change neuroses have finally started to subside. We’ve reached peak global warming craziness in the U.S., for sure, and even Europe seems to have turned its back on its economically masochistic net zero fossil fuels obsession.

Donald Trump is wisely and rapidly dismantling the climate change industrial complex.

Of all his pro-growth economic policies, there may be none with a higher longtime payoff than his recent order to repeal the mother of all costly regulations: the anti-fossil fuels “endangerment rule” taxing carbon dioxide emissions. The cost of that regulation had been estimated to exceed $1 trillion over time.

We can’t recapture the $16 trillion wasted on a false crisis. Sunk costs are, alas, sunk.

But we can stop the madness of actually believing that politicians who can’t even pay off the balance on their credit cards can somehow change the world’s temperature.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 12:50

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Midnight Foundation Adds Blockdaemon, Shielded Technologies As Node Operators
This week, Midnight Foundation announced that Blockdaemon and Shielded Technologies have signed on as federated node operators for the Midnight Network, “the fourth-generation blockchain bringing rational privacy to Web3.” The additions bring the network to four, joining previously announced partners Google Cloud and NASDAQ listed... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bank of Ireland UK Hit with £3.7M Fine for 14-Month Delay in Rolling Out Anti-Fraud Safeguard
The Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) has imposed a £3,779,300 fine on Bank of Ireland UK (BOIUK), the UK subsidiary of Bank of Ireland, for a significant delay in rolling out Confirmation of Payee (CoP), a key anti-fraud measure in the UK&#8217;s payment ecosystem. Confirmation of... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Monark Markets Secures $8.1M Financing
Monark Markets, a New York-based fintech company building the rails connecting brokerage firms and wealth platforms to private markets, has confirmed $8.1 million in strategic financing. The round is led by F-Prime with participation from The Treasury, Commerce Ventures, Grit Capital Partners, and BBAE Holdings.... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Ripple CEO Signals Steady Momentum for Crypto Regulation with 80% Odds on CLARITY Act Passage by April
In a recent appearance on Fox Business’s “Mornings with Maria,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse expressed relatively high confidence that landmark U.S. cryptocurrency legislation known as the CLARITY Act could clear Congress as early as April 2026. Garlinghouse placed the probability at approximately 80 percent, underscoring... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Figure Technology Faces Major Data Breach Impacting Nearly One Million Customers
Figure Technology Solutions (Nasdaq: FIGR) has suffered a significant data breach that exposed the personal details of approximately 967,000 customer accounts. The incident, which came to light in mid-February 2026, stemmed from a targeted social engineering attack rather than a technical vulnerability, highlighting ongoing challenges... Read More

Russia Today News
Open 
Third US citizen killed by feds revealed

BBC World News
Open 
Giant tortoises return to Galápagos island after nearly 200 years
The native species was driven to extinction by sailors in the 1800s. Now, 158 juvenile giant tortoises have been reintroduced to the island.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
At least five people killed in string of avalanches in Austria
Fatalities and injuries reported in avalanches across Tirol after prolonged snowfall and windy conditionsAt least five people have been killed in a string of avalanches in Austria, authorities said on Saturday.The government office of the Tirol region said intense snowfall over the last week led to accumulations of up to 1.5 meters (5ft). Combined with windy conditions and weak snowpack below, the conditions were especially susceptible to avalanches, it said. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Trump blasts ‘disloyal’ Republicans after Supreme Court sinks tariffs
President Trump late Friday blasted “disloyal” Republicans and Supreme Court justices after the high court struck down much of his tariff policy and as he ramps up efforts to sell his economic agenda ahead of the 2026 midterms. "Republicans are so disloyal to themselves!" he wrote on Truth Social. "Unite, stick together, and WIN!" Trump's...

The Hill
Open 
Huckabee claims it would be ‘fine’ if Israel took all of Middle East
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee claimed in an interview published Friday that it would be "fine" if Israel took over all of the Middle East, suggesting the Bible gives the Jewish state that right. Huckabee told conservative media personality Tucker Carlson that the land "from the river of Egypt until the great river, the...

The Hill
Open 
Tolerance for mismanagement threatens progressive governance
The left often treats “accountability” like a code word for austerity or conservatism.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Viral monkey Punch rejected by mother given stuffed orangutan
A young Japanese macaque at the Ichikawa City Zoo in Japan went viral, after videos showed him playing with a soft toy that zookeepers gave him for comfort.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
At least five people killed in string of avalanches in Austria
Fatalities and injuries reported in avalanches across Tirol after prolonged snowfall and windy conditionsAt least five people have been killed in a string of avalanches in Austria, authorities said on Saturday.The government office of the Tirol region said intense snowfall over the last week had led to accumulations of up to 1.5 metres (5ft). Combined with strong winds and weak snowpack below, the conditions were especially susceptible to avalanches, it said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Record-breaking Ireland humble woeful England in Twickenham demolition job
Six Nations: England 21-42 IrelandIreland condemn England to successive defeatsSo much for all those expectations of a tight two-horse race. For the second week running England were barely in the frame, comprehensively second best to opponents who started well and kept on galloping to a five-try rout. This was a record Irish win at Twickenham and it is Andy Farrell’s side who remain in the hunt for this season’s Six Nations title while England stare down the barrel of a bottom-half finish.To say Ireland were miles the better side is simply to state the obvious. The seeds of England’s downfall were sown in a calamitous first half which saw the visitors pull away to a 22-0 lead inside 30 minutes. As in Edinburgh they were guilty of way too many errors, with their lineout all over the shop. They also conceded 15 turnovers in the opening 40 minutes alone in addition to another yellow card, this time for Freddie Steward. It was so bad that Steve Borthwick replaced Luke Cowan-Dickie and Steward for tactical reasons even before the half-time oranges had been sliced. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales 23-26 Scotland: Six Nations rugby union – live reaction
Updates from 4.40pm kickoff (GMT) at the Principality Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielYes, we know the team is struggling, but the Principality Stadium looks incredible!If you are a rugby fan and you’ve not visited this cathedral, get your accountant on the line and book yourself a trip.I am not a confident Welsh fan. There are so many issues at the moment, it’s hard to know where to start. The WRU is spectacularly badly run. We were fortunate to have a couple of generations of genuinely World Class players between the mid 00’s and 2020ish, and considering the resources available, population, player base etc, that was always likely to drop off at some point. But I don’t think anyone expected the drop-off to be quite so drastic. We kept being told that it was a young side who would gained experience and improve. But that’s been a stuck record for 4 years or so. There’s no identity to the team. When you watch them, you often cant see what they’re trying to achieve. The basics, the flipping basics(!), are repeatedly falling apart. The first quarter against England was as bad a spell of international rugby as you’re ever likely to see. I don’t know where to go from here. It’s hideous. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump raises tariffs to 15% on imports from all countries
President announced increase from 10% using different authority from mechanism that supreme court struck down on FridayDonald Trump announced on Saturday that he would raise a temporary tariff rate on US imports from all countries from 10% to 15%, less than 24 hours after the US supreme court ruled against the legality of his flagship trade policy.Infuriated by the high court’s ruling on Friday that he had exceeded his authority and should have gotten congressional approval for the tariffs, the US president railed against the justices who struck down his use of tariffs - calling them a “disgrace to the nation” – and ordered an immediate 10% tariff on all imports, in addition to any existing levies. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
If Day: When Canada staged a Nazi occupation to sell the war

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
TikToker army medic, 25, found dead at barracks
Lucy Wilde's brother says she was "strength wrapped in softness" and served with "courage and pride".

Mail Online
Open 
German publishing group that supports a united Europe launches bid to buy The Telegraph
Axel Springer is backing an attempt by Dovid Efune, the owner of US news website the New York Sun, to strike a last-minute deal to purchase the historic British broadsheet.

Mail Online
Open 
Teenager is stabbed to death outside mosque and two others wounded in disorder during Ramadan
A teenager has been knifed to death outside a mosque during Ramadan. 

BBC World News
Open 
Nasa astronauts' moon mission likely to be delayed due to rocket issue
The mission to the far side of the Moon and back will likely be postponed after problems with were spotted with its rocket, a Nasa official said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Championship roundup: Wrexham beat Ipswich 5-3, Coventry pull clear of Boro
Coventry win 2-0 at West Brom; Oxford hold BoroMillwall lose to Portsmouth, Birmingham beat NorwichWrexham boosted their promotion hopes with a 5-3 victory over fellow high-flyers Ipswich in a crazy game at the Stok Cae Ras.Eight days after Josh Windass’s goal had decided the FA Cup fourth-round tie between the sides in Wrexham’s favour, the goals flowed in north Wales. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Scotty T, 37, 'relies on handouts from his mother to stay afloat' as his bleak yearly income from OnlyFans and club appearances is revealed after pleading guilty to illegal Instagram posts
The Geordie Shore star, 37 - real name Scott Timlin - is best known for appearing in Geordie Shore from 2012 to 2019 and winning Celebrity Big Brother in 2016.

Sky News Home
Open 
Vitali Klitschko tells Sky News his message to Donald Trump
Vitali Klitschko has urged Donald Trump "to be on the side of Ukraine" during peace talks with Russia - but the mayor of Kyiv admitted to Sky News he sometimes finds the president's messaging hard to understand.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch: Bergsma wins 'sensational' speed skating gold at 40
Forty-year-old Jorrit Bergsma from the Netherlands, becomes the oldest ever speed skater to win Olympic gold in the men's Mass Start Speed Skating event.

TechRadar News
Open 
Man City vs Newcastle Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025-26 from anywhere in the world

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Leigh Wood vs Josh Warrington 2: live stream boxing rematch online

TechRadar News
Open 
WhatsApp could get a Reddit-style spoiler-hiding feature – so you won't have to hide from group chats if you’re behind on the big shows

Boing Boing
Open 
This Macbook Air is now 80% off
TL;DR: Snag yourself this&#160;13-inch 2017 MacBook Air&#160;for just $199.97 (reg. $999).&#160;
When it comes to finding a reliable laptop, no one does it better than Apple. While some of its other devices may leave something to be desired, the MacBook line consistently delivers peak performance and long-lasting durability. &#8212; Read the rest
The post This Macbook Air is now 80% off appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Microsoft blogger suggests you train AI on pirated Harry Potter
Following a "backlash," Microsoft has removed a blog post [archive.is] suggesting that you train an AI on Harry Potter, which it helpfully explained can be found online free of charge. Alas, it is once again impossible to write your own Harry Potter fan fiction. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Microsoft blogger suggests you train AI on pirated Harry Potter appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Archive.today links banned at Wikipedia after operator edits archived URLs
Archive.today, also found at archive.li and other URLs, is a popular tool for snapshotting web pages and reading paywalled articles. The anonymity of its operators upsets the FBI and makes it an interesting alternative to the Internet Archive, which it has nothing to do with. &#8212; Read the rest
The post Archive.today links banned at Wikipedia after operator edits archived URLs appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Should I use the financial adviser at the firm holding my $1.4 million 401(k)?
“I am considering having her manage my portfolio for a 0.83% assets-under-management fee.”

Slashdot
Open 
Researchers Discover Ancient Bacteria Strain That Resists 10 Modern Antibiotics
CNN reports on a 13,000-year-old glacier in a Romanian cave, where scientists say a bacterial strain they thawed and analyzed "is resistant to 10 modern antibiotics used to treat diseases such as urinary tract infections and tuberculosis."

But there's no evidence the bacteria is harmful to humans, CNN notes, and "The scientists said the insights they have gained from the work may help in the fight against modern superbugs that can't be treated by commonly used antibiotics."


Analysis of the Psychrobacter SC65A.3 genome revealed 11 genes that are potentially able to kill or stop the growth of other bacteria, fungi and viruses... Matthew Holland, a postdoctoral researcher in medicinal chemistry at the UK's University of Oxford, said that researchers were searching in new and extreme environments, such as ice caves and the seafloor, for biomolecules that could be developed into new antibiotic drugs. He was not involved in the new study. "The team in Romania found this particular bug had resistance to 10 reasonably advanced synthetic antibiotics and that in itself is
interesting," he said. "But what they report as well is that it secreted molecules that were able to kill a variety of already resistant, harmful bacteria.
"So the hope is that can we look at the molecules it makes and see if there's the possibility within those molecules to make new antibiotics."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
Georgia says Elon Musk’s America PAC violated election law
For all his bluster about voter fraud, Elon Musk has been one of the most flagrant flaunters of US election law. Now his America PAC has been slapped with a reprimand by the Georgia State Election Board for sending out pre-filled absentee ballot applications. State law prohibits anyone, other than an authorized relative, from sending [&#8230;]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flemming earns last-gasp draw for Burnley after Chelsea’s Fofana sees red
Chelsea got what they deserved here. They had been coasting to fourth courtesy of an early João Pedro goal, but the second-half dismissal of Wesley Fofana gave a glimmer to a Burnley team previously clinging on. Liam Rosenior’s side desperately tried to run down the clock, only to allow an unmarked Zian Flemming to nod home a James Ward-Prowse corner in added time. It might have been worse, as Jacob Bruun Larsen nodded an identical Ward-Prowse corner over the bar.Rust the culprit? Chelsea’s players had enjoyed four days off given to them by Rosenior, Cole Palmer heading a winter sun delegation to Dubai in a rare midweek without competitive action. Estêvão was an absentee after a hamstring problem picked up on his return to training. Roméo Lavia, missing since November, on the bench was a point of intrigue, after the news he had spent his convalescence fine-tuning his decision making with the help of virtual reality. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
West Ham v Bournemouth: Premier League – live
⚽ Updates from the 5.30pm (GMT) kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email Taha9 min: Summerville shows off his quick feet inside his own half as West Ham try and counter.8 min: It’s an aerial game as the sides play volleyball inside the Bournemouth half. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: GB curlers go for gold, bobsleigh, ice hockey and more – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Klæbo claims sixth gold of Games | And email JamesMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police responder to 2017 London Bridge attack sacked for ‘derogatory’ language
DC Mark Luker used offensive language about Romas, Gypsies and Travellers in a WhatsApp groupA police officer who was one of the first on the scene of the 2017 London Bridge terror attack has been sacked for gross misconduct after using “derogatory” language about Romas, Gypsies and Travellers.DC Mark Luker of the British Transport Police (BTP) used offensive language in a WhatsApp group he was in with other police officers. Continue reading...

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Starfighters Space moves to Critical Design Review for STARLAUNCH I rocket
Starfighters Space, Inc., the operator of the world’s largest fleet of commercial supersonic aircraft, announced Friday that it will proceed to a Critical Design Review (CDR) for its STARLAUNCH I rocket.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Paris to Hong Kong in 777-200F cockpit with fantastic approach into HKG
Paris to Hong Kong in 777-200F cockpit with fantastic approach into HKG

Mail Online
Open 
Kelly Osbourne pens heartfelt post about 'enduring grief' seven months after her father Ozzy's death
The media personality's father Ozzy tragically died of heart failure at his Buckinghamshire home on in July last year, aged 76.

Mail Online
Open 
Boris Johnson says UK must put British troops on the ground in Ukraine now to 'flip a switch'' in Putin's head
The former Prime Minister said there is no reason why we cannot deploy non-combat troops now to support Ukraine if we planned to do it anyway as eventual peacekeepers.

Mail Online
Open 
US military prepared to pursue regime change in Iran if Trump orders it - planning at advanced stage and individual leaders may be targeted
Two US officials warned of the military's potential next steps in Tehran if Trump gives the go-ahead to intervene militarily.

Mail Online
Open 
England 21-42 Ireland: Limp Red Roses' Six Nations hopes go up in smoke as visitors make history with record win at Twickenham
NIK SIMON AT TWICKENHAM: With 10 minutes left to play, English fans filed out of their seats to drown their sorrows in the cold Twickenham concourse.

BBC World News
Open 
How will Trump's new global tariffs work and what's next?
The Supreme Court's decision has led questions over whether people can get a refund over the unlawful tariffs.

The Hill
Open 
DHS looks to outfit Secret Service protective detail in tailored suits
The Trump administration will pay to outfit U.S. Secret Service (USSS) protective detail agents with two tailored suits, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) confirmed to The Hill. The initiative, first reported by CNN on Friday and included in a public contract solicitation, emerged after DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said she did not like that...

The Hill
Open 
Bacon signals Trump's new tariff order 'will be defeated' by Congress
President Trump’s decision to issue new import taxes across the globe following the Supreme Court’s rebuke of his sweeping tariffs on Friday is drawing broad criticism, including from several Republican lawmakers. Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) told CNN’s Brianna Keilar on Friday that Congress is sure to challenge the new tariffs and signaled confidence that the...

The Hill
Open 
Woke goes broke: Why Hollywood’s politically correct remakes are a flop
You shouldn't fire petulant and sophomoric insults at half the potential audience of your film simply because you can.

The Hill
Open 
Trump elevates Maryland's Moore by picking a fight with him
The massive wastewater spill in the Potomac River is escalating a feud between President Trump and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) as Moore is increasingly seen as a potential 2028 presidential contender. Trump has laid blame on Moore, Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D), and Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser for the spill, which continues to...

The Hill
Open 
Trump hikes global tariff to 15 percent after 'ridiculous' Supreme Court ruling
President Trump on Saturday announced he is raising a newly-imposed global tariff to 15 percent after reviewing the Supreme Court's 6-3 decision to block him from using emergency powers to impose sweeping import taxes on foreign trading partners. “Based on a thorough, detailed, and complete review of the ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American decision...

Gizmodo
Open 
The Original 151 Pokémon and Their History Are Up for Auction
Games, anime merch, and most importantly cards are all up for sale in a celebration auction of the Pokémon franchise.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Trump administration fires Virginia prosecutor hours after judges appointed him
It is the second time this month that the Trump administration has abruptly fired a prosecutor who was appointed by judges.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BIG BREAKING: Trump announces he’s increasing global tariff to 15%
President Trump just announced, after a thorough reading of what he calls an &#8220;extraordinarily anti-American decision&#8221; by the Supreme Court on tariffs, that he will already be increasing the 10% global tariff . . .

Telegraph
Open 
England’s Six Nations in tatters after humiliation by Ireland at Twickenham
England’s Six Nations in tatters after humiliation by Ireland at Twickenham

Telegraph
Open 
Flemming makes 10-man Chelsea pay as Burnley draw at Stamford Bridge
Flemming makes 10-man Chelsea pay as Burnley draw at Stamford Bridge

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
James Milner breaks appearance record to help Brighton win at Brentford
Brighton marked James Milner’s record-breaking 654th Premier League appearance with a much-needed win at Brentford.The pressure had mounted on the Brighton manager Fabian Hürzeler after a run of one league win in 13 and he turned to veteran midfielder Milner in attempt to arrest a worrying run of results. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flemming rescues last-gasp point for Burnley after Chelsea’s Fofana sees red
Chelsea got what they deserved here. They had been coasting to fourth courtesy of an early João Pedro goal, but the second-half dismissal of Wesley Fofana gave a glimmer to a Burnley team previously clinging on. Liam Rosenior’s side desperately tried to run down the clock, only to allow an unmarked Zian Flemming to nod home a James Ward-Prowse corner in added time. It might have been worse, as Jacob Bruun Larsen nodded an identical Ward-Prowse corner over the bar.Rust the culprit? Chelsea’s players had enjoyed four days off given to them by Rosenior, Cole Palmer heading a winter sun delegation to Dubai in a rare midweek without competitive action. Estêvão was an absentee after a hamstring problem picked up on his return to training. Roméo Lavia, missing since November, on the bench was a point of intrigue, after the news he had spent his convalescence fine-tuning his decision making with the help of virtual reality. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tammy Abraham salvages late point for Aston Villa to deny battling Leeds
It felt like the day Aston Villa’s faint title hopes were extinguished despite Tammy Abraham’s late equaliser. Anton Stach’s incredible free-kick looked set to secure the win for Leeds until the 88th minute but it felt like another important point in their fight for survival.Unai Emery’s side have only won once in their past four Premier League home games and fell short once more to leave them seven points behind leaders Arsenal. They were punished for a sloppy opening 45 minutes when they failed to get almost anything right against their more aggressive opponents. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jorrit Bergsma wins mass start to continue golden Winter Olympics for 40-somethings
Dutch skater claims his first gold since 2014Jordan Stolz misses out on fourth medal of GamesJorrit Bergsma, the mullet-wearing 40-year-old speed skating legend from the Netherlands, won the men’s mass start on Saturday afternoon for his second medal of the Milano Cortina Games and his first Olympic gold since 2014.Bergsma crossed first in 7:55.50, ahead of Viktor Hald Thorup of Denmark and Andrea Giovannini of Italy, denying American star Jordan Stolz in his bid to become the first man in 32 years to win three long-track speed skating golds at a single Olympics. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Double Dutch speed skating delight, ski halfpipe postponed and more – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Klæbo claims sixth gold of Games | And email JamesMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
German publishing group that supports a united Europe launches bid to buy the Telegraph
Axel Springer is backing an attempt by Dovid Efune, the owner of US news website the New York Sun, to strike a last-minute deal to purchase the historic British broadsheet.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: Merz rallies base at Stuttgart CDU conference
The second day of the conference saw the party vote on dozens of proposals. Federal members came out strong against sugar taxes, call-in sick days, Muslim facial coverings, relaxed debt limits and much more. Follow DW.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
West Ham v Bournemouth: Premier League – live
⚽ Updates from the 5.30pm (GMT) kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email TahaWest Ham make one change from the side that drew against Manchester United: Freddie Potts is suspended after receiving a red card against Burton Albion in the FA Cup, so in comes Soungoutou Magassa. Eli Junior Kroupi and Tyler Adams are back in for Bournemouth.West Ham: Hermansen, Wan-Bissaka, Mavropanos, Disasi, Diouf, Fernandes, Magassa, Bowen, Soucek, Summerville, Castellanos Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump raises tariffs to 15% on imports from all countries
President announced increase from 10% using different authority from mechanism that supreme court struck down on FridayDonald Trump announced on Saturday that he would raise a temporary tariff rate on US imports from all countries from 10% to 15%, less than 24 hours after the US supreme court ruled against the legality of his flagship trade policy.Infuriated by the high court’s ruling on Friday that he had exceeded his authority and should have gotten congressional approval for the tariffs, the US president railed against the justices who blocked his use of tariffs, calling them a “disgrace to the nation”, and ordered an immediate 10% tariff on all imports, in addition to any existing levies. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
London Bridge terror attack officer sacked over 'offensive' Traveller messages
One of the first police officers on the scene of the 2017 London Bridge terror attack has been sacked for gross misconduct for his use of the word "pikey" in messages about Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller people.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Reimagining matter’: Nobel laureate invents machine that harvests water from dry air
Omar Yaghi’s invention uses ambient thermal energy and can generate up to 1,000 litres of clean water every dayA Nobel laureate’s environmentally friendly invention that provides clean water if central supplies are knocked out by a hurricane or drought could be a life saver for vulnerable islands, its founder says.The invention, by the chemist Prof Omar Yaghi, uses a type of science called reticular chemistry to create molecularly engineered materials, which can extract moisture from the air and harvest water even in arid and desert conditions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
West Ham v Bournemouth: Premier League – live
⚽ Updates from the 5.30pm (GMT) kick-off⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email TahaWest Ham: Hermansen, Wan-Bissaka, Mavropanos, Disasi, Diouf, Fernandes, Magassa, Bowen, Soucek, Summerville, CastellanosSubs: Areola, Walker-Peters, Kilman, Wilson, Traoré, Todibo, Scarles, Kanté, Mayers Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea 1-1 Burnley, Aston Villa 1-1 Leeds, Brentford 0-2 Brighton: clockwatch – live reaction
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomBrentford: Kelleher; Hickey, Ajer, Van den Berg, Henry; Janelt, Henderson, Jensen; Ouattara, Lewis-Potter, Thiago.Subs: Valdimarsson, Pinnock, Schade, Nelson, Yamoliuk, Collins, Damsgaard, Donovan, Furo. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump raises tariffs to 15% on imports from all countries
President announced increase from 10% using different authority from mechanism that supreme court struck down on FridayDonald Trump announced on Saturday that he would raise a temporary tariff rate on US imports from all countries from 10% to 15%, less than 24 hours after the US supreme court ruled against the legality of his flagship trade policy.Infuriated by the high court’s ruling on Friday that he had exceeded his authority and should have got congressional approval for the tariffs, the US president railed against the justices who blocked his use of tariffs, calling them a “disgrace to the nation”, and ordered an immediate 10% tariff on all imports, in addition to any existing levies. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Immensely heartened’: Sally Rooney hails Palestine Action high court ruling as victory for UK civil liberties
Exclusive: Irish author, who feared her books being withdrawn from UK, says proscription had been ‘extreme assault’ on rights and freedomsSally Rooney has hailed the high court’s decision that it was unlawful to ban Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws as a victory for civil liberties in Britain.Ministers suffered a humiliating legal defeat a week ago when three senior judges ruled that proscription of the direct action group, which targets organisations it considers complicit in arming Israel, was disproportionate and unlawful. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
US support is 'critically important' for Ukraine, says Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko
The support of the US is 'critically important' to Ukraine's war effort but it is hard to understand President Donald Trump's stance on peace, Vitali Klitschko has told Sky News.

Mail Online
Open 
'My bum was on display for the best part of a decade!' ROSIE GREEN on her wild life as a staffer at Vogue and Elle in the 90s - and borrowing outfits from J-Lo
A staffer at Vogue and Elle in the 90s, Rosie Green relives 'borrowing' outfits from the fashion cupboard, beating JLo to the jungle dress and baring all in public (more than once).

Mail Online
Open 
I was diagnosed with bowel cancer at the age of 39 - but six years after I got the all-clear I'm still suffering every day. This is why Wes Streeting's cancer plan is failing survivors like me
Seven years ago I was diagnosed with stage 2 bowel cancer at the age of 39. Happily, I was declared cancer-free 18 months later.

Mail Online
Open 
Something has gone terribly wrong for Gen Z women like myself: We MUST stop feeding the social media monster that ruthlessly exploits our anxieties... and makes men rich: FREYA INDIA
Something has gone terribly wrong for Gen Z. The generation most open about its feelings is facing the worst mental health crisis on record.

Mail Online
Open 
DAN HODGES: This is why Starmer could still face a Tory-style wipeout at the hands of Reform and the Greens - even if Labour somehow manages to win the Gorton and Denton by-election
Before I left for the Gorton and Denton by-election, a Labour minister delivered the following upbeat message: 'Everyone thinks Nigel Farage is going to walk it. But I don't think he will.'

Mail Online
Open 
PETER HITCHENS: Charles has lost control of the Andrew crisis - and it may bring down the Crown
Back in November, after Prince Andrew was de-brothered and unPrinced by the King, I warned that it wouldn't work.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa 1-1 Leeds, Chelsea 1-1 Burnley, Brentford 0-2 Brighton: clockwatch – live
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomBrentford: Kelleher; Hickey, Ajer, Van den Berg, Henry; Janelt, Henderson, Jensen; Ouattara, Lewis-Potter, Thiago.Subs: Valdimarsson, Pinnock, Schade, Nelson, Yamoliuk, Collins, Damsgaard, Donovan, Furo. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bodies of two young men found in Eryri mountain range after large-scale search
Rescue teams scoured Yr Wyddfa in north Wales in snow and ice after pair, aged 19 and 20, were reported missingThe bodies of two men have been found in Eryri mountain range in north Wales after a large-scale search, police have said.The men, aged 19 and 20, were reported missing on Wednesday, which sparked a search operation on the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Double Dutch speed skating delight, ski halfpipe postponed and more – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Klæbo claims sixth gold of Games | And email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bodies of two young men found in Eryri mountain range after large-scale search
Rescue teams scoured Yr Wyddfa in north Wales in snow and ice after pair, aged 19 and 20, were reported missingThe bodies of two men have been found in Eryri mountain range in north Wales after a large-scale search, police have said.The men, aged 19 and 20, were reported missing on Wednesday, which sparked a search operation on the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia). Mountain rescue teams waded through snow and ice on Yr Wyddfa – also known as Snowdon – until the early hours of Thursday morning before resuming at 8am that day. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran refusing to export highly enriched uranium but willing to dilute purity, sources say
Proposal will be at heart of offer to US as Trump considers whether to attack IranIran is refusing to export its 300kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium, but is willing to dilute the purity of the stockpile it holds under the supervision of UN nuclear inspectorate the IAEA, Iranian sources have said.The proposal will be at the heart of the offer Iran is due to make to the US in the next few days, as the US president, Donald Trump, weighs whether to use his vast naval build-up in the Middle East to attack the country. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Cash may be rotting after UK's biggest raid, say police
Twenty years after the notorious Securitas raid, Kent's top police officer looks back at the case.

TechRadar News
Open 
Can't afford a fancy new graphics card? Here's how to turn your outdated GPU into a frame-gen machine for less than the price of a 6-piece chicken nugget meal

TechRadar News
Open 
Microsoft's latest glass storage breakthrough promises to hold data for 10,000 years — but will Project Silica shatter under the pressure?

Boing Boing
Open 
Reese's heir accuses Hershey of cutting corners
The grandson of the man who invented the Reese's Peanut Butter Cup has a message for Hershey: that's not milk chocolate, and it's definitely not peanut butter.

Brad Reese, 70, said in a Feb. 14 letter to Hershey's corporate brand manager that for multiple&#160;Reese's products, the company replaced milk chocolate with compound coatings and peanut butter with peanut crème.

&#8212; Read the rest
The post Reese's heir accuses Hershey of cutting corners appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
How Python's Security Response Team Keeps Python Users Safe
This week the Python Software Foundation explained how they keep Python secure. A new blog post recognizes the volunteers and paid Python Software Foundation staff on the Python Security Response Team (PSRT), who "triage and coordinate vulnerability reports and remediations keeping all Python users safe."

Just last year the PSRT published 16 vulnerability advisories for CPython and pip, the most in a single year to date! And the PSRT usually can't do this work alone, PSRT coordinators are encouraged to involve maintainers and experts on the projects and submodules. By involving the experts directly in the remediation process ensures fixes adhere to existing API conventions and threat-models, are maintainable long-term, and have minimal impact on existing use-cases. Sometimes the PSRT even coordinates with other open source projects to avoid catching the Python ecosystem off-guard by publishing a vulnerability advisory that affects multiple other projects. The most recent example of this is PyPI's ZIP archive differential attack mitigation.

This work deserves recognition and celebration just like contributions to source code and documentation. [Security Developer-in-Residence Seth Larson and PSF Infrastructure Engineer Jacob Coffee] are developing further improvements to workflows involving "GitHub Security Advisories" to record the reporter, coordinator, and remediation developers and reviewers to CVE and OSV records to properly thank everyone involved in the otherwise private contribution to open source projects.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Is 'Brain Rot' Real? How Too Much Time Online Can Affect Your Mind.
Can being "very online" really affect our brains, asks the Washington Post:


Research suggests that scrolling through short videos on TikTok, Instagram or YouTube Shorts is affecting our attention, memory and mental health. A recent meta-analysis of the scientific literature found that increased use of short-form video was linked with poorer cognition and increased anxiety...

In a 2025 study published in the journal Translational Psychiatry, researchers looked at longitudinal data from more than 7,000 children across the country and found that more screen use was associated with reduced cortical thickness in certain areas of the brain. The cortex, which is the outer layer that sits on top of our more primitive brain structures, allows for higher-level thinking, memory and decision-making. "We really need it for things like inhibitory control or not being so impulsive," said Mitch Prinstein, a senior science adviser to the American Psychological Association and professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the study. The cortex is also important for controlling addictive behaviors. "Those seem to be the areas being affected by the reduced cortical thickness," he said, explaining that impulsivity can prompt us to seek dopamine hits from social media. In the study, more screen time was also associated with more attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms...

But not all screen time is created equal. A recent study removed social media from kids' devices but let them use their phones for as long as they wanted. The result? Kids spent just as long on their phones but didn't have the same harmful effects. "It's what you're doing on the screen that matters," Prinstein said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Holly Willoughby goes makeup free as she enjoys a relaxing 'self care' trip in the snowy mountains
Holly Willoughby looked radiant and glowing in makeup free snaps as she shared snippets of her 'self care' weekend on Instagram on Saturday.

BBC World News
Open 
Divers recover bodies of seven Chinese tourists from bottom of Lake Baikal
A Russian driver also died when their mini-bus plunged under the ice to the bottom of the lake in Siberia.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales v Scotland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 4.40pm kickoff (GMT) at the Principality Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielYes, we know the team is struggling, but the Principality Stadium looks incredible!If you are a rugby fan and you’ve not visited this cathedral, get your accountant on the line and book yourself a trip.I am not a confident Welsh fan. There are so many issues at the moment, it’s hard to know where to start. The WRU is spectacularly badly run. We were fortunate to have a couple of generations of genuinely World Class players between the mid 00’s and 2020ish, and considering the resources available, population, player base etc, that was always likely to drop off at some point. But I don’t think anyone expected the drop-off to be quite so drastic. We kept being told that it was a young side who would gained experience and improve. But that’s been a stuck record for 4 years or so. There’s no identity to the team. When you watch them, you often cant see what they’re trying to achieve. The basics, the flipping basics(!), are repeatedly falling apart. The first quarter against England was as bad a spell of international rugby as you’re ever likely to see. I don’t know where to go from here. It’s hideous. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran refusing to export highly enriched uranium but willing to dilute purity
Proposal will be at heart of offer to US as Trump considers whether to attack IranIran is refusing to export its 300kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium, but is willing to dilute the purity of the stockpile it holds under the supervision of UN nuclear inspectorate the IAEA, Iranian sources have said.The proposal will be at the heart of the offer Iran is due to make to the US in the next few days, as the US president, Donald Trump, weighs whether to use his vast naval build-up in the Middle East to attack the country. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Cantor Fitzgerald Slammed Over Tariff Trades Which Never Happened
Cantor Fitzgerald Slammed Over Tariff Trades Which Never Happened

In retrospect, if only Cantor Fitzgerald was called PolyCantor, none of this would have happened.

Ever since September, the upstart online betting marketplace PolyMarket has been offering traders the opportunity to make money by betting whether the US Supreme Court would rule in favor or against Trump's tariffs, with millions of bets placed for either outcome (of course, we learned the outcome at 10am ET on Friday, when a 6-3 majority - including two Justices selected by Trump - voted against the president's landmark trade policy).
Source: PolyMarket

If that's not enough, there were also parallel markets like "Will the Court Force Trump to Refund Tariffs?", "Will the Supreme Court rule on Trump's tariffs by..." and many others. 

Of course, there's also PolyMarket's carbon copy, Kalshi, which offered the exact same markets to its own group of traders.
Source: Kalshi

Yet reading the mainstream media or various social network politicized echo chambers, one would have no idea that both PolyMarket and Kalshi, which have revolutionized online betting for ordinary Americans (and as of this week, for institutional clients of both PolyMarket and NEW - Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle, now running Cantor Fitzgerald after Lutnick became Trump's Commerce Secretary, have been buying up rights to Trump-era tariff refunds at steep discounts, reportedly 20–30 cents on the dollar — Wired pic.twitter.com/AMrNcxckQB- Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) February 20, 2026 ">Kalshi), are letting their clients bet millions whether Trump's tariffs would be struck down in court. Instead, they would be bombarded by headline after headline that Cantor Fitzgerald - the investment bank overseen by the sons of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick - is doing just that.


NEW - Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle, now running Cantor Fitzgerald after Lutnick became Trump's Commerce Secretary, have been buying up rights to Trump-era tariff refunds at steep discounts, reportedly 20–30 cents on the dollar — Wired pic.twitter.com/AMrNcxckQB
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) February 20, 2026

🚨🇺🇸 LUTNICK SWINDLES AMERICA AGAIN!!
The Supreme Court just ruled Trump's tariffs illegal. Guess who's about to make a fortune off it?
Cantor Fitzgerald, the firm now run by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's sons, has been buying up the rights to tariff refunds from U.S.… pic.twitter.com/A2YMfsGJQK
— DD Geopolitics (@DD_Geopolitics) February 20, 2026

Only in the case of Cantor Fitzgerald, this is 100% fake news. 

It all started with a July report by Wired (which once was a great magazine before transforming itself into the modern day version of the Sears, pardon, Amazon catalog with its avalanche of product infomercials) that alleged the financial services company created a “litigation finance” product that brokers bets that the courts will strike down the tariffs.

"Trump’s Commerce Secretary Loves Tariffs. His Former Investment Bank Is Taking Bets Against Them. A subsidiary of Cantor Fitzgerald, which is run by the sons of US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick, is letting clients essentially bet that President Donald Trump’s tariffs will be struck down in court", Wired declared bombastically, adding that...


In a letter seen by WIRED, a representative from Cantor said the firm was willing to trade tariff refund rights for 20 to 30 percent of what companies have paid in duties. “So for a company that paid $10 million, they could expect to receive $2-$3 million in a trade,” the representative wrote. “We have the capacity to trade up to several hundred million of these presently and can likely upsize that in the future to meet potential demand.”


In theory, such trades would connect a company vulnerable to US tariffs with a fund willing to bet that such tariffs might be reversed, or provide a market for two funds who disagreed on what the outcome of the Supreme Court decision would be. Cantor, like PolyMarket or Kalshi, would be the market where such trades would take place. 

Always eager to stir up a scandal especially when there is none, Congress's two most vocal, anti-capitalists, Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden immediately sent a letter to Howard Lutnick's son, Brandon, who now runs Cantor, demanding full disclosure of transactions or agreements the firm has made relating to products that would let institutions effectively bet on the legality of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Brandon Lutnick

“Public reporting indicates that Cantor has offered companies the opportunity to trade their legal claim to a future tariff refund in exchange for 20 to 30% of the duties the company paid,” the letter said. “In this scenario, if the courts determine that the tariffs are illegal, the company stands to recover hundreds of millions of dollars.”

Among the questions the senators posed were how many tariff refund agreements Cantor has finalized, whether it created them at the request of a specific client and if anyone at the firm had communicated with people in the US government about the tariffs or related legal cases, including Trump and the Commerce secretary. 

Sadly for America's favorite "native American" politician, her fishing expedition went nowhere fast because as Bloomberg reported in August, while Cantor Fitzgerald held internal discussions about facilitating such trades, it - unlike Kalshi, PolyMarket and various of its invesdtment banking peers - "quickly shut down the idea before executing any transactions."

According to the Bloomberg report, Cantor received what is known as a reverse inquiry, which is essentially a client asking whether the firm can facilitate such trades, which are done by larger Wall Street banks, and some staff discussed with potential clients about arranging them before the idea was rejected. As an aside, Cantor takes no directional position on brokered trades, and only pockets a commission when it matches a buyer and a seller, which of course is the business model of online better markets which are now valued in the tens of billions.

“We have not facilitated or executed any trades in that market,” Cantor spokesperson Erica Chase told Bloomberg adding that “what is being reported about our business is absolutely false.”

Why would Cantor decide against matching willing clients and creating a market (where it itself has no position)? Simple: with Cantor founder Howard Lutnick now Donald Trump's Commerce secretary, shaping the president's policies and other potentially market-moving matters, the firm's dealings have been a key area of focus for ethics watchdogs who are on alert for conflicts of interest.

Which is not to say that others haven't been more than willing to jump in and take the spot voluntarily vacated by Cantor. 

In a separate report from October, Bloomberg reported that banks such as Jefferies (a portfolio company of none other than Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway), and Oppenheimer "are among firms brokering the deals, matching investors with companies that have paid tariffs to import goods into the US." Or precisely what Cantor has been accused of doing. 

Why would Jefferies and Oppenheimer offer to make a market in tariff related litigation finance? Simple: they stand to make a lot of money in commissions as the bid/ask in this illiquid market was so wide. A hedge fund might pay somewhere between 20 to 40 cents for each dollar of claims they could get back in refunds. Most of the trades range in size from $2 million to $20 million, with few over $100 million, Bloomberg sources said.

Additionally, in order to hedge the Supreme Court decision, investment banks had been asking customs brokers in several US states to recommend the deals to clients paying the tariffs. According to one customs broker quoted by Bloomberg, some investors are actively pursuing buying refund claims from importers that are hurting for cash.

In the end, the "cloak and dagger" narrative pushed by Elizabeth Warren was not only fake news, but would have in reality been beneficial to the broader market, as the kind of trades which Cantor was speculated of doing, and which Jefferies, Oppenheimer, Polymarket and Kalshi, have encouraged clients to engage in, was just a way to hedge risk and liquidity exposure. 

That's because if the Supreme Court strikes down the tariffs - as it now has - the process of recovering tariffs would be very lengthy and complex even for the importers themselves. For example, it would be particularly complicated for importers using commercial couriers such as FedEx and United Parcel Service to handle paperwork and tariff payments on their behalf. US Customs and Border Protection issues refunds only to the importer of record - the parcel handler, in this case, and not necessarily the ultimate recipient of the imported goods - and it’s likely that paperwork for every single shipment would be required for repayment.

Meanwhile, if a firm that will now wait in line for months if not years to collect its tariff refunds had hedged its exposure with Polymarket or Jefferies, the contract would have already paid out and the money would be in their bank account, no questions asked, making the broader market more efficient and more liquid.

Not even Elizabeth Warren would be able to write a strongly-worded letter complaining about that, especially since only does do markets realize how much more efficient they could have been all along.

As the WSJ wrote ahead Friday's SCOTUS decision, "Salvatore J. Stile II, founder of a customs brokerage firm, expects today’s Supreme Court ruling to create a market for tariff refunds. "My customers are asking what the mechanism is to get their money," said Stile, founder of Alba Wheels Up International. One option will be selling their potential refunds to hedge funds and other Wall Street firms. That would allow businesses to get cash faster.

Stile says he sold an $18 million potential refund claim from an importer to a hedge fund weeks ago, and said he expects to broker more of these transactions. He added that businesses will have to wait for more details to be released on the Federal Register before they can proceed with refunds.

Then again, there is speculation that the entire Supreme Court tariff play was Scott Bessent (and perhaps Howard Lutnick's) best play yet. After all, thanks to that New York Fed paper which Kevin Hassett slammed as the "worst paper he's ever seen" for "calculating" that 90% of the tariff burden was borne by US consumers...


Kevin Hassett should be sending thank you notes to the NY Fed: recall they calculated US consumers paid for 90% of tariff burden. So 90% of IEEPA refunds - $120BN - should go direct to consumers/firms. And with refund timing open-ended, they can be sent any time before midterms https://t.co/7FcF8lbxuV
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) February 21, 2026
.... all Trump needs to do now is cite that exact same paper and send out $120 billion (or 90% of the $133BN in IEEPA refunds that was "borne by US consumers") in "2026 Trump Tariff Refund Checks" (i.e. stimmies) to US consumers some time before the midterms, boost the economy while blaming the treachery of the Supreme Court for "forcing" him to do this, and tip the midterms in Republicans' favor. 

We are confident that countless markets are already connecting buyers and sellers willing to bet on that exact outcome, even if Cantor isn't one of them .

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 10:13

ZeroHedge News
Open 
9 Tips To Cut Your 2025 Tax Bill And File Smoothly Under New Rules
9 Tips To Cut Your 2025 Tax Bill And File Smoothly Under New Rules

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

With tax season underway and the April 15 filing deadline approaching, taxpayers are being encouraged to review new changes introduced by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to help minimize their tax bills and avoid filing delays.
The IRS in Washington. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times

The law, signed in July 2025, made several permanent revisions to the tax code. It also created a series of temporary deductions and expanded limits—many of which expire after 2028 or 2029 and come with strict income phaseouts.

The IRS has urged taxpayers to review the new provisions carefully and use online tools at IRS.gov to help ensure smooth processing.

Here are nine strategies to consider.

1. Revisit Itemizing Under the Higher SALT Cap

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) temporarily increased the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap from $10,000 to $40,000 for both single filers and married couples filing jointly.

For 2025, the standard deduction is $15,750 for singles, $31,500 for married couples, and $23,625 for heads of household.

Taxpayers whose total itemized deductions—including mortgage interest, charitable contributions, and state and local taxes—exceed those amounts may benefit from itemizing.

However, the expanded SALT cap begins phasing out at $500,000 in modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) and returns to $10,000 once MAGI reaches $600,000.

Because many benefits phase out at specific income levels, reviewing your projected MAGI before making major financial moves—such as selling investments or doing a Roth conversion—can help protect valuable deductions.

While most of your 2025 income is already set by filing season, certain contributions made before the April deadline, such as individual retirement account or health savings account funding, can still lower taxable income and help preserve income-sensitive tax breaks.

2. Calculate the Overtime Deduction Carefully

The law introduced a temporary deduction for qualified overtime compensation, capped at $25,000 for married couples and $12,500 for singles.

Only the additional “half-time” portion of time-and-a-half pay qualifies—not the full overtime rate.

The deduction begins phasing out at $300,000 in MAGI for joint filers and disappears entirely at $550,000.

Taxpayers should confirm that their W-2 accurately reflects overtime earnings before claiming the deduction.

3. Make Sure Tip Income Is Properly Reported

The qualified tip income deduction allows up to $25,000 in reported tip income per return.

Only tips formally reported on a W-2 or 1099 qualify. Unreported cash tips cannot be deducted.

The IRS has reminded taxpayers that they are responsible for all information reported on their return, even if a preparer completes it. Incorrect or mismatched income reporting may delay processing.

The tip deduction phases out beginning at $150,000 in MAGI for singles and $300,000 for married couples.

4. Confirm Eligibility for Auto Loan Interest Deduction

Taxpayers who purchased a new personal-use vehicle in 2025 may be able to deduct up to $10,000 in interest paid on a qualifying auto loan.

The vehicle must have final assembly in the United States, and leased vehicles do not qualify.

The deduction phases out beginning at $100,000 in MAGI for singles and $200,000 for married couples.

The IRS notes that lenders must provide taxpayers with statements showing the total interest paid during the year—and retaining that documentation is essential when claiming the deduction.

5. Seniors Should Watch Income Limits Closely

Taxpayers age 65 or older may qualify for a temporary senior deduction of up to $12,000 for married couples and $6,000 for singles.

The benefit begins phasing out at $150,000 in MAGI for married couples and $75,000 for singles.

Large Roth conversions, capital gains, or other income spikes could eliminate the deduction. Financial planners often recommend modeling income carefully before executing major transactions to avoid unintended tax consequences.

6. Manage MAGI to Preserve Income-Sensitive Breaks

Many of the OBBBA’s temporary provisions hinge on income thresholds, making modified adjusted gross income a key planning factor.

Taxpayers whose income is close to phaseout levels—such as $300,000 for the overtime and tip deductions or $500,000 for the expanded SALT cap—may benefit from carefully timing income and contributions. Even modest adjustments to income can preserve eligibility for deductions that may be worth thousands of dollars.

The IRS notes that contributing to retirement plans like 401(k)s or traditional IRAs—and making eligible health savings account contributions by the filing deadline—can lower adjusted gross income, which in turn can help taxpayers stay under key income thresholds that affect eligibility for tax breaks.

7. Double-Check Identity and Dependent Information

Errors in personal information remain one of the most common causes of refund delays.

The IRS has advised taxpayers to confirm Social Security numbers, dependent names, and Identity Protection PINs before filing. Taking these steps can help avoid delays in processing and in claiming credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit or Additional Child Tax Credit.

8. Use IRS Online Tools to Avoid Delays

The IRS recommends filing electronically and choosing direct deposit to speed refunds, noting that most refunds are issued in less than 21 days.

Refund status can be tracked using the “Where’s My Refund?” tool, available within 24 hours after an electronic filing is received.

The IRS is also phasing out paper refund checks, and mailed refunds may take six weeks or longer.

Taxpayers can use an IRS Individual Online Account to view tax records and transcripts, check refund status, verify adjusted gross income, retrieve an Identity Protection PIN, and view certain W-2 and 1099 forms.

9. The Bottom Line

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act created new tax-saving opportunities for 2025, but many come with strict limits and income phaseouts.

A careful review of deductions, income timing, and documentation—combined with the IRS’s online tools—can help taxpayers avoid losing temporary benefits or experiencing unnecessary delays.

With the filing deadline approaching, preparation and attention to detail may be the most effective ways to reduce stress—and potentially reduce your tax bill.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 10:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
If 'Cash Is King', Berkshire Hathaway Leads The World
If 'Cash Is King', Berkshire Hathaway Leads The World

The cash that companies hold is important for paying employees, funding operations, and as a measure of financial health.

This chart, via Visual Capitalist's Boyan Girginov, shows the 50 companies with the largest cash holdings, using data from TradingView to highlight who is sitting on the largest war chests.

This metric captures a company’s most liquid assets: cash plus short-term securities like T-bills that typically mature within a year.



Which Companies Hold the Most Cash?

Berkshire Hathaway leads the rankings with an impressive $382 billion.

The data table below shows the top 50 companies worldwide with the largest cash and short-term securities holdings:



Source: TradingView | Cash and Short-Term Investments | as of Feb 11, 2026

Following Berkshire are CITIC—a Chinese state-backed financial conglomerate—and Daiwa Securities Group, one of Japan’s biggest financial brokerages.

Big Tech rounds out the top five, with Alphabet holding $127 billion and Amazon holding $126 billion.

Why Buffett Holds So Much Cash

Among the top 50 companies, the Financials sector collectively holds the largest cash reserves at $1.2 trillion—partially driven by strict capital rules requiring banks to maintain large liquid buffers.

Berkshire Hathaway is different: its cash position is strategic, not regulatory.

After 12 straight quarters as a net seller of stocks, Buffett and the team have parked much of the company’s liquidity in short-term U.S. Treasury bills, implying that equity valuations look expensive.

The Oracle’s cash and cash equivalents as a percentage of total assets is at an all-time high—roughly 31% of total assets.

Historically, this has coincided with periods when he waits for a major economic or market dislocation before deploying capital as prices begin to mean-revert—quietly accumulating dry powder in the meantime.

Why Big Tech Holds So Much Cash

The Magnificent Seven: Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia and Tesla collectively hold $597 billion—enough to buy most S&P 500 companies.

Traditionally, Big Tech companies are massive cash machines: high gross margins and scalable cost structures mean incremental revenue converts into cash quickly.

Despite spending heavily to build AI factories, they’ve used little of their cash reserves to finance them—opting instead for debt.

They hold large cash stockpiles both to fund acquisitions and guard against potential economic turmoil, such as threats from tariffs or geopolitical conflicts.

To learn more about the world’s largest companies, check out this graphic on Voronoi.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 11:05

BBC UK News
Open 
Arrests amid Britain First march and counter protests
The arrests were in relation to offences including assault on an emergency worker, police said.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Donald Trump raises global tariffs to 15% from 10% after Friday's Supreme Court tariff ruling. Follow live
Donald Trump said he's raising the global 10% tariff to 15%, a day after the Supreme Court blocked much of the US president's emergency tariffs.

The Hill
Open 
O'Leary says Supreme Court 'caused a nightmare' with tariff decision
Millionaire investor Kevin O’Leary warned of a “major compliance cost” for business owners in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Friday ruling that blocks President Trump from using emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs. The high court's 6-3 decision struck down many of the Trump administration’s import taxes on foreign trading partners, finding Trump unlawfully...

The Hill
Open 
Stephen A. Smith knocks Democrats boycotting Trump address: 'Ticks me off'
Sports commentator Stephen A. Smith on Friday blasted the Democratic members of Congress who plan to boycott President Trump's State of the Union address next week, calling it "the kind of stuff that ticks me off." "You see, when you go to the American people and you ask the American people, 'Yo, stand up, step...

The Hill
Open 
Is the temperature of your bedroom hurting your heart?
A study found people with bedroom temperatures of higher than 75 degrees Fahrenheit had higher stress on their hearts.

The Hill
Open 
Trump approves DC emergency declaration over Potomac sewage spill
President Trump on Saturday approved Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's (D) request for federal disaster assistance as the nation's capital works to clean-up the Potomac River following a sewer line collapse. Bowser on Wednesday declared a local public emergency and asked the Trump administration for support in a 15-day order. In the declaration, the mayor...

The Hill
Open 
Why Medicaid has drifted from its mission — and how to fix It
The Trump administration is intensifying oversight of Medicaid spending to curb fraud, waste and abuse, and policymakers should address Medicaid's "mission creep" into housing by increasing transparency and shifting Medicaid financing to per-capita allotments.

The Hill
Open 
Maher mocks 'Karen' Trump after Supreme Court tariff upset
Comedian Bill Maher ridiculed President Trump over his response to the Supreme Court’s tariff ruling Friday, calling him a “Karen.” The high court ruled in a 6-3 decision that Trump unlawfully relied on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose sweeping tariffs on nearly all foreign trading partners. "Here they finally said, 'You...

The Hill
Open 
$1 million a year for life? New lottery game launching in 30 states, DC
The game is relatively similar to Powerball and Mega Millions, with some notable differences.

CNET News
Open 
How to Recycle Your Old Laptops and Printers for Free
Don't let those ancient printers and PCs live rent-free in your home.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM: 5th Circuit REVERSES decision that blocked Louisiana’s new 10 Commandment law
Yesterday evening the 5th Circuit reversed a ruling that blocked Louisiana&#8217;s new law that put the 10 Commandments back in the classroom. Not only did the 5th Circuit reverse a lower court . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM VIDEO – Scott Jennings corners Dem candidate, exposes him as know-nothing hack on CNN
Justin J. Pearson was one of the Tennessee Three who were kicked out of the legislature for leading a protest onto the House floor in the state capitol back in 2023. Nowadays . . .

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Trump says he will increase global tariffs to 15%
After the Supreme Court outlawed most of his tariffs on Friday, Trump announced new global tariffs of 10%. On Saturday he said he would increase these to 15%.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Donald Trump raises global tariffs to 15% from 10% as he reacts to Supreme Court ruling. Follow live
Donald Trump said he's raising the global 10% tariff to 15%, a day after the Supreme Court blocked much of the US president's emergency tariffs.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother, 31, is guilty of murdering her two-month-old daughter who suffered skull fractures, bleeding on the brain and broken ribs and collar bone
Zara Arsalan, 31, was yesterday convicted of murdering her baby Harleen in 2020.

Mail Online
Open 
Man 'tried to buy 40 handguns and 1,000 bullets and tried to make his own 3D printed machine gun'
Luke Fortune, 22, from Longwell Green, Bristol, was arrested in July 2024 on suspicion of purchasing 35 top-venting blank firearms and three antique guns. Pictured: Two other weapons dumped nearby

Mail Online
Open 
Prue Leith says she 'didn't want to overstay her welcome' as she opens up on her decision to quit Bake Off and shares advice for Nigella Lawson
Prue Leith has said she 'didn't want to overstay her welcome' as she opened up about her decision to quit the Great British Bake Off.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US trade war: Trump raises global tariffs to 15% from 10%
Donald Trump said he's raising the global 10% tariff to 15%, a day after the Supreme Court blocked much of the US president's emergency tariffs.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump announces he is hiking global tariffs to 15% as he comes out swinging against Supreme Court loss
President Donald Trump has hiked worldwide tariffs to 15 percent after the Supreme Court ruled his 'beautiful' plan was unconstitutional.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales v Scotland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 4.40pm kickoff (GMT) at the Principality Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielLuke McLaughlin heard from Wales’ skipper, Dewi Lake, who has urged the home fans to give his boys a lift:Scotland’s skipper, Sione Tuipulotu, knows that he can’t take Wales lightly:I put pressure on the group to be desperate out there and show desperation.It also makes me a little bit frustrated because the week before we couldn’t against Italy for a lot of reasons. So that feeling is still there for me and I hope it stays with me for the rest of the tournament, because I think it’s needed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Record-breaking Ireland humble woeful England in Twickenham demolition job
England 21-42 IrelandIreland run riot to condemn England to successive defeatsSo much for all those expectations of a tight two-horse race. For the second week running England were barely in the frame, comprehensively second best to opponents who started well and kept on galloping to a five-try rout. This was a record Irish win at Twickenham and it is Andy Farrell’s side who remain in the hunt for this season’s Six Nations title while England stare down the barrel of a bottom-half finish.To say Ireland were miles the better side is simply to state the obvious. The seeds of England’s downfall were sown in a calamitous first half which saw the visitors pull away to a 22-0 lead inside 30 minutes. As in Edinburgh they were guilty of way too many errors, with their lineout all over the shop. They also conceded 15 turnovers in the opening 40 minutes alone in addition to another yellow card, this time for Freddie Steward. It was so bad that Steve Borthwick replaced Luke Cowan-Dickie and Steward for tactical reasons even before the half-time oranges had been sliced. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Trump’s Tariffs: The Beginning of the End?
The Supreme Court has rejected US President Donald Trump’s global import taxes

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
GB go for men's curling gold - Saturday's guide
What's happening and who to look out for at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Trump ups tariffs day after Supreme Court ruling against him
The president will increase import taxes to 15% on most products coming into the US from Tuesday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Ruthless Ireland hit record away win over England
A ruthless Ireland reignite their Six Nations title bid with a record away win over England at Allianz Stadium.

Mail Online
Open 
Mayfair descends into mayhem: Mick Jagger's fiancée is mugged, residents claim they are 'easy prey for scum' - and billionaires who fear Rolex rippers need private security to walk around London's most prestigious postcode
When Melanie Hamrick enjoyed a night out in one of London's most prestigious postcodes, the fiancée of Sir Mick Jagger did not realise just how dangerous a neighbourhood she was in.

Mail Online
Open 
Police arrest six as violence breaks out between far-right Britain First march and counter-demonstrators
Supporters of the far-right group Britain First met outside Piccadilly station in Manchester city centre ahead of a 'march for remigration and mass deportations'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales v Scotland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 4.40pm kickoff (GMT) at the Principality Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielKeen to see how Sam Costelow gets on for Wales at fly-half.This will be his first start under coach Steve Tandy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Don’t be fooled by recent good news, the UK economy is still in a precarious state
Labour MPs may clamour for bolder spending, but – like their Tory and Reform counterparts – they ask for the unaffordableToo many Labour MPs want it all, and no amount of pleading from the top of government about the depleted public finances seems to make a difference.The mainly leftist MPs want all the wrongs of the last 15 years put right and quickly. Their next opportunity to demand more cash arrives when Rachel Reeves delivers her spring statement on 3 March. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Championship roundup: Coventry end away woes, Leicester denied late on
Leaders Coventry win 2-0 at struggling West BromLeicester draw 2-2 at Stoke in Gary Rowett’s first gameCoventry, the leaders, won away for the first time since 25 November and their 2-0 victory at the Hawthorns left West Brom, who have not won in nine league games and not scored a league goal in 360 minutes, deeper in relegation trouble.Coventry took the lead with their first attack of the game, punishing West Brom’s high defensive line. Frank Onyeka won the ball in midfield, Milan van Ewijk sent a long ball over the top and Ephron Mason-Clark chested it down before lobbing goalkeeper Max O’Leary, who got a hand to the shot. Mason-Clark got the wrong side of Alfie Gilchrist, who tried in vain to clear the ball off the line and ended up in the back of the net. The forward’s seventh goal of the season was his first since Boxing Day. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales v Scotland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 4.40pm kickoff (GMT) at the Principality Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email DanielThe Opta Supercomputer has crunched the numbers and the results are in…Wales have a 12.3% chance of winning. To be fair, I think most Welsh fans would take that. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bodies of two young men found in Snowdonia after large-scale search
Mountain rescue teams scoured Yr Wyddfa in snow and ice after pair, aged 19 and 20, were reported missingThe bodies of two men have been found in Snowdonia after a large-scale search, police have said.The men, aged 19 and 20, were reported missing on Wednesday, which sparked a search operation on the Eryri mountain range. Mountain rescue teams waded through snow and ice on Yr Wyddfa – also known as Snowdon – until the early hours of Thursday morning before resuming at 8am that day. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England 21-42 Ireland: Six Nations rugby union – live reaction
Ireland romp to record victory at Twickenham Wales v Scotland – live | And you can email Lee2 mins. The clearing kick from Ireland is returned by England with some carries up to the Irish 22. Ford floats a cross-kick to the right touchline where Steward claims it, but he’s quickly wrapped up by Lowe and two phases later a knock-on in midfield hands a scrum to the visitors.First test for what has been a very creaky Irish scrum in the tournament so far. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Decoding the secret meanings behind the A list's best red-carpet dresses: As the Oscars loom, LAURA CRAIK ​reveals how the savagely competitive world of styling is a hotbed of politics, power and rivalries
Coming first in the fashion race has become just as important as scooping an industry award. As the Oscars loom, Laura Craik reports on the competitive world of A-list styling

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
MPs to discuss inquiry into trade envoy role after Andrew arrest
A cross-party committee will also look into the appointment and accountability of UK trade envoys.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran refusing to export highly enriched uranium but willing to dilute purity
Proposal will be at heart of offer to US as Trump considers whether to attack IranIran is refusing to export its 300kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium , but is willing to dilute the purity of the stockpile held in Iran under the supervision of the UN nuclear inspectorate the IAEA, Iranian sources have said.The proposal will be at the heart of the offer Iran is due to make to the US in the next few days, as US president Donald Trump weighs whether to use his vast naval build up in the Middle East to attack Iran. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Alba Party 'unlikely' to stand in Scottish Parliament election
Leader Kenny MacAskill said the party faced an "immediate crisis" and it was unlikely it would be able to register for the Holyrood elections.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Wales vs Scotland: Free Streams, TV Channels & Preview for Six Nations 2026 clash, team news

TechRadar News
Open 
iPhone 17 Pro Max vs IPhone 3 GS perfectly illustrates 16 years of smartphone photography progress

TechRadar News
Open 
I don't care if physical copies are delayed — game publishers and developers must do something to prevent early leaks and spoilers

TechRadar News
Open 
I can’t stop talking about Rachel Sennott’s new satirical comedy I Love LA — here’s why it should be top of your HBO Max watch list

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Championship roundup: Coventry end away woes, Leicester denied late on
Leaders Coventry win 2-0 at struggling West BromLeicester draw 2-2 at Stoke in Gary Rowett’s first gameChampionship leaders Coventry won away for the first time since 25 November and their 2-0 victory at the Hawthorns left West Brom, who have not won in nine league games and not scored a league goal in 360 minutes, deeper in relegation trouble.Coventry took the lead with their first attack of the game, punishing West Brom’s high defensive line. Frank Onyeka won the ball in midfield, Milan van Ewijk sent a long ball over the top and Ephron Mason-Clark chested it down before lobbing goalkeeper Max O’Leary, who got a hand to the shot. Mason-Clark got the wrong side of Alfie Gilchrist, who tried in vain to clear the ball off the line and ended up in the back of the net. The forward’s seventh goal of the season was his first since Boxing Day. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Suspect in Tumbler Ridge school shooting described violent scenarios to ChatGPT
The suspect in the mass shooting at Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, Jesse Van Rootselaar, was raising alarms among employees at OpenAI months before the shooting took place. This past June, Jesse had conversations with ChatGPT involving descriptions of gun violence that triggered the chatbot's automated review system. Several employees raised concerns that her posts could [&#8230;]

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – psql: Add %i prompt escape to indicate hot standby status.
On 3rd of February 2026, Fujii Masao committed patch: psql: Add %i prompt escape to indicate hot standby status. &#160; This commit introduces a new prompt escape %i for psql, which shows whether the connected server is operating in hot standby mode. It expands to standby if the server reports in_hot_standby = on, and primary &#8230; Continue reading "Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 &#8211; psql: Add %i prompt escape to indicate hot standby status."

ZeroHedge News
Open 
No Laughing Matter: John Cleese Declares "I'm Afraid They Are Going To Have To Arrest Me"
No Laughing Matter: John Cleese Declares "I'm Afraid They Are Going To Have To Arrest Me"

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

In the classic movie comedy, A Fish Called Wanda, John Cleese lamented, “do you have any idea what it’s like being English? Being so correct all the time, being so stifled by this dread of, of doing the wrong thing.”



Now 86, Cleese has a more pressing concern about being English: whether his exercise of free speech will make him a criminal in his own country.

In a recent interview, Cleese observed that the government’s new speech standards would classify many citizens, including himself, as presumptive criminals for criticizing certain policies.

He observed that: ”As I am an Islamosceptic, I’m now worried that the Labour government may categorise me as a terrorist…”

The government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer has continued its headlong plunge into the criminalization of speech. The guidelines include a section on cultural nationalism, stating that such views are now the subject of government crackdowns. To even argue that Western culture is under threat from mass migration or a lack of integration by certain groups is being treated as a dangerous ideology.

Cleese responded by saying, “I’m clearly a terrorist, so I’m afraid they are going to have to arrest me.”

The tragedy is that this is no wicked Monty Python joke. Cleese has every reason to be concerned.

As I discuss in Rage and the Republic, the United Kingdom has eviscerated free speech in the name of social cohesion and order.

For years, I have been writing about the decline of free speech in the United Kingdom and the steady stream of arrests.

A man was convicted of sending a tweet while drunk, referring to dead soldiers. Another was arrested for an anti-police t-shirt. Another was arrested for calling the Irish boyfriend of his ex-girlfriend a “leprechaun.” Yet another was arrested for singing “Kung Fu Fighting.”

A teenager was arrested for protesting outside of a Scientology center with a sign calling the religion a “cult.”

Last year, Nicholas Brock, 52, was convicted of a thought crime in Maidenhead, Berkshire. The neo-Nazi was given a four-year sentence for what the court called his “toxic ideology” based on the contents of the home he shared with his mother in Maidenhead, Berkshire.

While most of us find Brock’s views repellent and hateful, they were confined to his head and his room.

Yet, Judge Peter Lodder QC dismissed free speech or free thought concerns with a truly Orwellian statement:


“I do not sentence you for your political views, but the extremity of those views informs the assessment of dangerousness.”


Lodder lambasted Brock for holding Nazi and other hateful values:


“[i]t is clear that you are a right-wing extremist, your enthusiasm for this repulsive and toxic ideology is demonstrated by the graphic and racist iconography which you have studied and appeared to share with others…”


Even though Lodder agreed that the defendant was older, had limited mobility, and “there was no evidence of disseminating to others,” he still sent him to prison for holding extremist views.

After the sentencing, Detective Chief Superintendent Kath Barnes, Head of Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE), warned others that he was going to prison because he “showed a clear right-wing ideology with the evidence seized from his possessions during the investigation….We are committed to tackling all forms of toxic ideology which has the potential to threaten public safety and security.”

“Toxic ideology” also appears to be the target of Ireland’s proposed Criminal Justice (Incitement to Violence or Hatred and Hate Offences) law.

It covers the possession of material deemed hateful.

The law is a free speech nightmare.

The law makes it a crime to possess “harmful material” as well as “condoning, denying or grossly trivialising genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes against peace.”

The law expressly states the intent to combat “forms and expressions of racism and xenophobia by means of criminal law.”

The Brock case proved, as feared, a harbinger of what was to come. Two years ago, the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, vowed to crack down on people “pushing harmful and hateful beliefs.” That includes what she calls extreme misogyny.

Now the UK’s most famous writers and comedians believe that they can be arrested under the country’s draconian speech laws from JK Rowling to John Cleese.

That leaves free speech much like Cleese’s famous parrot.



The British government and its supporters can claim evidence of life or just “resting,” but it is in fact "bleedin’ demised…passed on! … no more! … ceased to be! … expired and gone to meet it's maker!”

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 09:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Precrime: Months Before Massacre, OpenAI Worried About Canada's Trans Mass Killer
Precrime: Months Before Massacre, OpenAI Worried About Canada's Trans Mass Killer

Months before a Canadian man in a dress went on a Feb 10 rampage, killing his mother and half-brother at home before slaughtering five students and an education assistant at a secondary school where he was formerly a student, employees at OpenAI were deeply troubled by his interactions with the firm's ChatGPT AI chatbot.   

As first reported by the Wall Street Journal, Jesse Van Rootselaar's ChatGPT activity was flagged by the company's automated review system. When employees took a look at what he'd been up to over a several-day period in June 2025, they were alarmed. About a dozen of them debated what they should do.
OpenAI employees were sufficiently alarmed by future mass murderer Jesse Van Rootselaar's interactions with ChatGPT that they urged managers to call the police

Some were convinced Van Rootselaar's descriptions of gun-violence scenarios signaled a substantial risk of real-world bloodshed, and implored their supervisors to notify police, according to the Journal's unnamed sources. They opted against doing so, and a spokeswoman now says they'd concluded Van Rootselaar's posts didn't cross the threshold of posing a credible and imminent risk of serious harm. Instead, the company decided only to ban his account. 

About seven months after his disturbing series of interactions with ChatGPT, police say he killed 8 people and injured 25 more before killing himself in the school he'd attended earlier. Van Rootselaar's social media and YouTube accounts contained transgender symbolism as well as the online name "JessJessUwU" (a meme phrase that people may recognize from the bullet casings tied to the gay suspect charged in the assassination of Charlie Kirk). 
Van Rootselaar at a gun range: He captioned this social media post "I blew up their desert eagle!" 

Only after the bloody horror unfolded did OpenAI contact the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The situation highlights the difficult position social media and AI platforms are in, as they struggle with balancing conflicting goals: protecting their users' privacy and avoiding unnecessary interactions with police, versus preventing crimes up to and including mass murder. The Journal didn't report specifics about Van Rootselaar's ChatGPT interactions.  

ChatGPT wasn't the only online resource where he evidenced a potential for violence: He'd also used Roblox to build a game centered on carrying out a mass shooting at a shopping mall. Online activity aside, Van Rootselaar was already on the radar of local police, who made multiple visits to his home in response to mental health episodes, and even temporarily removing firearms from the property. An RCMP official said that, on multiple occasions, he was "apprehended for assessment and follow-up."  
Six days after Van Rootselaar's (left) mass murder-suicide, another man-in-a-dress, Robert Dorgan, killed his ex-wife, his own child and himself at a Rhode Island hockey rink 

Police say Van Rootselaar gender-transitioned about six years ago. Given he was 18 when he exploded into violence, that translates into the very young age of about 12. There's no indication that the "transition" went beyond "identity" and clothing, and into the realm of hormones and other body-transforming measures. Online, he bemoaned the fact that his six-foot frame would render impossible his aspiration to be a "petite" woman.  

On Reddit, Van Rootselaar often posted about his use of prescription and other drugs, and curiosity about 5-MeO-DMT, a hallucinogen nicknamed "toad venom." He said he'd been diagnosed with ADHD, obsessive compulsive disorder, major depressive disorder and autism spectrum disorder, and was taking "Setraline 380mg (SSRI). I on rare occasion take 2mg of Risperidone for sleep purposes (anti-psychotic.)" Setraline is the generic version of Zoloft. He dropped out of school about four years ago. 

Elsewhere on Reddit, in a post about his "right to be myself" and his "right to Hormone Replacement Therapy," Van Rootselaar noted that at least other people support his "bare minimum...right to bear arms," adding, "I'm a 15 year old trans person, transitioning from Male to Female. I 'own' 7 firearms, it's cool." 

What's definitely not cool: nudging 12-year-olds down the gender-transitioning path. 

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 09:55

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s Iran warning gives UK whiplash over Chagos island deal
President Trump’s attack plans for Iran have roiled a deal for the United Kingdom to cede control of the tiny and isolated island of Diego Garcia, where a strategic American air base sits in the middle of the vast Indian Ocean. Trump took to his Truth Social media account Wednesday to warn British Prime Minister...

The Hill
Open 
Huckabee Sanders on tariffs: Fastest way to get Trump to act is 'tell him that he can't'
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R) on Friday said the quickest way to have President Trump act on tariffs "is to tell him that he can't," after the Supreme Court ruled that his use of emergency powers to enact his sweeping tariff agenda was unconstitutional. The high court's 6-3 ruling invalidated Trump's use of the...

The Hill
Open 
Truckers will have to take test in English amid CDL crackdown
The announcement is part of a larger effort to address English proficiency for commercial drivers.

The Hill
Open 
The Supreme Court has ruled on tariffs, but who will ultimately pay?
This court is independent, but it won't remain so if Democrats get their way.

The Hill
Open 
O'Leary says Supreme Court 'caused a nightmare' with tariff decision
Millionaire investor Kevin O’Leary warned of a “major compliance cost” for business owners in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Friday ruling that blocks President Trump from using emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs.  The high court's 6-3 decision struck down many of the Trump administration’s import taxes on foreign trading partners, finding Trump unlawfully...

Gizmodo
Open 
Watchdog Says FAA Lacks Resources to Properly Oversee United Airlines
A new report says the agency’s oversight of United’s maintenance practices is hindered by under-resourced inspections.

Gizmodo
Open 
Sam Altman Says Companies Are ‘AI Washing’ Layoffs
Hold up, let him cook.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Tron: Ares’ Concept Art Reveals the Villain That Almost Was
Once upon a version of 'Tron: Ares,' Cillian Murphy might've returned to be the big bad, which might've made it better to people?

Mac Rumours
Open 
Anker's Weekend Sale Includes Big Savings on Newest Prime Chargers
Earlier this month, Anker debuted its new Prime 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Station with a launch discount on Amazon. This deal is still available this weekend, allowing you to clip an on-page coupon on Amazon to get the accessory for &#36;119.99, down from &#36;149.99.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



The Prime 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Station features Qi2.2 support, which lets a compatible MagSafe ‌iPhone‌ charge at up to 25W. It's the same speed as Apple's ‌MagSafe‌ charger, and it is 10W faster than the standard Qi2 ‌MagSafe‌ chargers. You can also simultaneously charge an Apple Watch and AirPods with the device.



Note: You won't see the deal price until checkout.

&#36;30 OFFAnker Prime 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Station for &#36;119.99



There are plenty of other Anker discounts happening on Amazon this week, including the Prime 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Dock back at its all-time low price of &#36;339.99, down from &#36;399.99. You can find this accessory and more on sale in the lists below, and note that as of writing only the new Prime 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Station requires an on-page coupon.



&#36;60 OFFAnker Prime 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Dock for &#36;339.99

Wall Chargers

Nano USB-C Wall Charger - &#36;29.99, down from &#36;39.99

6-in-1 USB-C Power Strip - &#36;59.99, down from &#36;109.99

140W 4-Port GaN USB-C Charger - &#36;89.99, down from &#36;99.99

14-in-1 Prime Thunderbolt 5 Dock - &#36;339.99, down from &#36;399.99

Wireless Chargers

Qi2 MagSafe-Compatible Wireless Charger 2-Pack - &#36;25.98, down from &#36;39.99

3-in-1 MagSafe-Compatible Charging Station - &#36;85.99, down from &#36;109.99

3-in-1 MagSafe-Compatible Charging Cube - &#36;97.48, down from &#36;149.95

3-in-1 Prime Wireless Charging Station (NEW) - &#36;119.99 with on-page coupon, down from &#36;149.99

Portable Chargers

Prime Power Bank 20,100 mAh - &#36;134.99, down from &#36;179.99

SOLIX C300 Power Station with Lantern - &#36;179.99, down from &#36;249.00

SOLIX C1000 Gen 2 Portable Power Station - &#36;469.99, down from &#36;799.00

SOLIX C2000 Gen 2 Portable Power Station - &#36;778.99, down from &#36;1,499.00



If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Anker's Weekend Sale Includes Big Savings on Newest Prime Chargers' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

CNET News
Open 
I Asked Audiologists if My Earbuds Are Damaging My Ears
I spoke with ear health experts to learn more about the risks of wearing earbuds and which headphone style is best to prevent hearing loss.

CNET News
Open 
Best Robot Vacuums: Our Latest Lab-Tested Robovacs Can Clean Just About Anything
We've tested dozens of robot vacuums to evaluate pickup power, navigation, obstacle avoidance and more. Here are our best picks for 2026. Two of them earned a CNET Lab Award.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew's security team stock up on lager and noodles after driving him home from police station following arrest
The two men - incidentally the same security officers who were pictured driving Andrew back to Sandringham on Thursday - were seen carrying Sainsbury's and Tesco's bags this afternoon.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Clearscope review: A well-rounded SEO optimization tool for business use

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brook says overlooking Pakistan players for the Hundred would be ‘a shame’
Brook urges four Indian-owned sides to think againEngland captain will play for Sunrisers LeedsHarry Brook has called on teams in this year’s Hundred to embrace Pakistan players after it was reported that they would not be considered by the tournament’s four Indian-owned sides.Brook, England’s white-ball captain, is contracted to Sunrisers Leeds, owned by the Indian media corporation the Sun Group, owners of the IPL side Sunrisers Hyderabad, and is the highest-paid player in the tournament. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Teen dies after being stabbed outside mosque
A murder investigation is under way into the death of Zeshan Afzal, 18.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump envoy backs Russia’s Paralympic comeback – NYT

Mail Online
Open 
Woman loses all her limbs 'after being licked by a dog' in devastating case of sepsis that caused her heart to stop six times in intensive care
Manjit Sangha, 56, spent 32 weeks in hospital and suffered several cardiac arrests with medics almost certain she would die.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine strikes missile plant deep inside Russia
The Votkinsk factory, that produces ballistic missiles, is more than 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) from Ukraine.

Mail Online
Open 
Could Andrew's inner circle face questions from police? Detectives may want to talk to closest aide Amanda Thirsk
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's inner circle of aides, confidantes and business associates could be next in the crosshairs as a police investigation into the former Duke continues.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘They were mothers, wives, friends’: how a ski trip turned deadly in the California mountains
A picture is emerging of one of the worst avalanche disasters in US history, and the women among a tight-knit group of friends who diedThe ringing of a phone echoed through the Nevada county, California, sheriff’s office just before noon on 17 February.The 911 call brought devastating news: an avalanche had occurred on nearby Castle Peak – a 9,110ft (2,780-meter) mountain north of the Donner summit in the Lake Tahoe area. A group of backcountry skiers had been on the mountainside, returning home from a three-day expedition, during a heavy winter storm. While six had survived, more than half their group was missing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo wins sixth gold, speed skating, curling and more – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Is the UK’s golden era of free museum entry coming to an end?
The National Gallery’s latest financial woes have brought the possibility of charging visitors back into the frameFor a quarter of a century, visitors to the UK’s national museums and galleries have enjoyed universal free entry to see permanent collections.The policy, introduced by the New Labour government in 2001, has been widely credited with improving access to culture and significantly increasing footfall to some of the country’s best-known attractions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games
Victory in 50km mass start breaks record from 1980Teammates Nyenget and Iversen lock out podiumAt the end of one of the great races in the history of the Winter Olympics, there was the greatest athlete in the history of the Winter Olympics. After a little over two hours of racing Johannes Høsflot Klæbo won his sixth gold medal of these Games when he beat his Norwegian teammate Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget by 17.4 seconds to win the men’s 50km classic.The triumph meant the 29-year-old set the record for the most gold medals in a single Winter Games, set by the US speed skater Eric Heiden when he won five at Lake Placid in 1980. In an age of exaggeration and in an industry that loves overstatement, it is entirely true to say that there has never been anything quite like it. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria and David Beckham celebrate son Cruz's 21st birthday at lavish London venue with family - as Brooklyn continues to isolate himself from his relatives
Victoria and David Beckham treated their family to a swanky meal at Gymkhana in Piccadilly to celebrate son Cruz's 21st birthday on Friday night. 

Mail Online
Open 
Scotty T, 37, 'relies on handouts from his mother to stay afloat' as his bleak yearly income from OnlyFans and club appearances is revealed after pleading guilty to illegal Instagram posts
The Geordie Shore star, 37 - real name Scott Timlin - is best known for appearing in Geordie Shore from 2012 to 2019 and winning Celebrity Big Brother in 2016.

TechRadar News
Open 
Keeping the human touch in tech: what over-automation gets wrong

TechRadar News
Open 
The Mandalorian and Grogu: release date, trailer, cast, plot, and everything else we know about the new Star Wars movie

TechRadar News
Open 
‘My love letter to an underappreciated work of art’: this is the one GameCube title that I want to see on Nintendo Switch Online

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Per-worker, and global, IO bandwidth in explain plans
Jeremy Schneider suggested a change to how plans are displayed &#8211; adding another bit of information in case we have timing information for IO for explain node. Took me a while to research, but it finally made it's way… Let's consider this simple plan. In it's Parallel Seq Scan node we see: -&#62; Parallel Seq &#8230; Continue reading "Per-worker, and global, IO bandwidth in explain plans"

The Verge
Open 
Aerial_Knight’s DropShot captures the thrill of skydiving and makes it stylish
I've always wanted to go skydiving. Aerial_Knight's DropShot, from indie developer Aerial_Knight, lets me live out that dream - at least in a safe, virtual kind of way. It also lets me shoot bullets from finger guns, wield laser skulls, and wear cool sunglasses while I'm falling through the air. So maybe it's better than [&#8230;]

The Verge
Open 
The Pixel 10A and Soundcore Space One are just two of the best deals this week
Welcome to the weekend, folks! The Reviews and Guides team here at The Verge is gearing up for all things Unpacked, but Samsung isn’t the only one readying new phones. Google just announced the Pixel 10A, which, for you early adopters, is already up for preorder with a $100 gift card. Elsewhere in deal land, [&#8230;]

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Deporting Censorship: US Targets UK Government Ally Over Free Speech
Deporting Censorship: US Targets UK Government Ally Over Free Speech

Authored by Paul D. Thacker via RealClearInvestigations,

As ICE sweeps in Minneapolis have drawn wide attention, a little-noticed immigration case playing out in a New York federal court has significant implications for America’s relationship with Britain and the ongoing debate over global censorship.  



In late December, the State Department announced its intention to revoke the visas of five foreign individuals who have allegedly censored Americans. The most consequential member of this group is Imran Ahmed, a British Labour Party political operative now living in the U.S., who is the CEO of an influential nonprofit, the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

In documents released Feb. 6 in federal court, the State Department claims Ahmed and the Center have been key players in efforts to censor Americans. A memo written by State Department Undersecretary Sarah Rogers asserts that “Ahmed was a key collaborator with the Biden administration on weaponizing the national security bureaucracy to censor U.S. citizens and pressure U.S. companies into censoring, and his group advocates for foreign regulatory action that extraterritorially impacts American citizens and companies.” 

In a follow-up memo, Secretary Marco Rubio wrote that Ahmed had led efforts to censor Americans and harm U.S. media outlets, including ZeroHedge and The Federalist. “I have determined that Ahmed’s activities and presence in the United States have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences and comprise a compelling U.S. foreign policy interest.” Rubio asserted. While the Center casts itself as a disinterested nonprofit trying to stop online hate, Rubio noted that documents leaked from inside the group outline ambitious plans to “kill Musk’s Twitter” and “trigger EU and UK regulatory action.” 

Ahmed has a small army of lawyers working to halt his deportation proceedings, which are now being litigated. Ahmed’s lead attorney is Roberta Kaplan - a former advisor to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo - who sued President Trump on behalf of his niece, Mary Trump. Ahmed is also represented by Norm Eisen, a Democratic Party fundraiser and former advisor to Obama. Last Thursday, they filed an updated court complaint against the U.S. government to keep Ahmed in the United States.

International Implications

The effort to deport Ahmed has broader political implications because of the close ties he and his associates have to the highest reaches of the British government. Morgan McSweeney, who co-founded the Center with Ahmed, is widely seen as the architect of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour Party victory in 2024. McSweeney served as Starmer’s chief of staff until earlier this month, when he resigned because of a separate scandal connected to Jeffrey Epstein. 
Imran Ahmed

U.K. government documents reviewed by RCI show that the organization’s influence extends throughout Starmer’s government. The Trump administration’s pushback on Ahmed’s weaponization of speech against U.S. citizens and companies suggests a deep concern about foreign intervention and censorship stemming from one of America’s closest allies.

In a recent interview with Undersecretary Rogers, RCI noted that the State Department appeared to be “knocking on the door of the Prime Minister’s office.” Rogers demurred, declining to detail her discussion with Starmer officials. “We have a very special relationship with the British government,” she responded. “The issue has been communicated.”

Senior Labour Minister Chi Onwurah accused the Trump administration of attacking free speech after Rubio announced shortly before Christmas that the administration was seeking Ahmed’s deportation. “Banning people because you disagree with what they say undermines the free speech the administration claims to seek,” Onwurah said, adding that Ahmed was an articulate advocate for greater regulation of online speech.

However, internal British government documents show that Onwurah is one of Starmer’s many advisors who have been working with Ahmed on activities many consider censorship. Ahmed and Onwurah did respond to requests for comment.

Weaponizing Censorship

The Center for Countering Digital Hate grew out of the efforts of Labour Together, a think tank founded in 2015 to undermine Jeremy Corbyn, a far-left member of Parliament who led the Labour Party at the time. McSweeney, a leading figure in the organization, founded the Center around 2018 with Ahmed as a potent weapon to attack political enemies and advance narratives in the British media.

In a tactic also deployed by progressives in the U.S., the Center worked to silence voices it opposed by creating advertising blacklists to deprive disfavored media outlets of revenue. One successful campaign involved constant claims of “misinformation” and antisemitism lodged against the influential leftist news site Canary to drive away advertisers and tank their funding. “Bye birdie! Hyper-partisan fake news website The Canary is on its last legs!” tweeted British TV host and Center campaigner, Rachel Riley, celebrating a 2019 crash in The Canary’s advertising.

In 2021, Ahmed opened an office in Washington, D.C., and began working with American journalists to censor dissent and enforce political narratives friendly to Democrats and the Biden administration. The Center’s chairman is Simon Clark, a former senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a think tank founded by John Podesta, who ran Hillary Clinton’s campaign against Donald Trump in the 2016 election.

In 2021, the Center for Countering Digital Hate released a report targeting a “disinformation dozen” of critics complaining about the Biden administration’s COVID vaccine policies. This report, released by an organization founded only months earlier in the United States, received a warm reception at the White House.

At a July 2021 press briefing, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki quoted from the report while claiming that Facebook was undermining federal vaccine policies. “There’s about 12 people who are producing 65% of anti-vaccine misinformation on social media platforms,” Psaki stated. Facebook criticized the Center’s report for being free of evidence and failing to explain how they arrived at their numbers and conclusions.

One of the people included in the “disinformation dozen” was Robert Kennedy Jr., who was considering a run against President Biden in the Democrats’ 2024 primaries. The Center’s “infamous ‘disinformation dozen’ report specifically called for deplatforming Secretary Robert F. Kennedy and others,” wrote Secretary Rubio in his memo calling for Ahmed’s deportation.

Targeting Musk’s X

In the summer of 2023, the Center hosted a private conference in Washington for liberal groups allied with the Biden administration for the purpose of neutralizing the influence of X owner Elon Musk, who was helping to fund Trump’s presidential campaign. The list of attendees included Biden White House and State Department officials, Democratic Party congressional staffers, union leaders, the heads of several progressive foundations, and employees of the hyper-partisan website Media Matters for America. While no Republicans or conservatives appear on the roster, at least one member of the British foreign service is listed as an invited guest. Annabel Graham is a diplomat and national security professional based at the British Embassy in Washington. She previously handled the Home Office’s engagement with the U.S. and Five Eyes partners.

Working in parallel with Media Matters, the Center took aim at X’s advertisers, just as it had the British Canary. After the Center and Media Matters released reports claiming that Musk’s social media site was promoting “hate,” companies such as Disney announced they were pulling their advertising from X, triggering a crash in Musk’s profits. Disney’s CEO at the time, Bob Iger, was also a major donor to the Biden administration.

Ahmed has also worked in Brussels to influence EU censorship laws. When European regulators first began targeting X for alleged disinformation in late 2023, Ahmed celebrated on social media, implying that his organization was behind the move. “The @CCDHate has been briefing EU officials since October 7,” he wrote, “using our research on the tidal wave of hate and disinformation coming from social media.”

“X has surged to become the leading news app in every EU country, serving tens of millions of Europeans who use the platform daily to access uncensored information,” the State Department noted in its filings to deport Ahmed.  

Friends in High Places

The Center’s involvement in U.S. politics is especially fraught because of its close connections with Britain’s leaders. 

Ahmed began working hard to lobby the Labour government even before its landslide victory in July 2024. Weeks before the election, Ahmed emailed his staffers, looping them in with Josh Simons on his private Gmail to set up a meeting. “Josh is head of Labour Together and is a key person in policy for the next Labour government,” Ahmed wrote. Simons soon left the think tank to become a member of Parliament, where he is a close ally of Starmer.

The Guardian recently reported that before his election to Parliament, Simons “commissioned and reviewed a report in 2023 on journalists investigating the thinktank [Labour Together] that would help propel Keir Starmer to power.”

The Center even has its own members now operating in Parliament. One of the newly elected MPs, Kirsty McNeill, sat on the organization’s board from late 2019 until her 2024 election to Parliament. McNeill was listed in the Center’s staff handbook as a lead trustee, and the group’s mental well-being plan provided McNeill’s personal cell phone for their Mental Welfare Hotline. “Please feel free to contact Kirsty if you have any concerns about your Mental Wellbeing that is not being addressed by CCDH and/or your Line Manager.”  

Ahmed has also been working quite closely with the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, which is responsible for regulating speech in the U.K., including implementing the Online Safety Act. Passed in 2023, the Act put a “range of new duties on social media companies and search services, giving them legal duties to protect their users from illegal content and content harmful to children.” The Starmer government has taken pains to hide Ahmed’s work with the department. When a British reporter asked the department to detail their relationship and work with Ahmed and the Center, it told him to file a freedom of information request.

Newly uncovered documents show that weeks after Labour won the 2024 election, Ahmed wrote to Baroness Jones of Whitchurch, whom Starmer appointed as a leading Minister of the department. Ahmed introduced Jones to his work to “outline the policy areas CCDH believes are critical to delivering your forthcoming agenda.”

Ahmed highlighted that the Center had “championed the Online Safety Act since its inception,” and bragged that he was the “first witness before the draft bill committee” that had reviewed the Act. He also promised that the Center would “continue to be a critical partner to OFCOM,” the U.K. regulator charged with enforcing the censorship act.

“We welcome the opportunity to work with your office as the UK leads the charge in online safety,” Ahmed wrote.

Ahmed stepped up his lobbying in August 2024, writing once again to Jones that, “Social media platforms cannot be a haven for those looking to sow division in our communities. … Please contact for further information or to arrange a briefing with CCDH.”

Closed-Door Meeting

Heavily redacted documents show that Ahmed met personally with senior department officials in early November 2024. This meeting led to a previously unreported closed-door roundtable with Baroness Jones and other prominent politicians. Documents show that Baroness Jones personally addressed the roundtable in her role as Minister for Online Safety. Jones emailed CCDH organizers and recommended that the meeting “focus on how best we can collectively monitor the impact the [Online Safety Act] is having and identify areas – based on evidence – of where further targeted interventions are needed.” 

Last July, the department published a report which argued that the Act “does not go far enough to address the spread of harmful misinformation.”

Baroness Jones left the department to join the House of Lords in September, and the department did not respond to RCI’s request for comment.

Senior directors at OFCOM, which is assessing and enforcing the Online Safety Act, were slated to attend this meeting, as was Simons and four other Labour MPs. Simons was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary to the department last month. He did not return request for comment sent to his government and private email.

Another guest expected to attend the private roundtable was Chi Onwurah, the MP who defended Ahmed when Secretary Rubio announced deportation proceedings. Onwurah chairs the Science and Technology Select Committee, which has oversight of the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.

Onwurah seems determined to obfuscate and mislead the media about her work with the Center. During a December BBC interview, she giggled when asked if the Center was a Labour Party front group that pushed through the Online Safety Act.

“The Online Safety Act was brought forward under the Conservatives and by the Conservative Party,” Onwurah told the BBC. Onwurah’s claim is a poor attempt to recast recent history.

Ahmed had, in fact, recruited at least one member of the Conservative Party. Damian Collins joined the Center in July 2020, and the British government later published a decision allowing his membership with Ahmed’s organization.

A Conservative Party MP, Collins is the original sponsor of the Online Safety Act. And the first person Collins had testify in favor of the act was Imran Ahmed, his colleague at the Center. 

After Parliament passed the Online Safety Act, which Collins and Ahmed campaigned for, Collins celebrated on X. Collins later left Parliament to join Geradin Partners in London to run the public policy practice at one of the leading law firms for digital regulation in Europe. Collins is also a director at Orbis, a firm co-founded by former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele. Steele’s now-debunked dossier, alleging ties between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia, helped spark years of investigation that plagued Trump's first term. 

The Trump White House has complained several times to the Starmer government about the Online Safety Act. Vice President JD Vance has said the law infringes on individual rights. When Vance accompanied an American delegationto London last August, he said the Online Safety Act is taking the Starmer government down a “very dark path” of online censorship. 

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 08:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
California Dominates America's AI/Data-Center Jobs
California Dominates America's AI/Data-Center Jobs

The AI boom isn’t just about chatbots and software. It’s also creating thousands of jobs tied to the physical infrastructure that powers large-scale computing.

As companies race to build data centers and expand AI capacity, employment tied to AI infrastructure has climbed to 482,716 jobs nationwide, according to 2025 data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

This map, via Visual Capitalist's Jeff Desjardins, ranks all 50 states by AI and data center employment, highlighting where this fast-growing segment of the tech economy has taken root—and which states have built the deepest talent bases.



The AI and Data Center Boom: Jobs by State

California leads the nation with 81,577 AI and data center jobs, accounting for about 17% of the U.S. total.

While California dominates in total jobs, Washington ranks first on a per capita basis, with 289.8 roles per 100,000 residents. This is partially thanks to being home base to companies like Microsoft and Amazon.



More populous states like Texas (48,029), Florida (28,682), and New York (27,849) are all at the top of the leaderboard in absolute terms. That said, the latter two (Florida and New York) are actually below average in per capita terms.

Silicon Slopes and the Data Center Capital of the World

When sorting the list in per capita terms, the states Utah, Missouri, and Virginia stand out—all making the top five.

Virginia has the world’s largest concentration of data centers (Northern Virginia’s “Data Center Alley”), driven by hyperscalers, federal demand, and dense fiber connectivity.

Utah is known in the tech industry as “Silicon Slopes”, with a budding startup ecosystem, strong SaaS presence, and tax-friendly policies for data center investment.

Finally, Missouri is an emerging Midwest tech hub with growing cloud, geospatial intelligence, and defense-tech activity, supported by low-cost power and central U.S. connectivity.

Learn more about data center electricity demand by region in this visualization on Voronoi.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 08:45

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine strikes missile plant deep inside Russia
The Votkinsk factory is more than 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) from Ukraine.

Mail Online
Open 
Winter Olympics speed skater breaks her silence as she goes under the knife for emergency facial surgery after having eye slashed by rival's blade
Kamila Sellier was stretchered from the ice with her face covered in blood after a horrifying accident shown live on TV during the women's 1500m at the Milan-Cortina Games.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
All Korean Airlines Ban In-Flight Use of Power Banks
All Korean passenger airlines will prohibit the in-flight use of portable batteries starting Monday Feb. 23, expanding safety measures following a series of onboard fire incidents linked to power banks.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Airbus Targets Record 870 Aircraft Deliveries in 2026
Airbus is aiming to deliver a record number of commercial aircraft in 2026, buoyed by strong global demand and a sharp rise in annual profit.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Top Stories: Apple Event on March 4, iOS 26.4 Beta, and More
It looks like our first major Apple product announcements of 2026 are right around the corner, with Apple announcing a "special Apple Experience" for members of the media scheduled for March 4 where we're expecting to see them get hands-on time with several newly announced products.





In other Apple news this week, the first betas of iOS 26.4 and related updates include some new features and enhancements, while we heard a bit more about the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max coming later this year, so read on below for all the details on these stories and more!



Top Stories

Apple Announces Special Event in New York, London, and Shanghai on March 4

Apple this week invited members of the media to a "special Apple Experience" taking place simultaneously in New York, London, and Shanghai on Wednesday, March 4.





Rather than a traditional Apple event, it sounds like these "experiences" will be opportunities for the media to get hands-on time with a variety of products being announced at the start of or slightly before the event time.



It actually sounds like we may be getting several days of press release announcements in the first part of the week, culminating in the media experiences on Wednesday. While we don't know exactly what products will be announced that week, there are a host of new products expected in the near future including the iPhone 17e, M5 Pro and M5 Max MacBook Pro models, new iPads, and more.



Everything New in iOS 26.4 Beta 1

Following last week's release of iOS 26.3, Apple this week seeded the first betas of iOS 26.4 and related updates.





While it doesn't include the more personalized Siri we had been hoping for, there are a bunch of changes and new features in the update.



One of the more interesting changes being prepped for in the release is support for CarPlay video over AirPlay, which will allow users to stream Apple TV and other video content to their car's infotainment screen while their vehicle is parked.



Five iPhone 18 Pro Features Revealed in New Report

While the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max should have very similar designs to their predecessors, they are likely to be getting an array of new features and upgrades to attract customers.





Research analyst Jeff Pu recently outlined five upgrades he's expecting to see in the new models, and we've recapped a full list of ten reasons why you might want to wait for the new models if you're considering buying now.



Apple Reveals How Many iPhones Are Running iOS 26

With the transition to the controversial new Liquid Glass design in iOS 26, some users appear to have been holding off on upgrading, but new data released by Apple last week suggests the impact is relatively small.





Apple adoption data shows roughly the same share of devices are running iOS 26 at this point as were running iOS 18 a year ago, although the company did wait three weeks longer to release data this year. So while it appears adoption is lagging a bit this year, it's not a massive difference.



Toyota Rolling Out Apple Wallet Car Keys on iPhone

Toyota, the world's largest car manufacturer, is finally rolling out support for Apple's digital car key feature, allowing users to lock, unlock, and start compatible vehicles from the Wallet app on their iPhone or Apple Watch.





Signs of the impending support were discovered back in December, and we've seen our first report of vehicles in the wild supporting it with the new 2026 RAV4.



Apple Launching New 'Sales Coach' App

Apple plans to launch a rebranded "Sales Coach" app on the iPhone and iPad later this month, according to a source familiar with the matter.





"Sales Coach" will arrive as an update to Apple's existing "SEED" app, and it will continue to provide sales tips and training resources to Apple Store and Apple Authorized Reseller employees around the world. For example, there are articles and videos highlighting everything from reasons to upgrade to a newer iPhone to popular iPad features.



MacRumors Newsletter

Each week, we publish an email newsletter like this highlighting the top Apple stories, making it a great way to get a bite-sized recap of the week hitting all of the major topics we've covered and tying together related stories for a big-picture view.



So if you want to have top stories like the above recap delivered to your email inbox each week, subscribe to our newsletter!Tag: Top StoriesThis article, 'Top Stories: Apple Event on March 4, iOS 26.4 Beta, and More' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

CNET News
Open 
MLS 2026 Kicks Off This Weekend With a New Setup on Apple TV
You can watch Lionel Messi without worrying about paying for a season pass.

The Hill
Open 
Majority of Americans approve of Supreme Court’s ruling on Trump tariffs
Most Americans say the Supreme Court got it right in blocking much of President Trump’s sweeping emergency tariffs, according to a new survey. The YouGov poll, released Friday, found that 60 percent of U.S. adults "strongly" or "somewhat" approve of the high court's decision. Another 23 percent say they "strongly" or "somewhat" disapprove of the...

The Hill
Open 
Former 'Jersey Shore' star Snooki says she has cervical cancer
“So 2026 is not panning out how I wanted it to,” she said.

The Hill
Open 
Affordability is a structural problem that monetary policy can’t fix
The affordability crisis, especially in housing, health care and education, is not about Federal Reserve decisions.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump tariffs: EU grapples with fallout of US court ruling
European leaders and businesses have responded to the US Supreme Court's decision to rule many of US President Donald Trump's tariffs illegal with both cautious optimism and deep uncertainty.

Mail Online
Open 
Having a Wales of a time! Kate can't stop giggling as she cheers on England in Six Nations rugby match - after week from hell for Royals after Andrew's arrest
The Princess of Wales arrived to cheer on the England rugby team in their match against Ireland this afternoon at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump tariffs: Europe grapples with fallout of US ruling
European leaders and businesses have responded to the US Supreme Court's decision to rule many of US President Donald Trump's tariffs illegal with both cautious optimism and deep uncertainty.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What was Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s trade envoy role?
Backed by Labour and Conservative figures, he was a controversial choice when appointed in 2001Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office, bringing his former role as the UK’s special representative for international trade and investment into focus. He denies any wrongdoing. But what was that role? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo wins historic sixth gold, ski cross joy for Italy – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England v Ireland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 2.10pm kickoff (GMT) at Twickenham Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Lee2 mins. The clearing kick from Ireland is returned by England with some carries up to the Irish 22. Ford floats a cross-kick to the right touchline where Steward claims it, but he’s quickly wrapped up by Lowe and two phases later a knock-on in midfield hands a scrum to the visitors.First test for what has been a very creaky Irish scrum in the tournament so far. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Water disruption may last 'several days' after river diesel spillage
Residents in Killin have been warned by Scottish Water not to use tap water for anything other than flushing toilets.

BBC UK News
Open 
Gavin Henson on autism, shaving his legs and struggles with rugby fame
Henson was a star on and off the field, but says he struggled with the media spotlight on him.

Mail Online
Open 
Bishop of Lincoln, 68, is arrested for sexual assault and has been suspended from ministry after complaint was made
The Right Reverend Stephen Conway (pictured), 68, was detained amid an 'ongoing investigation' into allegations of sexual violence, Lincolnshire Police confirmed.

Mail Online
Open 
Two bodies are found in Snowdonia in hunt for missing men, 19 and 20, as mountain rescue team battle snow and ice
Mountain rescuers battled snow and ice in a days-long search which tragically ended after two bodies were found.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Man dies after being stabbed outside mosque
West Midlands Police says two other men were also injured outside the mosque in Smethwick.

Russia Today News
Open 
Epstein ranch under criminal investigation after ‘buried bodies’ claim – Reuters

Mail Online
Open 
MPs consider trade envoys inquiry after Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's arrest over misconduct in a public office
The Business and Trade Committee will meet on Tuesday to discuss its options, as police continue to investigate the allegations against the former prince.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate keeps calm and carries on: Princess of Wales cheers on England in Six Nations rugby match as Royal Family reels from Andrew arrest
The Princess of Wales arrived to cheer on the England rugby team in their match against Ireland this afternoon at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham.

BBC UK News
Open 
Bottled water handed out to villagers after river diesel spillage
Residents in Killin have been warned by Scottish Water not to use tap water for anything other than flushing toilets.

BBC UK News
Open 
Third man arrested after teens die at holiday park
Ethan Slater, 17, and Cherish Bean, 15, died at a holiday park near Bridlington on Wednesday.

Ars Technica
Open 
Dinosaur eggshells can reveal the age of other fossils

Russia Today News
Open 
EU state issues ultimatum to Zelensky over Russian oil supplies

Mail Online
Open 
You're washing your gym clothes wrong! Experts reveal why you should NEVER put sweaty garments straight in the machine
When you get home after the gym, it might seem practical to throw your sweaty clothes straight into the machine. But experts say this can actually trap odour.

Mail Online
Open 
Maura Higgins' blink-and-you'll-miss-it film debut: TV star has less than TWO minutes of air time in her hotly-anticipated comedy The Spin
Maura Higgins was said to have 'impressed big Hollywood executives' with her appearance in Irish comedy The Spin.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside Sophie Turner rebrand after a therapy breakthrough, career reboot and 'very expensive' Joe Jonas divorce as she enters her 30, flirty and thriving era
Sophie Turner has been on a journey of reinvention as she enters a new chapter of her life, her thirties.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's most dangerous prisoner Charles Bronson pledges to 'expose his unlawful sentence' as it's confirmed he'll get to make new oral bid for freedom
Charles Bronson, now 73, has spent over five decades in custody, after being first jailed back in 1974 aged 21 for armed robbery.

Mail Online
Open 
I was on Take Me Out - we weren't even allowed to eat the food on our staged date and I didn't get paid a penny
A Take Me Out contestant has opened up about the surprising reality of being on the show - and it turns out that those lucky enough to bag a date on the Isle of Fernando's can't actually eat the food.

Mail Online
Open 
Missed the films lauded at the BAFTAs and Oscars at the cinema? Here's where to stream the most critically acclaimed movies of the last year
There are few things better than sitting down to watch a brilliant film, but as all cinephiles know, not all films are created equally.

Mail Online
Open 
Why you should holiday in peaceful Greenland while you still can - and the best way to see the country
President Trump has his eye on it - so, is now the time to sneak in a trip to explore a territory largely untouched by tourism? Jo Kessel makes the trip.

Mail Online
Open 
'Miracle' in the Alps: Moment Brit skier, 23, is swept away in 1,300ft avalanche before friends dig through 7ft of snow to save his life with minutes to spare near top French mountain resort
Daniel Matthews was buried under 7ft of snow and remained unconscious for five minutes when part of the mountainside he was skiing on in Tignes in the French Alps collapsed on Friday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Salad praise: how ice hockey’s ‘lettuce’ hair is winning over Hollywood
Gentler take on mullet has flowed over shoulders at Winter Olympics and is now tossed on red carpetsHair cut ideas are typically drummed up in the salon, but recently a more unconventional source of inspiration has appeared: the vegetable aisle.“Lettuce hair” is trending. A gentler take on a traditional mullet, the new salad style consists of more subtle differences in the length between the back, sides and top of the hair. Lettuce hair features a loose and often wavy top, softly tapered sides and a feathery tail that skims the back of the neck, resembling leafy greens. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘He was approachable, down-to-earth, irritating’: inside the real-life love story of JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette
As Ryan Murphy’s new mini-series focuses on their explosive relationship, aides and experts explain the real-life couple behind the myth He only met John F Kennedy Jr for five minutes but, three decades later, the memory lingers on. “Oh my God, he had it all,” says Larry Sabato, a political scientist, recalling their encounter at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in Washington. “He had his mother’s poise and his father’s charisma; it was a perfect combination of the two. If there was anybody destined to be president, it was him.”In the US, the Kennedys occupy territory somewhere between the British royal family and Greek tragedy, a tale of impossible glamour pierced by spectacles of public mourning. More than a quarter of a century after the single-engine plane piloted by John Kennedy Jr plunged into the Atlantic Ocean, killing him; his wife, Carolyn Bessette; and her sister, Lauren Bessette, Camelot is being mined for content once more. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England v Ireland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 2.10pm kickoff (GMT) at Twickenham Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email LeeMaro Itoje takes a huge ovation from his home crowd as he enters the arena alone on the occasion of his 100th appearance. The teams emerge soon after into a overcast but very still afternoon in south west London; the conditions are ideal for rugby.It’s England captain Maro Itoje’s 100th cap today, his latest appearance in a brilliant career. At 31 years of age you imagine there are plenty more caps to come to add more lustre to his already achieved England all-time great status. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Six races, six golds - Klaebo's historic Olympics
Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo, Norway's king of cross-country skiing, breaks the record for the most gold medals won at a single Winter Olympics with his sixth of the Games.

Russia Today News
Open 
‘Satanic’ – Putin aide on ex-Prince Andrew and his ‘liberal West friends’

Mail Online
Open 
How Meghan partied while the Fab Four fell: Did Duchess's ultra lavish New York baby shower take place while William confronted Harry over her 'abrasive' nature - before pushing him into a dog bowl?
While Meghan partied in New York with her A-list pals, Prince Harry may have been reeling from his infamous fight with Prince William at Nottingham Cottage.

BBC World News
Open 
Civilians to soldiers: how four years of war has changed ordinary Ukrainians
Seven Ukrainian men and women in uniform reveal how Russia's invasion in 2022 has changed them.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rahm’s refusal to pay fine over LIV Golf puts Ryder Cup future in peril
LIV rebel rejects European Tour Group’s offer Tyrrell Hatton has settled over seven-figure fineJon Rahm’s Ryder Cup future is in serious doubt after the Spaniard failed to join his teammate Tyrrell Hatton in settling a dispute over a seven-figure fine with the European Tour Group over participation in LIV Golf.Hatton is one of eight players who have agreed to settle all outstanding fines due in Europe and withdraw any appeals in return for releases to play on LIV tournaments in 2026. Luke Donald, who is expected to remain in office for a third stint as Europe’s Ryder Cup captain, wanted the situation with Hatton and Rahm resolved. Donald has only partly got his wish, with Adare Manor in 2027 looming ever closer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brook says overlooking Pakistan players for the Hundred would be ‘a shame’
England captain urges four Indian-owned sides to think againSunrisers Leeds player will be in charge this yearHarry Brook has called on teams in this year’s Hundred to embrace Pakistan players after it was reported that they would not be considered by the tournament’s four Indian-owned sides.Brook, England’s white-ball captain, is contracted to Sunrisers Leeds, owned by the Indian media corporation the Sun Group, owners of the IPL side Sunrisers Hyderabad, and is the highest-paid player in the tournament. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Leeds, Chelsea v Burnley, Championship and more: Saturday clockwatch – live
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomBrentford: Kelleher; Hickey, Ajer, Van den Berg, Henry; Janelt, Henderson, Jensen; Ouattara, Lewis-Potter, Thiago.Subs: Valdimarsson, Pinnock, Schade, Nelson, Yamoliuk, Collins, Damsgaard, Donovan, Furo. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's benefits capitals mapped as figures reveal up to 14% of working-age adults are getting handouts in parts of country
Britain's unemployment benefits capitals have been mapped as new data shows up to 14 percent of working-age adults who are required to look for work are receiving handouts in parts of the country.

Mail Online
Open 
Retired company director, 56, killed after being buried 8ft deep in Alps avalanche while skiing off-piste without safety transmitter
Neil Willetts, 56, was buried under tonnes of snow after he was engulfed by a huge snowslide in the popular resort of La Plagne on January 11.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games
Victory in 50km mass start breaks record from 1980Teammates Nyenget and Iversen lock out podiumAt the end of the great races in the history of the Winter Olympics, there was the greatest athlete in the history of the Winter Olympics. After a little over two hours of racing Johannes Høsflot Klæbo won his sixth gold medal of these Games when he beat his Norwegian teammate Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget by 17.4 seconds to win the men’s 50km classic.The triumph meant the 29-year-old set the record for the most gold medals in a single Winter Games, set by the US speed skater Eric Heiden when he won five at Lake Placid in 1980. In an age of exaggeration and in an industry that loves overstatement, it is entirely true to say that there has never been anything quite like it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour minister faces calls to be sacked over false claims against journalists
Guardian investigation showed Josh Simons falsely linked journalists to ‘pro-Kremlin’ network in emails to GCHQPoliticians from across the spectrum have said a minister should be sacked after a Guardian report that he had accused journalists of having links to Russian intelligence.Their comments came after an investigation showed that Josh Simons, who was running Labour Together at the time, had falsely concluded the journalists had obtained information about the thinktank from a Russian hack. Continue reading...

Autosport F1
Open 
Analysis: Is F1 engine vote a fair solution after Mercedes kept FIA 'in the loop'?
Ever since rivals discovered that Mercedes could comply with the 16:1 limit during static tests, but can achieve a higher ratio while running on track, the compression ratio has become the biggest political topic of Formula 1’s pre-season.During the first week in Bahrain, Wolff made it clear that Mercedes had closely involved the FIA throughout the entire engine development process and kept ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Wales vs Scotland: Free Streams, TV Channels & Preview for Six Nations 2026 clash

TechRadar News
Open 
Google's 'America-India Connect' is filling in the last gaps for a truly global subsea cable network

TechRadar News
Open 
The Samsung Galaxy S26 is tipped to get 2 smart camera upgrades – but the OnePlus 16 may show it up with an elite new telephoto sensor

Slashdot
Open 
Hazardous Substances Found In All Headphones Tested By ToxFREE Project
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: You wear them at work, you wear them at play, you wear them to relax. You may even get sweaty in them at the gym. But an investigation into headphones has found every single pair tested contained substances hazardous to human health, including chemicals that can cause cancer, neurodevelopmental problems and the feminization of males. [...] Researchers say that while individual doses from particular sources may be low, a "cocktail effect" of daily, multi-source exposure nevertheless poses potentially severe long-term risks to health. [...]

Researchers bought 81 pairs of in-ear and over-ear headphones, either on the market in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia and Austria, or from the online marketplaces Shein and Temu, and took them for laboratory analysis, testing for a range of harmful chemicals. "Hazardous substances were detected in every product tested," they said. Bisphenol A (BPA) appeared in 98% of samples, and its substitute, bisphenol S (BPS), was found in more than three-quarters. Synthetic chemicals used to stiffen plastic, BPA and BPS mimic the action of oestrogen inside organisms, causing a range of adverse effects including the feminization of males, early onset puberty in girls, and cancer. Previous studies have shown that bisphenols can migrate from synthetic materials into sweat, and that they can be absorbed through the skin.

"Given the prolonged skin contact associated with headphone use, dermal exposure represents a relevant pathway, and it is reasonable to assume that similar migration of BPA and its substitutes may occur from headphone components directly to the user's skin," the researchers said. Also found in the headphones tested were phthalates, potent reproductive toxins that can impair fertility; chlorinated paraffins, which have been linked to liver and kidney damage; and brominated and organophosphate flame retardants, which have similar endocrine disrupting properties to bisphenols. Most were, however, found in only trace quantities.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Could these 6 non-AI chip stocks be the next leg of the AI boom?
Analog chips have largely missed out on a broader semiconductor rally over the last two years — but that may be about to change.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I need to get my financial ducks in a row’: I’m 80 with $1 million. How do I prevent my son from being hit with inheritance tax?
“I have $650,000 in investments, $250,000 in life insurance and about $150,000 equity in my home.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This week’s slump in asset-manager stocks was driven by private-credit fears. Here’s what’s worrying investors.
Shares of asset managers fell due to worries over a private-credit fund managed by Blue Owl Capital, triggering broader anxiety about spillover effects.

The Verge
Open 
Stellantis is in a crisis of its own making
Demand for EVs has gone glacial, and one automaker after another is running aground: General Motors threw $7.6 billion overboard. Ford washed $19.5 billion off its books. Leave it to Stellantis to face the most titanic charge yet, a $26.5 billion bill for its own misplaced bet on EVs. The Jeep, Dodge, and Chrysler parent [&#8230;]

The Aviationist
Open 
Ukrainian Air Force F-16 Captured Shooting Down Russian Target with APKWS II
Following the first sighting of the new capability in December 2025, a Ukrainian F-16 was captured using APKWS II laser-guided rockets to engage a drone. A Ukrainian Air Force F-16 was captured for the first time while using its Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) II guided rockets against a Russian unmanned system, believed to [&#8230;]

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the gilded life of Asos boss's ex-wife who had accused British fashion firm founder of fraud before his deadly fall from 17th floor Thai apartment
This is the ex-wife of the British co-founder of online fashion group Asos, who fell to his death from the 17th floor of his Thai apartment and who has insisted she played no part in his death.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Leeds, Chelsea v Burnley, Championship and more: Saturday clockwatch – live
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomLet’s have a look ahead to the Premier League weekend. Team news for the 3pm games will be dropping in 15 minutes or so.ChampionshipHull 1-1 QPRStoke 1-0 LeicesterSwansea 1-0 Bristol CityWest Brom 0-2 CoventryPlymouth 3-2 CardiffRotherham 1-0 DoncasterWycombe 1-0 StevenageFleetwood 0-2 BarrowSwindon 0-1 Crewe Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England v Ireland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 2.10pm kickoff (GMT) at Twickenham Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email LeeIt’s England captain Maro Itoje’s 100th cap today, his latest appearance in a brilliant career. At 31 years of age you imagine there are plenty more caps to come to add more lustre to his already achieved England all-time great status.Henry Pollock starts his first international game today, and Rob Kitson has thoughts on it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Oscars bellwether, British awards or both? The identity dilemma facing the Baftas
Few UK nominations this year as industry tries to balance attracting global attention and celebrating homegrown projectsIt may be billed as Britain’s premier film awards, but when nominations for the Baftas were announced last month, the lack of British representation in the top categories was hard to ignore. Just one British actor, Robert Aramayo, appeared in the leading actor category, while there were no British nominees at all for leading actress (the UK-based Irish actor Jessie Buckley notwithstanding).Peter Mullan was the only Briton in the supporting actor category, while representation for best supporting actress fared better, with Emily Watson, Carey Mulligan and Wunmi Mosaku nominated. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bishop of Lincoln arrested on suspicion of sexual assault
Church suspends Stephen Conway as police investigate claim man was sexually assaulted between 2018 and 2025The bishop of Lincoln has been arrested on suspicion of sexual assault, according to police.Lincolnshire police confirmed that a 68-year-old man was arrested as part of an “ongoing investigation following an allegation that a man was sexually assaulted between 2018 and 2025”. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
The best indoor TV antenna of 2026: Expert recommended
An indoor TV antenna is a great, budget-friendly way to access free local news, sports, and entertainment channels and help ditch streaming apps or cut the cord with your cable provider.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11050 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Supplier Maintenance - Coventry (New)
Supplier will be carrying out planned maintenance on our network infrastructure.

Change Reference: CHG0128995
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Service(s):

Service No Agent Ref
S981124 2841179

Work Description:
ASN relocation.

Maintenance Window:
Start: 10/03/2026 09:00 GMT
End: 10/03/2026 15:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers are expected to experience an interruption of approximately 4 hours during the maintenance window. In the event of unforeseen on-site issues, the outage duration may exceed this estimate.

Although daytime working is not preferred, overnight activity has not been possible in certain cases due to operational constraints. Where works are carried out during the day, every effort will be made to minimise disruption and complete the activity as efficiently and safely as possible.

All work will be completed as quickly as practicable to reduce customer impact.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 10th Mar 2026 09:00

End: Tue, 10th Mar 2026 15:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:16

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11051 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Supplier Maintenance - Chippenham (New)
Supplier will be carrying out planned maintenance on our network infrastructure.

Change Reference: CHG0128931
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Service(s):
Chippenham

Work Description:
FEX audit.

Maintenance Window:
Start: 11/03/2026 02:00 GMT
End: 11/03/2026 06:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers are expected to experience an interruption of approximately 5 minutes during the maintenance window. In the event of unforeseen on-site issues, the outage duration may exceed this estimate.

All work will be completed as efficiently as possible to minimise disruption.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 24th Feb 2026 02:00

End: Tue, 24th Feb 2026 06:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:35

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11052 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Supplier Maintenance - Dundee (New)
Planned maintenance will be carried out on the supplier network.

Change Reference: CHG0128833
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Services (Dundee):

Service No Agent Ref Location
S1470647 2998800 Dundee
S1649381 3043767 Dundee
S759834 2748297 Dundee
S1649919 3043907 Dundee
S1471087 2998887 Dundee
S1471100 2998901 Dundee
S1472276 2998907 Dundee
S1470825 2998836 Dundee
S821331 2777475 Dundee
S1361044 2972371 Dundee
S941651 2831941 Dundee
S1118941 2887333 Dundee
S400984 2549633 Dundee
S862713 2796468 Dundee

Work Description:
Cable replacement.

Maintenance Window:
Start: 12/03/2026 08:00 GMT
End: 12/03/2026 17:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers are expected to experience a service interruption of approximately 9 hours during the maintenance window. Should unforeseen on-site issues arise, the outage duration may exceed this estimate.

Although daytime working is not preferred, overnight activity has not been possible in certain cases due to operational constraints. Where works take place during the day, every effort will be made to minimise disruption and complete the activity as efficiently and safely as possible.

All work will be completed as quickly as practicable to reduce customer impact.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 12th Mar 2026 08:00

End: Thu, 12th Mar 2026 17:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:25

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11053 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Supplier Maintenance - Sunderland (New)
Planned maintenance will be carried out on the supplier network.

Change Reference: CHG0127176
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Service(s):
As previously notified.

Work Description:
Cabinet redress (rescheduled).

Maintenance Window:
Start: 11/03/2026 08:00 GMT
End: 11/03/2026 17:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers are expected to experience a service interruption of approximately 4 hours during the maintenance window. Should unforeseen on-site issues arise, the outage duration may exceed this estimate.

Although daytime working is not preferred, overnight activity has not been possible in certain cases due to operational constraints. Where works take place during the day, every effort will be made to minimise disruption and complete the activity as efficiently and safely as possible.

All work will be completed as quickly as practicable to reduce customer impact.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 11th Mar 2026 08:00

End: Wed, 11th Mar 2026 17:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:29

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11054 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Supplier Maintenance - York (New)
Emergency maintenance will be carried out on the supplier network.

Change Reference: CHG0129257
Customer Impact: Service Impacting

Affected Service(s):

Service No Agent Ref
S1359605 2971134

Work Description:
Relocation of Aerial Service Node (ASN).

Maintenance Window:
Start: 05/03/2026 08:00 GMT
End: 05/03/2026 14:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers will experience a loss of service during the maintenance window.

Works are scheduled during daytime hours, which fall outside of preferred maintenance periods. However, due to safety requirements, overnight working has been ruled out. The dates have been mandated by Openreach and cannot be amended.

All work will be completed as efficiently as possible to minimise disruption.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 5th Mar 2026 08:00

End: Thu, 5th Mar 2026 14:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:31

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Emergency

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11055 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Supplier Maintenance - Newcastle Upon Tyne (New)
Emergency maintenance will be carried out on the supplier network.

Change Reference: CHG0129333
Customer Impact: Service Impacting

Affected Service(s):

Service No Agent Ref
S1812554 3084399

Work Description:
Relocation of Aerial Service Node (ASN).

Maintenance Window:
Start: 27/02/2026 08:30 GMT
End: 27/02/2026 13:30 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers will experience a loss of service during the maintenance window.

Works are scheduled during daytime hours, which fall outside preferred maintenance periods. However, due to safety requirements, overnight working has been ruled out. The dates have been mandated by Openreach and cannot be amended.

All work will be completed as efficiently as possible to minimise disruption.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Fri, 27th Feb 2026 08:30

End: Fri, 27th Feb 2026 13:30

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 13:33

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Emergency

CNET News
Open 
What's Coming to Disneyland and Disney World in 2026 and Beyond? Rides, Lands and More
Are we close to getting those new Avengers, Avatar and Coco rides? And what about the new lands for Cars, Monsters Inc. and Disney's villains? Here's what to expect and when.

CNET News
Open 
Galaxy S26 Rumors: Lots of Leaks About Samsung's New Phone Series
Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event is a few days away. Here's what we know so far about the Galaxy S26, S26 Plus and S26 Ultra.

CNET News
Open 
In a World Without BlackBerry, Physical Keyboards on Phones Are Making a Comeback
Commentary: You might not even need a new phone to get clicky buttons.

The Hill
Open 
Not so fast: Quick-moving AI leaves accountability behind in the dust
As technology accelerates action, responsibility cannot be reconstructed later. It has to exist at the moment a decision takes effect. 

Mail Online
Open 
How can I stop taking pills for my depression and avoid the side effects? DR ELLIE has the answer...
Coming off antidepressants can be very difficult. But with the right steps, most patients can safely stop taking the tablets.

BBC World News
Open 
Katseye's Manon to take 'temporary hiatus' to focus on health
The six-person girl group say the decision was made following "open and thoughtful conversations together".

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Leeds, Chelsea v Burnley, Championship and more: Saturday clockwatch – live
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomPlymouth v Cardiff in League One was goalless the last time I checked, just before the half hour mark. Then the following happened:28 mins – Lorent Tolaj makes it 1-0 Plymouth31 mins – Aribim Pepple doubles the hosts’ lead33 mins – 2-1 as Omari Kellyman reduces the deficit34 mins – Pepple scores again for 3-143 mins – Kellyman scores again, 3-2 Continue reading...

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
I reviewed Philips' affordable Fidelio stereo speakers that look 'too good to be true' on the spec sheet — and they nearly pull it off

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Leeds, Chelsea v Burnley, Championship and more: Saturday clockwatch – live
⚽ Latest updates from the Premier League and beyond⚽ Live scores | Follow us on Bluesky | And email DomBlackburn’s win over Preston last night means they’ve now gone on a spurt of three wins in four games, a much-needed new manager bounce under Michael O’Neill. It also means, with Portsmouth in decent form themselves – they’ve only lost two of their past seven – that one of Leicester or West Brom looks likely to drop into League One.Oxford are second bottom but not completely out of the hunt for survival, though they have a tough task today away at Middlesbrough. Pompey also have their work cut away, away at Millwall.Hull 0-1 QPRStoke 1-0 LeicesterSwansea 1-0 Bristol CityWest Brom 0-2 Coventry Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England v Ireland: Six Nations rugby union – live
Updates from 2.10pm kickoff (GMT) at Twickenham Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email LeeYou can send me all your thoughts on proceedings both prior to an during the match via the email. I look forward to reading them.Team news Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games
Victory in 50km mass start breaks record from 1980Teammates Nyenget and Iversen lock out podiumAt the end of the great races in the history of the Winter Olympics, there was the greatest athlete in the history of the Winter Olympics. After a little over two hours of racing Johannes Høsflot Klæbo won his sixth gold medal of these Games when he beat his Norwegian teammate Martin Loewstroem Nyenget by just 17.4 seconds to win the men’s 50km classic.The gold medal triumph meant the 29 year old set the record for the most gold medals in a single Winter Games, set by the US speed skater Eric Heiden when he won five at Lake Placid in 1980. In an age of exaggeration and in an industry that loves overstatement, it is entirely true to say that there has never been anything quite like it. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Giant tortoises reintroduced to a Galapagos island
Ecuador released 158 juveniles in the first phase of an ambitious rewilding effort at the World Heritage Site.

Ars Technica
Open 
Major government research lab appears to be squeezing out foreign scientists

Ars Technica
Open 
Have we leapt into commercial genetic testing without understanding it?

Mail Online
Open 
Gethin Jones's new friend with a VERY famous football father: Pien Meulensteen, 29, has forged an impressive career on Sky Sports - while her dad played a crucial role in making Cristiano Ronaldo a ruthless superstar
Pien has become a regular fixture on football fans' TV screens. The Dutch-born journalist presents live coverage on ITV, DAZN and the Premier League's own in-house channel.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK should send non-combat troops to Ukraine now, former PM Johnson tells BBC
Troops should be deployed to peaceful parts of the country in non-fighting roles, he said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s global tariffs have finally been overturned. What next? | Steven Greenhouse
The US supreme court ruled against the president. Let’s hope the court removes its pro-Trump glasses on other issues and stands up for the rule of lawThere’s no denying that the US supreme court’s long-awaited ruling that overturned Donald Trump’s global tariffs is important, and if the ruling turns out to be a harbinger that the court is ready to abandon its startling sycophancy toward the US president, it could prove hugely important. The ruling this Friday is the first time during Trump’s second term that the justices have struck down one of his policies. Not only that, the policy they struck down is Trump’s signature economic policy – he has used tariffs to bash, lord over and terrorize dozens of other countries and make himself the King of the Economic Jungle.In the court’s main opinion, joined by three conservative justices and three liberals, chief justice John Roberts used some sharp language to slap down Trump’s tariffs, writing that the constitution specifically gives Congress, not the president, the power to impose taxes and tariffs. (Roberts noted that tariffs are indeed taxes.)Steven Greenhouse is a journalist and author, focusing on labour and the workplace, as well as economic and legal issues Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games
Victory in 50km mass start breaks record from 1980Teammates Nyenget and Iversen lock out podiumJohannes Hoesflot Klæbo completed an historic gold medal sweep of the men’s cross-country skiing events on Saturday by winning his sixth race and set the record for the most golds by one athlete in a single Winter Olympics.The Norwegian’s victory in the 50km mass start race shattered the nearly 50-year record set by the American speed skater Eric Heiden, who won five golds in the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics. All of Heiden’s wins were in individual races and two of Klaebo’s have come in team events, so Heiden’s record for individual wins still stands. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The need for support is everywhere’: working-class arts group expands to north of England
The Working Arts Club is working to counter the stark class disparity within the UK creative sector‘The problem the art world has with class is a systemic issue and the need for support is everywhere,” says Meg Molloy, the founder of Working Arts Club, which aims to help people from working-class backgrounds secure jobs in the arts.Founded in 2024 as an independent initiative in London, it has collaborated with the likes of the V&amp;A, Royal Academy, Christie’s, Sotheby’s and Frieze London. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A crunchy, blistered, golden-brown pillow’: the best supermarket puff pastry, tasted and rated
Which supermarket shortcrust pastry puffs up proudly, and which comes up short?• The best supermarket unsalted butterPuff pastry is made by wrapping a block of fat (ideally butter) in a sheet of dough, then rolling it out, folding it over itself, and repeating the rolling and folding process several times more. This creates dozens of thin layers of fat between each layer of pastry. It’s skilled, arduous work, but that’s where ready-rolled puff pastry comes in. This miraculous product makes baking your own pastries, vol-au-vents and upside-down tarts very simple indeed.I baked a small rectangle of pastry from each brand for 10-15 minutes at 180-200C (or according to the manufacturer’s instructions). I noted the height of the rise as well as the lamination (the separation of layers), texture, flavour, ingredients and value relative to quality. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cemented locks and deflated diggers: the war over privately run allotments
With waits for council plots in England decades-long, Roots is renting out green space – but some communities are digging inWhen police arrived at the field outside Bristol in October 2023, two old cars, wheels removed, were blockading the gates. Protesters had hauled them across the entrance to stop developers building on the slice of north Somerset green belt. The threat was not housing or industry, but a company building vegetable patches.Roots builds privatised allotments to give city dwelling customers a place to grow food. It was co-founded in 2021 by Christian Samuel, Ed Morrison and William Gay, who were frustrated by a 28-year waiting list for a plot in their area of Streatham, south London. “We thought: ‘This is crazy’,” says Samuel, 32. “‘Why don’t we just build our own?’” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo wins historic sixth gold, ski cross joy for Italy – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email BillyMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Giant tortoises reintroduced to a Galapagos island
Ecuador releases 158 juveniles in the first phase of an ambitious rewilding effort at the World Heritage Site.

Mail Online
Open 
Teenager is stabbed to death outside mosque and two others wounded in disorder during Ramadan
A teenager has been knifed to death outside a mosque during Ramadan celebrations. 

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK should send troops to Ukraine now, former PM Johnson tells BBC
Troops should be deployed to peaceful parts of the country in non-fighting roles, he said.

Mail Online
Open 
The Epstein photos they never wanted you to see... and the clues the pedophile left in his Manhattan lair
In his sprawling New York townhouse, the venue for star-studded parties, Epstein left not so subtle clues about his perversions.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Watch: Baby monkey Punch cuddles soft toy after being abandoned by mother
A young Japanese macaque at the Ichikawa City Zoo in Japan went viral, after videos showed him playing with a soft toy that zookeepers gave him for comfort.

Russia Today News
Open 
Israel has biblical right to Middle East – US envoy to Tucker Carlson

Mail Online
Open 
The Epstein images they never wanted you to see... and the clues the pedophile left in his Manhattan lair
In his sprawling New York townhouse, the venue for star-studded parties, Epstein left not so subtle clues about his perversions.

TechRadar News
Open 
I found all the best Google Pixel 10a cases — because your new phone deserves to look its best

TechRadar News
Open 
“The AI data centers of 2036 won’t be filled with GPUs”: FuriosaAI’s CEO on the future of silicon

TechRadar News
Open 
Aston Villa vs Leeds United Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025-26 from anywhere in the world

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The Supreme Court’s tariff ruling has economists even more stressed about worsening U.S. debt
The Supreme Court decision striking down most of the Trump administration’s tariffs adds fuel to a brushfire of concern among economists about the worsening federal debt outlook.

Mail Online
Open 
'We're no Jew hunters!': Activists say they weren't intimidating people who refuse to join Israel boycott and were just handing out leaflets instead
The group said they would never ask someone about their religion and insisted that it was not their aim to persuade people who said they were a Zionist.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Macron's India Trip Exposes EU Tech Overreach And Policy Failures
Macron's India Trip Exposes EU Tech Overreach And Policy Failures

Submitted by Thomas Kolbe

At times, it seems almost absurdly comical when senior European Union officials make conspicuous efforts to court local business on foreign trips. Didactic in tone, nearly arrogant in their demands toward potential trade partners, and buoyed by a taste for moral superiority, the EU takes the global stage.

It still attempts to force large parts of the world into Brussels’ doctrinal playbook—as if economic cooperation could be achieved through normative decrees.



Meanwhile, its own economic weakness is either overlooked or deliberately ignored.

Economic strength would at least provide some justification for such demands.

Yet the ongoing relocation of European industry to Asia and the United States undermines any carefully staged display of supposed superiority.

From February 17 to 19, France’s President Emmanuel Macron visited India—the newly discovered object of European diplomatic desire.

In Brussels, high hopes are pinned on Prime Minister Narendra Modi: unspoken is the goal of trade-policy support in the battle against Donald Trump’s America.

For Macron, this India trip could have been an easy diplomatic exercise—without missteps, without verbal blunders, simply by observing routine protocol.

He could have used the opportunity to study how a booming AI hub is being built. Instead, he presented his bewildered hosts with Europe’s “third way”—a performance that at best left them perplexed, likely met with a shrug.

Macron advocated for “transparent” AI focused on open-source models, strict privacy standards, and societal benefits in health, education, and especially climate protection. Initiatives like “Current AI,” an EU-funded €2.5 billion project to finance nonprofit activities, confirm what is already obvious: Brussels still believes technological innovation can be decreed by the state.

But new technologies do not emerge administratively or via bureaucratically managed grants. Innovation thrives where free markets operate, entrepreneurship takes risks, and open capital markets enable customer-oriented value creation.

For Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz, and Ursula von der Leyen, this insight may seem like a dangerously heretical lesson. Yet it describes nothing more than the only viable civilizational path: an open self-discovery process that allows mistakes, does not stigmatize risk, and provides bold pioneers real opportunities—essentially turning EU policy upside down.

European policy has little interest in fostering genuine open-source dynamics—even if desirable for a flourishing market economy. Rather, the impression solidifies that state control mechanisms are being secured: through regulatory backdoors, software tools, and laws like the Digital Services Act—with the aim of steering markets and, above all, controlling public discourse.

Macron delivered perhaps his most revealing remarks before students in New Delhi at the AI Impact Summit. He lamented the lack of control over platforms like Elon Musk’s X and spoke of missing transparency. A “jungle” had arisen in which no one knew who was saying what, algorithms were beyond state reach. In this context, he called appeals to freedom of speech “bullshit”—a striking moment of candor that accurately reflects the stance of much of the EU’s political elite.

They are engaged in an open struggle with citizens—at least with the portion who see themselves as the true sovereign and view politics as representation within a democratic state, not an educational disciplinary apparatus. Macron, however, seems convinced he can use aggressive opinion control to postpone both the collapse of his minority government and the looming state insolvency—at least until his own political exit is secured.

Back in wintry Germany, his counterpart Friedrich Merz struck a similar note. At a CDU Ash Wednesday event in Trier, the chancellor outlined his vision for future communication platforms: real-name requirements and digital identities for youth. Translated, this means nothing less than the gradual end of online anonymity—a space that has so far been essential for opposition voices and political coordination.

The pressure to act grows: month after month, the European economy loses substance—regardless of, or precisely because of, the intensity of state intervention in the shrinking remnants of the continent’s once-proud social market economy.

The gap between aspiration and reality in Europe was recently on display at the Munich Security Conference. EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas presented Brussels’ demands toward Russia as a basis for potential peace talks. Moscow must make substantial compromises—limiting forces, cutting the military budget, and recognizing Ukraine’s pre-2022 borders. Territorial concessions or legitimizing occupied areas are out of the question. Sanctions and future use of frozen Russian assets, particularly via Euroclear, remain leverage.

A reminder: Russia’s de facto dominance in the Ukraine conflict is measured not least by its effects on Europe—ongoing energy crises across much of the continent and the visible erosion of the European economy. That Europeans weren’t even at the table in recent pre-negotiations for a peace deal is a diplomatic humiliation. Yet even this does not seem enough to fundamentally question their strategy or objectively assess reality.

Instead, growing elite resentment is increasingly directed inward. Citizens expressing dissatisfaction and supporting nationally sovereign political forces fall under scrutiny. This reflects a fear of competition that might effectively challenge what is perceived as coercive EU policy.

Upcoming state elections will reveal just how resilient the firewall really is—one that delivers more mass migration, digital censorship, and the construction of a green-military socialism.

* * * 

About the author: Thomas Kolbe, a German graduate economist, has worked for over 25 years as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 07:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Here's What People Value Most In The US, UK, & Germany
Here's What People Value Most In The US, UK, & Germany

If you had to choose just three things that matter most in life, what would they be?

Across the U.S., UK, and Germany, family and health dominate. But after that, national differences emerge. Germans lean toward security and stability. Americans stand out for money, growth, and faith. In the UK, work-life balance comes into the fold as a top priority.



The data for this visualization comes from Statista Consumer Insights. Over 1,000 adults per country were surveyed in January 2026 and asked to select up to three personal values that matter most in their lives.

Family Comes First

Family life ranks as the most important value in all three countries.

In the UK, 51% of respondents selected family as a top priority, the highest share among the three nations. Germany follows at 43%, while 42% of Americans say family matters most.



Because respondents could choose multiple answers, percentages do not sum to 100%.

Health and Security Stand Out in Germany

Germans place a particularly strong emphasis on health, with 49% identifying it as a top value.

Safety and security (30%) and freedom/independence (27%) also rank highly in Germany. Friendships, at 26%, further suggest a focus on stability and social cohesion.

Money, Growth, and Faith in the U.S.

In the United States, making money ranks relatively high at 26%, slightly above the UK (25%).

Americans are also more likely to prioritize personal growth (24%) and faith or spirituality (21%), categories that did not rank among the top responses in the UK or Germany.

Work-life balance, cited by 24% in the UK, stands out as a distinctly British priority in this comparison.

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Which Countries Are Diligent About Medical Check-Ups? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 02/21/2026 - 07:35

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Influencers fined for issuing unauthorised financial promotions – Financial Conduct Authority

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Influencers fined for issuing unauthorised financial promotions – Financial Conduct Authority

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Influencers fined for issuing unauthorised financial promotions – Financial Conduct Authority

ZDNet News
Open 
This $5 cleaning gel did wonders for my keyboard - and 4 other PC cleaning tips
Opening up your PC to clean it will keep your hardware running smoothly for years. Here's how I recommend doing so.

Mail Online
Open 
Awards given to The Beatles at height of their fame and hidden for over 60 years set to go under the hammer
They were awards given to The Beatles at the peak of their fame - but have been out of sight for nearly 60 years.

Mail Online
Open 
Two bodies are found on Snowdonia in hunt for missing men, 19 and 20, as mountain rescue team battle snow and ice
Mountain rescuers battled snow and ice in a days-long search which tragically ended after two bodies were found.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
This Ramadan in Gaza we pray for mercy, share what we have and light a single candle for hope | Majdoleen Abu Assi
I mourn the vibrant life we lived before. But though our faces anxiously turn to the sky, our hands are joined in a solidarity that rises above hungerEvery year, Ramadan comes as a sanctuary for the soul. For Muslims like me, it is a sacred pause in the chaos of life. But this year, as a woman displaced from the familiar streets of Gaza City to a rented room in Al-Zawayda, I am searching for a peace that feels like a ghost. The world calls this a “ceasefire”, yet from my window the silence feels heavy. We are holding our breath because the fear of death has not disappeared, it has just become unpredictable.I did not welcome Ramadan this year with the golden lanterns that once adorned our balconies. I welcomed it to the roar of bulldozers clearing the bones of neighbouring houses and with the constant buzz of the zanana, the Israeli surveillance drones, overhead. Even as we stand in prayer, that metallic humming drowns out the adhan, the call to prayer, reminding us that we are still watched and that our “calm” rests at the mercy of a sudden strike.Majdoleen Abu Assi is a project coordinator and humanitarian practitioner based in Gaza, PalestineDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Worst skis I ever had’: Swedish biathletes blame poor Olympic form on waxing team
Wax technicians apologise after mass-start failureSweden’s trio finish 18th, 21st and 26th in eventSweden’s biathletes have struggled to deliver medals at the Winter Olympics and on Friday they finally ran out of patience with their waxing team, blaming a bad job on their skis for an embarrassingly poor performance in the men’s mass start.Often among the favourites in biathlon events, the Swedes had a dismal day in the final men’s race of the Games, with Sebastian Samuelsson finishing 18th, Martin Ponsiluoma 21st and Jesper Nelin 26th in the 30-man field. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Best Unlimited Data Plans for 2026
An unlimited data phone plan opens all sorts of options. We pick our favorite plans with unlimited data from Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile.

CNET News
Open 
This Is the Only Smart Ring You Should Own to Keep Track of Your Health
Smart rings are in, but they're not created equally. This is the one I swear by.

CNET News
Open 
Don't Buy the Galaxy S25 Ultra. Get the Galaxy S24 Ultra Instead
The Galaxy S24 Ultra performance and features are not that different from the Galaxy S25 Ultra (and likely the S26 Ultra). Plus, the S24 Ultra is half the price of the S25 Ultra.

Gizmodo
Open 
A Veteran Blood Donor’s Guide to Not Freaking Out Your First Time
Here are some simple tips on how to make your blood donation as smooth and faint-free as possible.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I’m living year to year now’: Neymar says he may retire by end of 2026
Santos player has struggled with injury in recent seasonsBrazilian forward remains doubtful for this year’s World Cup Brazil striker Neymar, who extended his contract with his boyhood club Santos last month, said that he may retire by the end of the year.The 34-year-old forward returned to Santos in January 2025 and played a key role in their survival in the Brazilian top flight, scoring five times in their last five matches. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Worst skis I ever had’: Swedish biathletes blame poor Olympic form on waxing team
Wax technicians apologise after mass-start failureSweden’s trio finish 18th, 21st and 26th in eventSweden’s biathletes have struggled to deliver medals at the Winter Games and on Friday they finally ran out of patience with their waxing team, blaming a bad job on their skis for an embarrassingly poor performance in the men’s mass start.Often among the favourites in biathlon events, the Swedes had a dismal day in the final men’s race of the Games, with Sebastian Samuelsson finishing 18th, Martin Ponsiluoma 21st and Jesper Nelin 26th in the 30-man field. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo wins historic sixth gold, bobsleigh resumes after crash – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email BillyMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Team GB face uphill task for four-man bobsleigh medal
Team GB face an uphill task to win an Olympic medal in the four-man bobsleigh event as they sit seventh at the halfway point in Cortina.

Mail Online
Open 
Bobsleigh driver hospitalised at Winter Olympics after terrifying crash during four-man final - with event delayed by over 20 minutes while he received urgent medical attention
The Austrian, 27, was competing in the second heat of the four-man final on Saturday when the sled veered on its side and was unable to stop.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
As Manchester City prepared for a huge Premier League meeting with Newcastle at the Etihad, Mikel Arteta insisted that Arsenal are not ‘bottlers’ ahead of the North London DerbyJohan Lange, the Tottenham sporting director, has explained the rationale behind Igor Tudor’s hire as head coach until the end of the season. Lange said: “it’s very important to go into a shorter process than you do if you are changing a head coach over the summer. We interviewed a few candidates. Igor impressed us very, very much in the interview.“He comes in with very big experience at the highest level in football. As a player, playing for a very, very big club, one of the biggest clubs in the world in Juve. Of course he was part of this very good generation of Croatia national team in the late 90s. He has shown the capabilities of coming into clubs around this time, February, March, and also big clubs, and made an immediate performance impact. That was of course a very big reason.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo wins historic sixth gold, bobsleigh resumes after crash – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Oscars bellwether, British awards or both? The identity dilemma facing the Baftas
Few UK nominations this year as industry tries to balance attracting global attention and celebrating homegrown projectsIt may be billed as Britain’s premier film awards, but when nominations for the Baftas were announced last month, the lack of British representation in the top categories was hard to ignore. Just one British actor, Robert Aramayo, appeared in the leading actor category, while there were no British nominees at all for leading actress (the UK-based Irish actor Jessie Buckley notwithstanding).The supporting categories fared little better, with Peter Mullan and Emily Watson the sole British nominees. Of the films themselves, only one British co-production, Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet – about Shakespeare and his wife Agnes’s grief over the loss of their son – made it into the best film race. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sex first, dinner later: what can singles in Oslo, Berlin, Paris and Rome teach me about dating?
My fellow Brits seem weighed down by endless swiping – I went to the Europeans for a fresh perspectiveLast year, I went through a breakup and threw myself into internet dating. I started experimenting with mirror selfies, and spent whole evenings trying to take artful photographs of my own bum. I agonised over my three-line bio. I even put a notebook by my bed with the Hinge prompt “most spontaneous thing I’ve done” written on the first page, so if the answer came to me in a dream, I’d have a pen and paper handy.I’d spent my early 30s trying to cling on to a failing relationship, which had made me feel stuck in a holding pattern. As if I was fated to have a slightly different version of the same argument every night until I was dead. The thrill of scrolling on Hinge, when I first started dating, was that it felt like shopping for an alternate future. I’d pore over pictures of men cradling small dogs and swinging tennis rackets, and get high on the thought of all the tiny dogs and tennis games we would enjoy together. I started hiding my phone in a cupboard in the kitchen before I went to sleep, because when I kept it in my room, I could feel all my new lives calling to me. Sometimes, when I got up to hide it, I had motion sickness from scrolling so hard and so fast. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Fans flock to see Punch the baby monkey who became Japanese social media star for turning to orangutan toy for comfort after being abandoned by his mother
On Friday, more than 100 visitors gathered around the zoo's monkey enclosure, straining to take photos and shouting 'hang in there!' as Punch tried to approach others in the troop.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor MUST be removed from line of royal succession, says Cabinet Minister as police search Royal Lodge for third day
Defence Minister Luke Pollard has become the first senior Cabinet Minister to back calls for Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to be removed from the line of succession.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Frederick Wiseman obituary
Influential documentary-maker whose films eavesdropped on the relationships between people and institutions In 1960, when a small group of American documentary film-makers named their work direct cinema, they might have been accurately describing the films of Frederick Wiseman, who has died aged 96. Although he came along a few years later, Wiseman, more than the others in the movement, exemplified the credo of direct cinema, which believed in an immediate and authentic approach to the subject matter.Avoiding planned narrative and narration, Wiseman recorded events exactly as they happened. People were allowed to speak without guidance or interruption, while the camera watched them objectively, not interfering with the natural flow of speech or action. This was made possible by the advent of light, portable cameras and high-speed film, which allowed more intimacy in the film-making – what Wiseman called “wobblyscope”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Botswana’s diamond-funded health system has failed: it needs to be reformed and rebuilt | Duma Gideon Boko
As Botswana’s president here is my plan to renew this country’s beleaguered health system – and my vision for a stronger AfricaShortages of medicine in Botswana forced me to declare a public health emergency last year. Patients went without treatment – not because health workers failed them, but because the system did. For a nation committed to universal healthcare, free at the point of use, it was a moment of hard truth.Even outwardly strong public health systems can be fragile. As donor assistance bites across the continent, governments cannot afford to delay building resilience. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
CBS News is convulsing as Larry Ellison tries to please Trump | Margaret Sullivan
Recent incidents involving Anderson Cooper and Stephen Colbert suggest things are not well at the network after the acquisition financed by Trump supporter Larry EllisonAnderson Cooper decides to walk away from broadcast TV’s most prestigious news show, 60 Minutes. Stephen Colbert takes his interview with a rising Democratic politician to YouTube instead of his own late-night show. The CBS Evening News anchor presents a misleading version of the network’s own exclusive reporting on Ice arrests. And a news producer writes a farewell note to her CBS News colleagues blaming the loss of editorial independence.If you connect the dots, the picture of what’s happening at CBS becomes all too clear. That picture comes into even sharper focus once you recall an underlying factor: the network’s parent company is trying to get a big commercial deal done and needs the help of the Trump administration to bring it over the finish line.Margaret Sullivan is a Guardian US columnist writing on media, politics and culture Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
This Ramadan in Gaza we pray for mercy, share what we have and light a single candle for hope | Majdoleen Abu Assi
I mourn the vibrant life we lived before. But though our faces anxiously turn to the sky, our hands are joined in a solidarity that rises above hungerEvery year, Ramadan comes as a sanctuary for the soul. For Muslims like me, it is a sacred pause in the chaos of life. But this year, as a woman displaced from the familiar streets of Gaza City to a rented room in Al-Zawayda, I am searching for a peace that feels like a ghost. The world calls this a “ceasefire”, yet from my window the silence feels heavy. We are holding our breath because the fear of death has not disappeared, it has just become unpredictable.I did not welcome Ramadan this year with the golden lanterns that once adorned our balconies. I welcomed it to the roar of bulldozers clearing the bones of neighbouring houses and with the constant buzz of the zanana, the Israeli surveillance drones, overhead. Even as we stand in prayer, that metallic humming drowns out the adhan, the call to prayer, reminding us that we are still watched and that our “calm” rests at the mercy of a sudden strike.Majdoleen Abu Assi is a project coordinator and humanitarian practitioner based in Gaza, Palestine Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The 60-second rule? Colour theory? Yet more ways we’re supposed to live our lives | Francesca Newton
In these times of social, political and even environmental instability, is it any wonder that we turn to influencers for instruction?A group of young women are about to try colour analysis for the first time. One says she suspects she’s not “supposed to wear gold”, and then holds up both hands swathed in gold rings and bracelets. The video cuts to the same woman with a strip of gold fabric laid across her chest. A sad trumpet sound plays before the strip is whipped off and replaced with a silver one. “See?” the analyst says. “Way better here.” The woman says: “Yeah”, but she sounds unhappy.Colour analysis is a method of picking out the shades that suit your skin tone. After its first life in the 1980s and 90s, “getting your colours done” found a new audience on TikTok in 2024 and has only become more popular since. This clip was one of many thrown up by my Instagram feed but it stuck with me, largely because it seemed so depressing in its portrayal of the trend as something to be endured rather than enjoyed. Directions on what you’re “supposed” or “not supposed” to wear, it intimated, should be followed even if it means sacrificing your own preferences.Francesca Newton is a writer and editorDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rahm’s refusal to pay fine over LIV Golf puts Ryder Cup future in peril
LIV rebel rejects European Tour Group’s offer Tyrrell Hatton has settled over seven-figure fineJon Rahm’s Ryder Cup future is in serious doubt after the Spaniard failed to join his teammate Tyrrell Hatton in settling a dispute over a seven-figure fine with the European Tour Group over participation in LIV Golf.Hatton is one of eight golfers who have agreed to settle all outstanding fines due in Europe and withdraw any appeals in return for releases to play on LIV tournaments in 2026. Luke Donald, who is expected to remain in office for a third stint as Europe’s Ryder Cup captain, wanted the situation with Hatton and Rahm resolved. Donald has only partly got his wish, with Adare Manor in 2027 looming ever closer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We can see that courage’: Greece recovers long-lost photos of Nazis’ May Day executions
Culture ministry hails ‘exceptional historical importance’ of prints that show resistance fighters’ final momentsIn his book-filled office, Vangelis Sakkatos took in the images of the men lined up before a firing squad. The executions on May Day 1944 have haunted him since he was a boy.“Their heroism was the stuff of myth,” said the veteran leftist, casting his eyes over the photographs that have dominated Greece’s press in recent days with a mixture of fury and awe. “The years may have passed, but I haven’t forgotten.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Reimagining matter’: Nobel laureate invents machine that harvests water from dry air
Omar Yaghi’s invention uses ambient thermal energy and can generate up to 1,000 litres of clean water every dayA Nobel laureate’s environmentally friendly invention that provides clean water if central supplies are knocked out by a hurricane or drought, could be a life saver for vulnerable islands, its founder says.The invention, by the chemist Prof Omar Yaghi, uses a type of science called reticular chemistry to create molecularly engineered materials, which can extract moisture from the air and harvest water even in arid and desert conditions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Donor suspended from Tories pays £50,000 for dinner with Kemi Badenoch
Exclusive: Rami Ranger, who was suspended temporarily in 2023, makes successful bid at party fundraising eventA Conservative donor who was suspended from the party after being accused of bullying and inappropriate language spent £50,000 last week to have dinner with Kemi Badenoch, the Guardian has learned.Rami Ranger was the successful bidder for the dinner at a Tory fundraising event and will attend the meal with a small group of friends, infuriating those in the party who believe he should not have been readmitted. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
You Can Now Install—and Update—Microsoft Store Apps Using the Command Line
By typing simple, text-based commands into Windows' PowerShell, you can quickly install apps directly from the Microsoft Store—all without the typical ads or clutter.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Password Managers Share a Hidden Weakness
Plus: The cybersecurity community grapples with Epstein files revelations, the US State Department plans an online anti-censorship “portal” for the world, and more.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
6 Best Phones With Headphone Jacks (2026), Tested and Reviewed
Headphone jacks are endangered, but they’re not gone. Here are our favorite smartphones that still let you plug and play.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best Budget Monitors: I Found 3 Impressive Screens Under $200 (2026)
You might assume all monitors under $200 are terrible. But after trying some out, I found a few that defy expectations.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Souvenirs From the 2026 Winter Olympics Are Being Resold for Big Bucks Online
From pins to mascots to Swatch watches, memorabilia from the Milano Cortina Games is showing up on sites like eBay and Vinted.

Mail Online
Open 
Ghislaine Maxwell's brother Ian speaks up for Andrew: Says royal is 'single man', his sex trafficker sister 'is on the right side of history' and Virginia Giuffre was 'a monster'
Ian Maxwell, 69, launched a defence of his sister Ghislaine, who is currently languishing in a US jail cell having been sentenced to 20 years behind bars for child sex trafficking.

Mail Online
Open 
We monarchists must fight back against Leftist republicans who want to bring the whole royal edifice crashing down: STEPHEN GLOVER
The monarchy is under threat. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor could even bring down the whole house of cards. These are the opinions we read and hear every hour.

Mail Online
Open 
What happens next to Andrew? Four brilliant legal minds offer their verdicts on how a potential prosecution and trial might play out
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's sensational arrest this week has raised myriad legal questions. Here, four legal experts give their verdicts...

Mail Online
Open 
BEL MOONEY: Caring for my mum makes me feel tired and bitter
I'm an only child in my mid-50s, unmarried and caring for my ageing mum, who is struggling. I handle the shopping, appointments, paperwork - everything she can't.

Mail Online
Open 
LIZ JONES'S DIARY: In which disaster strikes - and I so very nearly lost my beloved Alice...
Friday was not a good day. I went down to put washing on in my cellar, only to find it flooded due to the torrential rain. I now own an indoor pool.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘She’ll be cheering on from heaven’: Itoje sad his late mother will not see him win 100th cap
England captain reaches milestone against IrelandItoje: ‘I know she would have loved the occasion’Maro Itoje says his late mother will be at Twickenham in spirit when the England captain wins his 100th cap in the Six Nations showdown with Ireland on Saturday.After Florence Itoje died in December, the Saracens second-row was absent from the start of England’s pre-tournament training camp in Girona to attend her funeral in Nigeria. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: bobsleigh delayed by Austria crash, ski cross and more on day 15 – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palace would not oppose move to remove Andrew from succession
Police continue searches at Mountbatten-Windsor’s former Windsor home after arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public officeBuckingham Palace will not oppose plans to remove Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor from the royal line of succession, the Guardian understands, as police confirmed a search of his former Windsor home would continue over the weekend.Royal sources indicated on Saturday that King Charles would not stand in the way of parliament if it wanted to ensure the former prince could never ascend to the throne. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Bodies found in North Wales mountain range
Two bodies have been found in the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia) during a search for two missing men, North Wales Police have said.

TechRadar News
Open 
This WhatsApp setting will upgrade your photos and videos — here’s how to use it

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor MUST be removed from line of royal succession, says Cabinet Minister as police search Royal Lodge for third day
Defence Minister Luke Pollard has become the first senior cabinet minister to back calls for Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to be removed from the line of succession.

The Verge
Open 
Anker’s X1 Pro shouldn’t exist, but I’m so glad it does
The Soundcore Nebula X1 Pro is too weird to exist. It takes the excellent 4K projector and karaoke microphones from Anker's Nebula X1 and stuffs them inside a powerful five-speaker Google TV party on wheels. It's so absurd that it feels like a gadget fever dream - and I'm here for it. At the heart [&#8230;]

ZDNet News
Open 
This upcoming work laptop is a productivity dream machine that hits all the right notes
Asus' ExpertBook Ultra is a joy to use, with Intel's flagship Panther Lake chip and a vibrant OLED display.

Mail Online
Open 
Wuthering fights: influencers encourage hordes of tourists to descend on quaint Yorkshire village home of the Bronte sisters amid hype around new Wuthering Heights movie - leaving locals struggling to cope
After the release of the much-hyped Hollywood version of Wuthering Heights, a tidal wave of tourists (pictured) has begun descending onto the home of the Bronte sisters.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran prepares nuclear counterproposal as US considers limited military strikes
Trump orders massive buildup of naval forces in Middle East, leading to fears of an imminent warIran’s foreign minister has said he expects to have a draft counterproposal ready within days after nuclear talks with the US this week, while Donald Trump said he was considering limited military strikes.The US president has ordered a massive buildup of naval forces in the Middle East, including repositioning aircraft carriers and other warships, leading to fears of an imminent war. But it is not clear if the military movements are intended as an intimidation tactic to put pressure on Iran to make concessions on its nuclear programme. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gisèle Pelicot on rape, courage and her ex-husband: ‘He was loved by everyone. That’s what is so terrifying’
The case against her former husband shocked the world, while her response inspired awe. As she publishes a memoir, she discusses chemical submission, the abuse hidden within her apparently perfect marriage – and why she decided to go publicAt Gisèle Pelicot’s new home on Île de Ré off France’s Atlantic coast, she likes to take bracing walks along the beach in all weathers, play classical music loud, eat nice chocolate and, as a gift to each new morning, always set the table for breakfast the night before. “It’s my way of putting myself in a good mood when I wake up: the cups are out already, I just need to put the kettle on,” she says.But one of her most treasured possessions is a box of letters she keeps on her desk. The envelopes from across the world – some sent on a prayer, addressed only with her name and the village in Provence where she once lived – piled up at the courthouse in Avignon in southern France in late 2024, when she became famous worldwide as a symbol of courage for waiving her right to anonymity in the trial of her ex-husband and dozens of men he had invited to rape her while she was drugged unconscious. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s Iran warning gives UK whiplash over Chagos island deal
President Trump’s attack plans for Iran have roiled a deal for the United Kingdom to cede control of the tiny and isolated island of Diego Garcia, where a strategic American air base sits in the middle of the vast Indian Ocean.  Trump took to his Truth Social media account Wednesday to warn British Prime Minister...

The Hill
Open 
The Memo: Trump fumes at Supreme Court justices who knocked down tariffs
Less than six weeks before the 2020 election, President Trump stepped into the White House Rose Garden to fete his newest Supreme Court nominee.  “She is a woman of unparalleled achievement, towering intellect, sterling credentials, and unyielding loyalty to the Constitution,” he enthused. “Judge Amy Coney Barrett.” Barrett would duly be confirmed, the third newly...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans breathe sigh of relief as Supreme Court axes Trump tariffs
The Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down the sweeping global tariffs at the heart of President Trump’s economic policies has produced enormous cracks in the GOP’s outward show of party unity. After spending the past year rallying behind Trump on virtually every facet of his second-term agenda, Republican lawmakers spanning the ideological spectrum are publicly...

The Register
Open 
Government upgrades drones, deploys joystick tweakers to catch illegal dumpers
Electronic eyes are watching from above, ready to catch dumpers of smashed up couches in the act The UK government is pulling together an elite squad of drone operators to crack down on the scourge of fly tippers and unauthorized dumpers across this ever less green and pleasant land.…

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cheating, Penisgate and boos for Vance: the 10 wildest stories of the Winter Olympics
Amid the triumphs, failures and broken medals in Milano Cortina, here’s our countdown of the outstanding moments that will live long in the memoryCheating has been part and parcel of the Olympics since at least Eupolus of Thessaly in 388BC. But crooked boxers from ancient Greece never confessed their indiscretions on live television. The Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Lægreid did exactly that after winning bronze in the men’s 20km biathlon for his first individual Olympic medal, publicly admitting he’d two-timed his girlfriend three months earlier and calling it “my biggest mistake” in an overshare for the ages carried live by national broadcaster NRK. Lægreid’s shot appeared to have missed the target one day later when the wronged party, wishing to remain anonymous, told the Norwegian paper VG it was “hard to forgive” what he did. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Bodies found in Eryri mountain range during search for two missing men
Two bodies have been found in the Eryri mountain range (Snowdonia) during a search for two missing men, North Wales Police have said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brook says overlooking Pakistan players for the Hundred would be ‘a shame’
Captain urges four Indian-owned sides to think againSunrisers Leeds player will not lead side this yearHarry Brook has called on teams in this year’s Hundred to embrace Pakistan players after it was reported that they would not be considered by the tournament’s four Indian-owned sides.Brook, England’s white-ball captain, is contracted to Sunrisers Leeds, owned by the Indian media corporation the Sun Group, owners of the IPL side Sunrisers Hyderabad, and is the highest-paid player in the tournament. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch: Six athletes crash in 'extraordinary' speed skating semi-final
An "extraordinary" women's 1500m speed skating semi-final at the 2026 Winter Olympics sees six of the seven skaters crash, with China's Yang Jingru - the only athlete not to fall - finishing first.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump's Tariffs... Trump attacks the Supreme Court over tariff ban
A breaking episode of Americast as POTUS takes on SCOTUS

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The Week: Andrew Arrested, New Cabinet Secretary & Jenrick Economics
Adam, Alex and Joe wrap up the week.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Macron urges calm ahead of rally for slain far‑right activist
The death of Quentin Deranque, who succumbed to injuries following an altercation between far-left and right-wing activists, has left the country on edge.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It brings the moon down to Earth’: Mimi Mollica’s best phone picture
A sleepless night led the Sicilian photographer to capture this remarkable lunar image from his London balconyMimi Mollica says that his photograph of the moon above London presents something of a dichotomy. “There is an element of surprise in seeing the moon in proximity to our terrestrial life, a ‘wow’ factor,” the Sicily-born photographer explains. “And yet this photo also democratises her; bringing her down to Earth, almost touching a building.”Mollica took the shot from the balcony of his top-floor flat, which overlooks a skyline spanning from the Docklands to central London. It was mid-spring, and he’d woken around 4am. Unable to get back to sleep, he used his iPhone 13 Mini against the viewfinder of his telescope. He has now captured enough images in this way to fill a photography book, Moon City. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Epstein files place renewed attention on US authorities’ failure to stop him
Files show accuser in 2011 provided extensive account of abuse as questions mount over why action was not takenThe Department of Justice’s release of millions of Jeffrey Epstein files has not only prompted questions about his crimes – but renewed attention on authorities’ failure to stop him after an accuser reported him in 1996.This new cache of Epstein files has provided more insight into authorities’ familiarity with allegations against him in the years that followed, including time between his sweetheart plea deal in 2008 and federal arrest nearly six years ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Dictator vibes’ as dear leader Trump puts name and face front and center
Banner at justice department just the latest example of how president has imposed himself on daily US lifeYou wouldn’t be alone if you feel that the US more closely resembles North Korea these days – with giant images of the dear leader scowling down on the citizenry, and his name inscribed everywhere from public buildings to street signs, transportation hubs and self-aggrandizing monuments.Thursday’s unfurling of a massive banner bearing the visage of Donald J Trump, the 47th US president, on the exterior of the Washington headquarters of the federal justice department was only the latest example of how he has imposed himself on every facet of American life. Some critics have called it “dictator vibes”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Madeline Horwath on the end of the Winter Olympics – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Does Nigel Farage have a problem with women?
Critics say Reform leader’s patronising rhetoric is part of worrying trend. He says scrutiny is a two way street.When Nigel Farage told a journalist this week she should “write some silly story … and we won’t bother to read it”, it provoked an instant – and divided – reaction. For some it was a “masterclass” in dealing with mainstream media, but for others it was “rude, dismissive, misogynistic, arrogant”.Behind the scenes, Farage’s treatment of the Financial Times’s Anna Gross – which was met with mirth and applause among Reform diehards in the room – provoked disquiet and anger among lobby journalists across the political spectrum. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Decline in remote jobs risks shutting disabled people out of work, study finds
Research project warns fall in homeworking roles could undermine efforts to reduce unemploymentA decline in the number of jobs for people who need to work remotely, including those with disabilities, could undermine the government’s efforts to reverse rising unemployment, according to a two-year study.More than eight in 10 respondents to a survey of working-age disabled people by researchers at Lancaster University said access to home working was essential or very important when looking for a new job. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police search at Andrew’s former home in Windsor enters third day
Items removed from former prince’s current and former homes being examined over allegations of misconduct in public officeThe search for evidence of alleged misconduct in public office at the former Windsor home of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is expected to continue over the weekend, police have said.The former prince was arrested on Thursday as part of an investigation by Thames Valley police into claims he gave the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein confidential information while serving as a British trade envoy. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
‘Narco-Submarine’ Carrying 4 Tons of Cocaine Captured by Mexico's Navy
Following increased surveillance and patrols of routes used by transnational drug-trafficking networks, Mexican authorities have seized approximately 10 tons of cocaine in the past week alone.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
After the 2026 Winter Olympics, Figure Skating Will Never Be the Same
From disappointments to scandals to Madison Chock and Evan Bates’ silver medal, figure skating brought some of the biggest surprises of the Milano Cortina Games. We talked to Adam Rippon to find out why.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
iRestore Elite Laser Hair Growth System Review: Surprisingly Effective
After just two months, my husband saw enough hair regrowth that his college friends commented on it.

Mail Online
Open 
Every detail of Jeffrey Epstein's massive web of influence uncovered in the Mail's interactive Deep Dive into hundreds of surprising connections
From Donald Trump to Bill Gates and Peter Mandelson, Deep Dive's forensic database tracks how famous figures have been tied to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Mail Online
Open 
Pub landlady who inherited Tony Martin's £2.5million fortune had no idea the burglar-killing farmer had left her everything he owned
Tony Martin, who died last year aged 80, was initially jailed for the murder of 16-year-old Fred Barras and for seriously injuring accomplice Brendon Fearon at his farmhouse, near Wisbech, in 1999.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump announces new global tariff after losing in Supreme Court

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: British influencer arrested on Majorca for 'trying to kill husband by drugging his wine after pressuring him to get life insurance'
Amanda Jeffrey, 45, was arrested on suspicion of poisoning her businessman partner Victor in Majorca on Wednesday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'It's ruined my life': Hundreds tell BBC how medication triggered gambling and other addictions
More than 250 people contacted us describing impulsive behaviour side effects from prescription drugs.

Mail Online
Open 
'Running a caravan park is scarier than performing at the National Theatre - at one point I thought it was going to kick off!' says Danny Dyer of his new show's most disastrous moments
Danny Dyer plays tech tycoon Freddie Jones in hit bonkbuster series Rivals, but it's painfully obvious early on in his new reality show The Dyers' Caravan Park that lacks Freddie's business acumen.

Mail Online
Open 
I was an extra on Death In Paradise - Don Warrington and Ralf Little both showed their true colours days into filming
Extras, also known as supporting artists, are utilised in scenes needing a crowd, often without lines, to help add to the realism.

Mail Online
Open 
This winter has been dubbed Europe's deadliest ski season... so why ARE we having so many avalanches?
Scientists have blamed a perfect mix of weather patterns and the popularity of off-piste skiing for the slew of deadly snowslides around the world.

Mail Online
Open 
Can YOU see them? Mind-boggling optical illusion has a kitchen utensil hidden in plain sight - as one baffled viewer claims it 'makes my head hurt'
TikTok users have been baffled by a mind-boggling optical illusion that has a common kitchen utensil hiding in plain sight.

Mail Online
Open 
Brit reveals plans to bury a Boeing 737 in his garden to turn it into a fully functional nuclear bunker - after buying it from Facebook Marketplace for £4,000
Dave Billings, 44, purchased the plane for £4,000 and is working on burying it 14-feet underground in his back garden to convert it into a bunker.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the surprisingly affordable 'Mary Poppins of ski holidays' - where nannies treat kids to heart-shaped pancakes while parents hit the slopes
Hot chocolates, brownie-baking and nursery slope lessons, childcare in the mountains has never felt so sorted, writes Gabriella Le Breton

Mail Online
Open 
Mous Travel Backpack review: This carry-on bag holds up to two weeks worth of clothes AND beats those notorious Ryanair cabin restrictions
This backpack has 25 different pockets and compartments. Best of all, it's compliant with the majority of airlines - including the notoriously strict Ryanair bag requirements.

Sky News Home
Open 
BrewDog co-founder Watt to plough £10m into rescue bid for brewer | Mark Kleinman blog

Sky News Home
Open 
Court approves law requiring Louisiana schools to display Ten Commandments
A US court has cleared the way for a law to take effect, which requires the Ten Commandments to be displayed in public classrooms in Louisiana.

Digital Trends
Open 
iPhone 17e: Everything we know so far
From launch timing and pricing to design changes, performance upgrades, cameras, and battery improvements, here's a complete roundup of the latest iPhone 17e rumors.
The post iPhone 17e: Everything we know so far appeared first on Digital Trends.

TechRadar News
Open 
My first love, The Legend of Zelda, turns 40 today — here's why I think the series has survived and thrived

TechRadar News
Open 
There's a simple way to watch the Super 8 at the T20 World Cup for *FREE*

TechRadar News
Open 
Landman season 3 — everything we know so far about the hit Taylor Sheridan show's return

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch England vs Ireland: Free Streams, TV Info as Steve Borthwick's side look to hit back at Twickenham

Slashdot
Open 
OpenAI's First ChatGPT Gadget Could Be a Smart Speaker With a Camera
OpenAI is reportedly developing its first consumer hardware product: a $200-$300 smart speaker with a built-in camera capable of recognizing "items on a nearby table or conversations people are having in the vicinity." It's also said to feature Face ID-style authentication for purchases. The Verge reports: In addition to the smart speaker, OpenAI is "possibly" working on smart glasses and a smart lamp, The Information reports. (Apple may also be working on a smart lamp.) But OpenAI's glasses might not hit mass production until 2028, and while OpenAI has made prototypes of gadgets like the smart lamp, The Information says it's "unclear" if they'll be released and that OpenAI's devices plans are in early stages.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Rose Byrne causes awards season upset with low-budget film If I Had Legs I'd Kick You as she prepares to face off against Hamnet and Marty Supreme
This year's awards season is in full swing with the BAFTAs soon upon us and the Oscars less than a month away. 

Mail Online
Open 
Cecil: The Lion And The Dentist review: This heartbreaking documentary proves the global trophy hunting backlash achieved NOTHING - and will fill you with blind rage
Thought to be the world's biggest lion at the time, Cecil, with his unusual black mane, was the star of the show at the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe.

Mail Online
Open 
Behind-the-scenes at the BAFTAs: Edith Bowman shares her favourite red carpet memories from Hugh Jackman's hilarious reaction to her pregnancy to the moment that made Olivia Colman break down in tears
The BBC radio star and film fanatic, 52, has mingled with some of the industry's biggest names, interviewing stars from Olivia Colman and Martin Scorsese to Russell Crowe.

Mail Online
Open 
Who is Amanda Holden's sister Debbie? Star's glamorous younger sibling lives jet set lifestyle and survived a brush with death at Mount Everest
There is only a year between the siblings - who bear a strong resemblance to each other - Amanda is 55 and her sister is 54.

Mail Online
Open 
Aston Martin sells its F1 naming rights for £50M as sales slide
It also announced the sale of naming rights for its Aston Martin F1 team to AMR GP Holdings for £50m to help shore up its finances.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside Nigeria's deadly faultline - where an Islamist war on Christians and the struggle for land create a brutal future: DAVID PATRIKARAKOS
I've just returned from the Plateau state in Central Nigeria. Muslim Christian violence has strafed Nigeria for decades. It is a brutal conflict that has claimed thousands of lives.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best WordPress hosting services of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
You don't need to know coding to set up a WordPress-based website. Manage your website and content easily with our top picks for 2026.

BBC UK News
Open 
Two men aged 19 and 20 die after going missing on Yr Wyddfa
Mountain rescue teams were launched in challenging conditions to try and find the pair.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
MarketMuse review: Businesses of all sizes should consider this SEO optimization tool

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's surge of 'ultra high earners': There are now 31,000 on £1M or more, this is what their tax bills look like
There has been a sharp uptick in people classed as ultra high earners, analysis of taxman data shows.

Russia Today News
Open 
Proposed US-Saudi pact could allow Riyadh to build nuclear weapons – report

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Middleton fans won't want to miss Hobbs' new season collection now 15% off - here's what the Princess would love
Fans of the Princess of Wales's signature style will be delighted to hear that Hobbs is offering 15 per cent off its new-season collection - but only for a limited time.

Mail Online
Open 
Is YOUR handbag making you look old? The styles that instantly date you - and even expensive Chanel handbags are a problem
Speaking to the Daily Mail, UK-based celebrity stylist Lisa Talbot revealed how the accessory could be a telltale sign of how old you really are to others.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate and Beatrice's 'difficult' day at Royal Ascot: Princesses' joint outing was marked with 'awkwardness and mutual tension', claims body language expert
While Kate and Beatrice beamed as they waved confidently to crowds of well-wishers, video footage captured of their carriage ride also highlighted a 'tension' between the royal women.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor MUST be removed from line of royal succession, says Cabinet Minister as police search Royal Lodge for third day
Defence Minister Luke Pollard has become the first senior cabinet minister to back calls for Andrew Mountbatten Windsor to be removed from the line of succession.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The 60-second rule? Colour theory? Yet more ways we’re supposed to live our lives | Francesca Newton
In these times of social, political and even environmental instability, is it any wonder that we turn to influencers for instruction?A group of young women are about to try colour analysis for the first time. One says she suspects she’s not “supposed to wear gold”, and then holds up both hands swathed in gold rings and bracelets. The video cuts to the same woman with a strip of gold fabric laid across her chest. A sad trumpet sound plays before the strip is whipped off and replaced with a silver one. “See?” the analyst says. “Way better here.” The woman says: “Yeah”, but she sounds unhappy.Colour analysis is a method of picking out the shades that suit your skin tone. After its first life in the 1980s and 90s, “getting your colours done” found a new audience on TikTok in 2024 and has only become more popular since. This clip was one of many thrown up by my Instagram feed but it stuck with me, largely because it seemed so depressing in its portrayal of the trend as something to be endured rather than enjoyed. Directions on what you’re “supposed” or “not supposed” to wear, it intimated, should be followed even if it means sacrificing your own preferences.Francesca Newton is a writer and editor Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Marcus Mumford: ‘Which living person do I most admire? Sickeningly, it’s probably my wife’
The Mumford &amp; Sons frontman on farming, the fallout from contact sports as a kid and the four-letter word that’s banned at homeBorn in California, Marcus Mumford, 39, formed the band Mumford &amp; Sons in 2007. Two years later, they released their Brit award-winning debut Sigh No More, which included the song Little Lion Man. In 2013, Babel won album of the year at the Grammys, and in 2025 the band had their third No 1 album, Rushmere. Their latest release is Prizefighter and on 4 July they play BST Hyde Park in London. In 2022, Mumford made a solo record, Self‑Titled. He is married to the actor Carey Mulligan, has three children and lives in the West Country.Which living person do you most admire, and why?
Sickeningly, it’s probably my wife, because she’s a legend. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: CDU party conference resumes in Stuttgart
The second day of the conference will see the ruling party discuss dozens of motions. Meanwhile, several pro-EU demonstrations are planned in Stuttgart, Hamburg, Munich and other European cities. Follow DW.

Mail Online
Open 
Hairless heroes! Inside the online community where balding men encourage one another to shave their heads - and heap praise on their astounding new looks
A online forum for balding men has gone viral for members' stunning transformations, as men post before and after pictures of their newly-shaved pates.

Mail Online
Open 
The brutal Brontës! Wuthering Heights author Emily beat up her dog, toothless Charlotte spitefully held back Anne's career and all three died close to their 30th birthdays... not to mention their opium addict brother
The famous family of British writers endured everything from opium addiction to water contaminated by a cemetery, as well as a string of tragically early deaths.

BBC World News
Open 
Italian toddler dies after transplant with heart 'burned by frostbite'
The heart given to two-year-old Domenico was reportedly severely damaged during its transfer to hospital.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Goalkeeper hauled off at half-time as howler sparks A-League rout before coach resigns
Wellington’s Josh Oluwayemi heads into his own goal from outside boxAuckland FC’s 5-0 win prompts Giancarlo Italiano to resignA comical own goal from Wellington goalkeeper Josh Oluwayemi sparked a 5-0 thrashing by Auckland FC, prompting coach Giancarlo Italiano to dramatically announce his resignation in the post-match press conference.Oluwayemi’s 24th-minute howler looks destined to be a permanent feature on goalkeeper gaffe compilations after the Phoenix No 1 completely misjudged a Jake Girdwood-Reich clearance at Sky Stadium in Wellington on Saturday. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Two men aged 19 and 20 die after going missing on Yr Wyddfa
The bodies of two men have been recovered by mountain rescuers after they were reported missing.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Montbatten-Windsor MUST be removed from line of royal succession, says Cabinet Minister as pressure grows on Number 10
Defence Minister Luke Pollard has become the first senior cabinet minister to back calls for Andrew Mountbatten Windsor to be removed from the line of succession.

Mail Online
Open 
Perrie Edwards quietly shuts down her clothing brand Disora after racking up losses of £265,000
The companty behind the brand - Indigo Aura - has been shut down after last filing accounts at Companies House in December 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie 'are putting pieces of the puzzle together' over father Andrew's behaviour as they focus on protecting their young children from Epstein fall-out
Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie are reportedly focusing on protecting their own young children following their father's arrest on Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Civilians to soldiers: how four years of war has changed ordinary Ukrainians
Six Ukrainian men and women in uniform reveal how Russia's invasion in 2022 has changed them.

BBC UK News
Open 
Woman handed gift card receipt for £63 quadrillion
She thought it was "hilarious" when she saw her remaining gift card balance from a matcha latte.

BBC UK News
Open 
When satnavs go wrong: Why drivers end up following GPS into danger
The experts have their say after an Amazon delivery driver got stuck in mudflats this week.

BBC World News
Open 
Israeli strikes kill at least 10 in Lebanon, officials say
The strikes are among the deadliest in Lebanon since a ceasefire ended the war between Israel and Hezbollah.

Mail Online
Open 
Expert reveals a cheap vitamin that costs 4p a dose is the secret to making sure pricey collagen supplements actually work: 'Totally fundamental'
Can you eat your way to glowing, younger-looking skin? If you believe the adverts for collagen gummies, pills and powders, then yes.

Mail Online
Open 
Neurologist shares five ways to protect your brain health - and reduce likelihood of developing dementia
Getting your blood pressure checked, staying up to date with vaccines could be some of the most important things you can do to ward off dementia, experts say.

Mail Online
Open 
It's up to Kate and William to save the Royal Family: 'Pressure falls squarely' on Prince and Princess of Wales to rebuild integrity of the monarchy over next 50 years, says PR guru
The detention of the King's younger brother on his 66th birthday on suspicion of misconduct in public office represents the biggest crisis to hit the royals in modern history.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: ski cross, bobsleigh, aerials and more on day 15 – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh In the workshop, a man carefully waxes down a sleigh. Another Canadian team next, under Dearborn, but they can’t improve on their countrymen.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: The French have a cracking silver sled, but it all goes wrong at the start when one of the riders gets his foot stuck. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Britain's 'most notorious prisoner' pledges to 'expose unlawful sentence' ahead of parole hearing
The Parole Board has confirmed Charles Bronson's&#160;latest bid for release will progress to an oral hearing in the coming months, where he could be invited to make his plea for freedom.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
What parents, students and teachers want to see changed in the government's SEND reform
Some government plans for SEND were leaked earlier this week. But what else do families want to change?

Autosport F1
Open 
Russell: My F1 2026 practice starts were my worst ever
George Russell claimed his two practice starts in testing for the 2026 Formula 1 campaign “were worse” than his worst ever, with Ferrari looking the strongest in that regard.  Changes to the race start procedure has been one of the main talking points during pre-season, as drivers must now rev their engines for at least 10 seconds to spool up the turbo.This is as a result of the new ...Keep reading

TechRadar News
Open 
How to switch your music from Spotify to Qobuz with minimal fuss and without losing your playlists

TechRadar News
Open 
Will 2026 be the year facial recognition becomes boring, and why does it matter?

TechRadar News
Open 
‘A confident answer isn’t the same as a correct one’ — I asked medical experts whether you should use ChatGPT for health advice, and I was shocked by their answers

RevK
Open 
Charging for postage

Mail Online
Open 
Kia's EV5 review: The family electric SUV is here to conquer the UK market
The EV5 is available in three generously stocked trim levels and much of its hi-spec kit has trickled down from the vastly bigger and more expensive EV9.

Mail Online
Open 
The Dorset council that could send parking fines across Britain up to £160 - AA warns it will 'burst the dam'
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council has made a request to the Department for Transport to make temporary higher fines introduced last year a permanent fixture.

BBC UK News
Open 
Cash may be rotting after UK's biggest raid , say police
Twenty years after the notorious Securitas raid, Kent's top police officer looks back at the case.

UK Government News
Open 
Patients to benefit from improved access to dental appointments
Patients across the country will have better access to NHS dentistry, boosting earlier intervention, prevention and continuity of care.

Mail Online
Open 
Top interiors experts reveal why February is the perfect time to give your home a refresh - and the small changes you can make so your space sings for spring
February is the 'ideal' time for rethinking your decor - it's dark, cold, and quiet, but has an air of optimism as the days get longer and the temperatures slowly start to rise in the lead up to spring.

Mail Online
Open 
Owner only realised her dog had gatecrashed the Winter Olympics when she saw him cross finish line on TV - after he'd unlocked his cage and opened front door himself
Alice Varesco, 35, told the Daily Mail she could hardly believe her eyes when she spotted two-year-old Nazgul barrelling through the women's team cross-country skiing qualifying round.

Mail Online
Open 
Kimberley Garner reveals new relationship with mystery man who 'inspired her swimwear brand' as they share a passionate kiss
Kimberley, 35, who previously dated trader William Claeyssens de Tena, is refusing to name her new man, yet she's clearly smitten as he inspired her swimwear brand.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine launches devastating long-range cruise missile strike 900 miles into the heart of Russia as they take the fight back to Putin
Ukrainian forces launched an overnight attack on a major Russian missile plant.

Mail Online
Open 
Surge of 'ultra high earners': There are now 31,000 people in Britain raking in £1m-plus annually - here's how much tax they pay
There has been a sharp uptick in people classed as ultra high earners, analysis of taxman data shows.

Mail Online
Open 
Was panel of experts wrong to cast doubt on Lucy Letby's guilt? New medical research challenges their defence of killer nurse
Lucy Letby's defence team say new medical evidence has been submitted to the Criminal Cases Review Commission in a bid to have her convictions quashed.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brook says overlooking Pakistan players for The Hundred would be ‘a shame’
Captain urges four Indian-owned sides to think againSunrisers Leeds player will not lead side this yearHarry Brook has called on teams in this year’s Hundred to embrace Pakistan players after it was reported that they would not be considered by the tournament’s four Indian-owned sides.Brook, England’s white-ball captain, is contracted to Sunrisers Leeds, owned by the Indian media corporation the Sun Group, owners of the IPL side Sunrisers Hyderabad, and is the highest-paid player in the tournament. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: ski cross, bobsleigh, aerials and more on day 15 – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh: Taylor Austin snaps his visor into place, taps the bob, and that’s the sign for the sprint start, Canada fold into place smoothly, and it’s a decent run but not enough to trouble the leaders.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: With their chunky build and primary colours, the sleighs remind me of those 10p-and-ride-me aeroplanes that you used to find at the supermarket. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11048 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Supplier Maintenance - Barton on Sea (New)
Supplier will be carrying out planned maintenance on our network infrastructure.

Change Reference: CHG0128976
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Service(s):

Service No Agent Ref
S1186956 2924931

Maintenance Window:
Start: 09/03/2026 09:00 GMT
End: 09/03/2026 11:00 GMT

Work Description:
Scheduled network maintenance.

Expected Impact:
An interruption of approximately 2 minutes is expected during the maintenance window.

All work will be completed as efficiently as possible to minimise disruption.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Mon, 9th Mar 2026 09:00

End: Mon, 9th Mar 2026 11:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 09:26

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11049 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Supplier Maintenance - Coventry (New)
Supplier is undertaking emergency maintenance on our network infrastructure.

Change Reference: CHG0129362
Customer Impact: Service Affecting

Affected Services (Coventry):

Service No Agent Ref Location
S1043613 2856771 Coventry
S729886 2739386 Coventry
S1759692 3063264 Coventry
S1774221 2784452 Coventry
S729109 2739244 Coventry
S908200 2818299 Coventry
S750473 2745750 Coventry
S758732 2747795 Coventry
S1391425 2978547 Coventry
S877811 2803327 Coventry
S1354693 2969713 Coventry
S513810 2650349 Coventry

Work Description:
Attenuator installation.

Maintenance Window:
Start: 22/02/2026 00:01 GMT
End: 22/02/2026 07:00 GMT

Expected Impact:
Customers are expected to experience an interruption of approximately 5 minutes during the maintenance window. In the event of unforeseen on-site issues, the outage duration may exceed this estimate.

All efforts will be made to complete the work promptly and minimise disruption.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 00:00

End: Sun, 22nd Feb 2026 07:00

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 09:31

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Emergency

Russia Today News
Open 
Russian-Italian reporter detained in Türkiye

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tech Life
We chat about a conversational AI that's almost human-like in its speech skills

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Stay humble' - Glasner reacts to fan backlash as future in doubt
Sources tell BBC Sport that Crystal Palace's board is considering Oliver Glasner's future at the club.

Telegraph
Open 
England v Ireland, 2026 Six Nations: When is it, odds and how to watch
Plus: Who will referee fixture as England hope to return to winning ways after Scotland defeat

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Losing the dressing room' - what does it mean and how can it happen?
"Losing the dressing room" is now part of football's vocabulary. Chief football writer Phil McNulty asks what it means, how it happens and can it be solved?

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Who is Tucker Carlson and what does he tell us about the future of MAGA?
And what does MAGA look like post-Trump?

Russia Today News
Open 
French right rallies over ‘lynching’ of activist: What to know

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: ski cross, bobsleigh, aerials and more on day 15 – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh: The Austrians hit the wall almost as soon as they’ve folded into position, bouncing off another for good measure, and finish, in bob-time, a huge +0.89 behind the leaders.Men’s four-man bobsleigh: Team GB, in a royal blue bob are next. Brad Hall drives/steers? well and they’re very happy to slip into bronze. These are not slips of men, they’re big units and it is incredible how they fold into little balls. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Horrifying moment Winter Olympics speed skater is slashed above the EYE by rival's blade - as goggles save her from long-term damage
WARNING - GRAPHIC CONTENT: A competitor's blade sliced her above her left eye during the women's 1500 meters at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Politico owner Axel Springer joins rival Telegraph bid led by Dovid Efune
Sale to Lord Rothermere, Daily Mail owner, referred to regulators on media plurality and competition groundsThe media company Axel Springer, the owner of Politico and Business Insider, has joined a rival bid for the Telegraph as a proposed £500m sale to the owner of the Daily Mail faces months of scrutiny from regulators.Axel Springer, which also owns Europe’s highest-circulation newspaper, Bild, has joined a consortium led by Dovid Efune, the British owner of the New York Sun, who has been pursuing the Telegraph titles for more than a year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereJohan Lange, the Tottenham sporting director, has explained the rationale behind Igor Tudor’s hire as head coach until the end of the season. Lange said: “it’s very important to go into a shorter process than you do if you are changing a head coach over the summer. We interviewed a few candidates. Igor impressed us very, very much in the interview.“He comes in with very big experience at the highest level in football. As a player, playing for a very, very big club, one of the biggest clubs in the world in Juve. Of course he was part of this very good generation of Croatia national team in the late 90s. He has shown the capabilities of coming into clubs around this time, February, March, and also big clubs, and made an immediate performance impact. That was of course a very big reason.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics 2026: ski cross, bobsleigh, aerials and more on day 15 – live
• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing• Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email TanyaMen’s four-man bobsleigh: Team GB, in a royal blue bob are next. Brad Hall drives/steers? well and they’re very happy to slip into bronze. These are not slips of men, they’re big units and it is incredible how they fold into little balls.Hang about, how many German teams are there? Germany two and Germany three are next in their bobs, but neither are as quick as Lochner’s quad. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer 2.0: could a more authentic PM revive Labour’s appeal?
After surviving a coup, and with his critics chastened, No 10 insiders say a more combative PM is up for taking the fight to Reform UKTwo days after Keir Starmer had been disowned by the Scottish Labour leader last week, and as a row raged over another controversial peerage, the prime minister decided to pick a fight with a billionaire.It was a dark week for the prime minister, with the departure of his longtime chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, who had become a deeply divisive figure and who took the hit for the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador, despite his links to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bishop of Lincoln arrested on suspicion of sexual assault
Church suspends Stephen Conway as police investigate claim man was sexually assaulted between 2018 and 2025The bishop of Lincoln has been arrested on suspicion of sexual assault.Lincolnshire police confirmed that a 68-year-old man was arrested as part of an “ongoing investigation following an allegation that a man was sexually assaulted between 2018 and 2025”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Last year I read 137 books’: could setting targets help you put down your phone and pick up a book?
BookTok influencer Jack Edwards motivates himself with reading goals – and he’s not alone. Authors and avid readers discuss the rise of metrics, and reveal how many books they finished last yearEvery January, thousands of readers log on to Goodreads, Instagram or TikTok and make the same declaration: this is the year I read 50 books. Or 75. Or 100. Screenshots of spreadsheets circulate, templates for tracking pages and percentages are downloaded, friends publicly pledge to “do better” than they did last year. What was once a private pastime is announced, quantified and, in some corners of the internet, judged.The appeal is obvious: in a distracted age, reading can easily become crowded out by work, screens and fatigue. Literacy rates in the UK are stagnating: in 2024, around 50% of UK adults read regularly for pleasure, down from 58% in 2015. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Horrifying moment Winter Olympics speed skater is slashed above the EYE by rival's blade
WARNING - GRAPHIC CONTENT: A competitor's blade sliced her above her left eye during the women's 1500 meters at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Australia v India: third women’s T20 international – live
Updates from the T20I cricket at Adelaide Oval Any thoughts? Get in touch with an email2nd over: India 14-0 (Smriti 5, Shafali 3)Gardner comes in for the second over to open from the other end. Shafali attacks immediately, coming down the pitch and attempts to drive it back over Gardner’s head, but the ball catches the edge instead. It falls safely, just past Litchfield and Shafali is off the mark. It’s a fairly tight over from Gardner, just four runs from it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereJeff Sax has messaged in about Mikel Arteta and Arsenal:“I cannot understand how Arteta is not receiving more criticism. He has not been able to win the league for years and now he seems to be setting up for another miss.Stoke City v Leicester City (12:30pm)West Brom v Coventry City (12:30pm)Swansea City v Bristol City (12:30pm)Hull City v QPR (12:30pm)Millwall v PortsmouthNorwich City v Birmingham CityWrexham v Ipswich TownMiddlesbrough v Oxford UnitedSouthampton v Charlton AthleticWatford v Derby County Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Bishop of Lincoln arrested on suspicion of sexual assault
The Bishop of Lincoln, the Right Reverend Stephen Conway, has been arrested on suspicion of sexual assault.

BBC UK News
Open 
I ran marathons on seven continents in a week in memory of my brother
Bobby White ran seven 26.2 mile races across the world to raise money for Glasgow Hospital Children's Charity.

Sky News Home
Open 
Child puberty blocker trial paused over 'wellbeing concerns'
A clinical trial into puberty blockers has been paused after the medicines regulator raised "new concerns directly related to the wellbeing of children", the government said.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Sacrifices' & celebrations - why Chelsea's Neto is misunderstood
Pedro Neto has been criticised for lacking a "killer instinct", but the Chelsea winger's shape-shifting role goes some way to explain that.

BBC World News
Open 
Avalanches kill five in Austrian Alps, officials say
A man skiing with his son was among the victims on Friday, bringing the region's avalanche death toll this season to at least 21.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereMikel Arteta has insisted the word “bottlers” is not in his vocabulary and that Arsenal must take criticism “on the chin” after surrendering a 2-0 lead against the bottom side, Wolves, in midweek.As always, feel free to email in with any thoughts, feelings, predictions and all that jazz ahead of today’s games. You can also leave a comment below the line. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Australia v India: third women’s T20 international – live
Updates from the T20I cricket at Adelaide Oval Start time is 7.15pm local/1.45pm IST Any thoughts? Get in touch with an email2nd over: India 14-0 (Smriti 5, Shafali 3)Gardner comes in for the second over to open from the other end. Shafali attacks immediately, coming down the pitch and attempts to drive it back over Gardner’s head, but the ball catches the edge instead. It falls safely, just past Litchfield and Shafali is off the mark. It’s a fairly tight over from Gardner, just four runs from it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereAs always, feel free to email in with any thoughts, feelings, predictions and all that jazz ahead of today’s games. You can also leave a comment below the line.matchday.live@theguardian.com Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
What CES 2026 didn’t show: The quiet crisis in wireless capacity nobody is talking about

TechRadar News
Open 
'Modern technologies have revolutionised virtually every aspect of sport': Get ready for more AI coming to all the sports you love

The Verge
Open 
Anker’s powerful home theater on wheels is pure chaos
The Soundcore Nebula X1 Pro is too weird to exist. It takes the excellent 4K projector and karaoke microphones from Anker's Nebula X1 and stuffs them inside a powerful five-speaker Google TV party on wheels. It's so absurd that it feels like a gadget fever dream - and I'm here for it. At the heart [&#8230;]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
England head into T20 World Cup Super 8s with a clean slate and a clear aim to improve
Although the weather in Kandy looks precarious, England have been dealt a good draw and can make the last four with a fair windLate on Friday morning, after the entire playing surface had spent most of the preceding few days shrouded in plastic sheeting, the sun broke out. The covers were peeled back and the ground staff – a huge team of about 70 people, those covers don’t move themselves – set about trundling their roller slowly across a fresh pitch at Pallekele International Cricket Stadium.The bad weather had lifted and, finally, work could begin. England were training at the time, hoping their own clouds are about to break and that after progressing awkwardly through the World Cup’s opening group stage they will, finally, in the words of Jacob Bethell, “go out there and give it the full shebang”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League news and buildup, EFL and more – matchday live
⚽ Buildup to the weekend’s football action⚽ Follow us over on Bluesky | And mail us hereFrom strike partners to new eras, here are 10 things to look out for in the Premier League this weekend…Thomas Frank, sacked by Tottenham last week, is believed to be a contender to take over at Crystal Palace in the summer. Palace would also be interested in Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola, whose contract expires at end of June. The former Republic of Ireland forward Robbie Keane, who is managing Ferencvaros, and Rayo Vallecano’s Iñigo Pérez have also been mooted as potential replacements. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Crash ethics, colourful commentary and other questions from watching Winter Olympics | Emma John
Everything I still need to know after two weeks of the sublime and sometimes bizarre in Milano CortinaHaving avoided the horrific February weather by staying on my sofa for two weeks, I have embraced the Winter Olympics as a quadrennial extra Christmas holiday. It offers pine trees, baubles and the chance to gather around the TV while someone with an RP accent tells us how determined and courageous the British are.The Olympic Games have always presented something of a paradox – on one hand, they are the peak of human athleticism, and on the other, they can look like an elite school sports day. There’s normally at least one activity that reminds you of your youth, whether it’s table tennis or trampolining. Presumably the skiing and snowboarding on display this month have felt very relatable to swathes of Surrey. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Winter Olympics briefing: united by 2022 fiasco, Maier and Smith rise to the top
Daniela Maier and Fanny Smith did not need a courtroom to decide their fate at these Winter GamesThey say if you want to go fast, go alone, but if you want to go far, go together. On day 14 of Milano Cortina, the slopes of Livigno proved that theory in spectacular fashion.Four years ago at Beijing 2022, Daniela Maier of Germany and Fanny Smith of Switzerland were the unwilling protagonists of a convoluted medal dispute. Smith had crossed the finish line in third ahead of Maier in fourth. But the race jury flipped the result after ruling Smith had interfered with Maier, despite both skiers disagreeing. Smith appealed against the jury’s decision to the court of arbitration for sport (Cas), which overruled the officials’ decision and deemed that bronze medals should be awarded to both skiers. Smith got her bronze a year later in Switzerland. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Bond, bagpipes & controversial Canadians - why curling is must-watch
Curling might seem a strange choice for prime-time Saturday night viewing, but at 18:05 GMT - live on the BBC - millions will find themselves tuning in to see if Team GB can add a fourth gold medal of these Winter Olympics.

The Register
Open 
Ofcom's grumble-o-meter lights up for EE, TalkTalk, Vodafone
Q3 figures show the trio drawing the most broadband complaints per 100,000 customers The UK's telecoms regulator has named and shamed the companies it receives the most customer complaints about, with certain brands cropping up more than others.…

Deutsche Welle
Open 
No reckoning over ethnic cleansing of Bulgaria's Turks
Bulgaria's Turkish community, descendants of Ottoman settlers, suffered severe persecution under the communist regime. Yet little has been done to address the injustice.

Mail Online
Open 
Chilling sign of Trump's 'imminent' Iran attack as more than 60 US warplanes swarm key army base
Donald Trump has alluded to potential military action against Iran as negotiations continue over nuclear power.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The woman defying norms in Iran - and starring in an Oscar-tipped film
In a room of 1,500 men, Sara Shahverdi becomes the only female leader in her region of Iran - a new film joins her as she pushes for change.

Mail Online
Open 
Surge of 'ultra high earners': There are now 31,000 people in Britain raking in £1m-plus annually - here's how much tax they pay
Andrew Tricker, Lubbock Fine's managing director, says many younger people earning super-sized incomes were working in 'volatile' industries.

Mail Online
Open 
West Wing star Timothy Busfield pleads NOT GUILTY to four counts of sexual contact with a child
The 68-year-old was indicted by a grand jury on February 6 and accused of touching two children on the set of The Cleaning Lady while filming in Albuquerque between November 2022 and 2024.

Sky News Home
Open 
Three men killed in US strike on alleged drug boat
The US military says it has struck a boat "engaged in narco-trafficking operations", killing three men.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
I tested the Blackview Xplore 2 Satellite - and this rugged phone can call from remote places, if the stars align

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's curling king going for gold: Openly gay Bruce Mouat is stony-faced at the Winter Olympics but his sport helped to 'break the ice' with his boyfriend on Tinder
He's the stony-faced sensation looking to win gold for Britain at the Winter Olympics. But Bruce Mouat has already written his own history after becoming an openly gay elite sportsman.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside Nigeria's deadly faultline - where sectarian violence, climate change and mineral wars create a brutal future: DAVID PATRIKARAKOS
I've just returned from the Plateau state in Central Nigeria. Muslim Christian violence has strafed Nigeria for decades. It is a brutal conflict that has claimed thousands of lives.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price's horrified friends tell me how she's been 'brainwashed' by 'vile' new husband: He's 'thick as ****', one rants... and that's just the start as they tell KATIE HIND truth about Kerry Katona punch-up... and worse
Almost a month into her fourth marriage, and the evidence is already piling up that Katie Price has married, to put it bluntly, a wrong 'un.

Mail Online
Open 
Murder probe after 'kind, selfless and loyal' mother-of-two, 47, dies a week after being attacked in her village home
Helen Bird, 47, was found seriously injured on February 2 inside the £500,000 village home at Chelveston, Northamptonshire. She died eight days later.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Penguins delight residents in care home visit
Residents were able to hold and stroke the two Humboldt penguins during the visit.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Supermarket worker's kindness meant I could feed my newborn baby
Emma and Harry Brown say the Asda employee's kindness helped them to feed and clothe their new baby.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Striking drone footage shows ship abandoned off coast of Wales
Jay Curtis was flying his drone when he spotted the Resolute vessel off the coast of Pembrokeshire.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK snow carver comes second in global contest with Olympic sculpture
Pippa Unwin says she is delighted to succeed with her "ridiculously complicated" design.

Mail Online
Open 
Wounded Trump's tariff humiliation gives him no choice but to attack Iran, close ally says... as president mulls decision that's set to define his legacy
The president, who has been going back and forth on the issue with advisers for days as the military sends dozens of air and sea crafts to the region, has a heavy focus on his legacy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Psychological torture’: Spanish tenants fight back against housing ‘harassment’
Court in Madrid will soon decide whether developers are using construction to force people out of their homesWhen the Madrid building where Jaime Oteyza had lived since 2012 was sold to an investment fund two years ago, a local tenants’ union swiftly warned him what to expect.First the tenants would be told that none of their rental contracts – regardless of their expiry date – would be renewed, the union said. Then, as the 50 or so families in the building grappled with what to do next, a series of construction projects would probably be launched in the building to ramp up pressure on them to leave. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cheating, Penisgate and boos for Vance: the 10 wildest stories of the Winter Olympics
Amid the triumphs, failures and broken medals in Milano Cortina, here’s our countdown of the outstanding moments that will live long in the memoryCheating has been part and parcel of the Olympics since at least Eupolus of Thessaly in 388BC. But crooked boxers from ancient Greece never confessed their indiscretions on live television. Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Lægreid did exactly that after winning bronze in the men’s 20km biathlon for his first individual Olympic medal, publicly admitting he’d two-timed his girlfriend three months earlier and calling it “my biggest mistake” in an overshare for the ages carried live by national broadcaster NRK. Lægreid’s shot appeared to have missed the target one day later when the wronged party, wishing to remain anonymous, told the Norwegian paper VG it was “hard to forgive” what he did. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Palestinian Authority in dire straits as Israel's hold on West Bank deepens
More than 30 years after its creation, there are increasing warnings that the PA is close to collapse.

Sky News Home
Open 
How Iran might be preparing itself for a potential US strike
Satellite images analysed by Sky News' Data and Forensics team show Iran has fortified its nuclear and defence facilities, alongside conducting live drills with Russian forces amid rising tensions with the US military.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The Uber-driving English champion & his 30-year fight for a passport
English light-middleweight champion Bilal Fawaz challenges for the British title belt on Saturday, but is still fighting for a British passport.

Sky News Home
Open 
Charles Bronson pledges to 'expose unlawful sentence' ahead of parole hearing
The Parole Board has confirmed Charles Bronson's&#160;latest bid for release will progress to an oral hearing in the coming months, where he could be invited to make his plea for freedom.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11047 Managed Hosting - Openstack - Reduced Resiliency (New)
We are experiencing Openstack node issues. Our engineers are investigating the issues. Currently there is no impact to the customers other than reduced resiliency. More updates to follow soon.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:01

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:47

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11047 Managed Hosting - Openstack - Reduced Resiliency (Update)
Our engineers have rebooted the node remotely and the node has now recovered.
We will continue to monitor over the weekend.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:01

End: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 11:00

Update: Mon, 23rd Feb 2026 10:30

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 07:16

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

TechRadar News
Open 
I've trawled through the Amazon UK weekend sale and picked the 15 best tech deals that'll please any bargain hunter

TechRadar News
Open 
Thinking about getting the Google Pixel 10a? I've looked through every network's deals and these are the biggest discounts

TechRadar News
Open 
Which of Dyson's wet-floor cleaners should you buy? Here's what I'd recommend

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Super 8 at T20 World Cup 2026: Free Streams, TV Channels, Schedule

TechRadar News
Open 
How a good file helped me break free of Yahoo! Mail

Slashdot
Open 
US Particle Accelerators Turn Nuclear Waste Into Electricity, Cut Radioactive Life By 99.7%
Researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility are advancing Accelerator-Driven Systems (ADS) that use high-energy proton beams to transmute long-lived nuclear waste into shorter-lived isotopes. "The process also generates significant heat, which can be harnessed to produce additional electricity for the grid," reports Interesting Engineering. The projects are supported by $8.17 million in grants from the Department of Energy's NEWTON (Nuclear Energy Waste Transmutation Optimized Now) program. From the report: The researchers are developing ADS technology. This system uses a particle accelerator to fire high-energy protons at a target (such as liquid mercury), triggering a process called "spallation." This releases a flood of neutrons that interact with unwanted, long-lived isotopes in nuclear waste. The technology can effectively "burn" the most hazardous components of the waste by transmuting these elements. While unprocessed fuel remains dangerous for approximately 100,000 years, partitioning and recycling via ADS can reduce that window to just 300 years. [...]

To make ADS economically viability, Jefferson Lab is tackling two primary technical hurdles: efficiency and power. Traditional particle accelerators require massive, expensive cryogenic cooling systems to reach superconducting temperatures. Jefferson Lab is pioneering a more cost-effective approach by coating the interior of pure niobium cavities with tin. These niobium-tin cavities can operate at higher temperatures, allowing for the use of standard commercial cooling units rather than custom, large-scale cryogenic plants. The team is also developing spoke cavities, which is a complex design intended to drive even higher efficiency in neutron spallation.

The second project focuses on the power source behind the beam. Researchers are adapting the magnetron -- the same component that powers microwave ovens -- to provide the 10 megawatts of power required for ADS. The primary challenge is that the energy frequency must match the accelerator cavity precisely at 805 Megahertz. In collaboration with Stellant Systems, researchers are prototyping advanced magnetrons that can be combined to reach the necessary high-power thresholds with maximum efficiency. The NEWTON program aims to enable the recycling of the entire US commercial nuclear fuel stockpile within the next 30 years.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Eleven basic car features that should make a comeback, from CD players to dashboard buttons and tax discs
With motorists being overwhelmed by the amount of gadgets and features in modern cars, a new report has revealed that plenty still prefer a more basic way of driving life.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tumbler Ridge suspect's ChatGPT account banned before shooting
OpenAI said the account's activity did not meet the threshold to flag it to authorities when it was identified.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Tudor '100%' convinced Spurs will avoid relegation
New Tottenham head coach Igor Tudor says he is "100%" convinced Spurs will avoid relegation and still be in the Premier League next season.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'That's me!': Hundreds tell BBC how medication triggered gambling and other addictions
More than 250 people contacted us describing impulsive behaviour side effects from prescription drugs.

Mail Online
Open 
Two years ago her marriage imploded. Now RUTH LANGSFORD is back with a bang - and an empowering book to help women navigate life's hardest blows...
I thought Eamonn and I would be together
for ever...But you can't fall apart. Get up, have a little weep - and keep going

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How the beaches, culture and people of Corfu hit me for six
A cricket match kindled my love affair with the Greek island, inspiring both a literary festival and my new novelThis is not where you would expect an article about one of the Mediterranean’s most beautiful islands to start. It’s the tail end of winter, 2021. Kensal Green Cemetery in west London: the imperial mausolea canted and crumbling, low clouds dissolving into rain. We are still in that strange phase of the pandemic when we are masked, newly aware of our bodies and the space around them. We are here to bury Nikos, a man who for me, for many, was the incarnation of Corfu.I had spent my 20s trying to find the perfect Greek island, hopping from the well-trodden (Mykonos, Santorini, Cephalonia) to the more obscure (Kythira, Symi, Meganisi). None quite matched the vision I had dreamed into being as a child, when I segued from Robert Graves to Mary Renault, then to Lawrence Durrell and John Fowles. Greece was an idea before it was a place: freedom and deep thought, a constellation of sand, salt and thyme. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My cultural awakening: Operation Mincemeat taught me how to cry – now I sob at everything
A musical number about a woman’s letter to her husband on the second world war frontline unlocked my ability to blub – and made me a happier personI am sure I must have cried as a child, but by the time I was a teenager it had stopped. It was probably a boarding school thing. Very stiff upper lip. My parents are not the most emotionally available human beings, either. I like to tease them by saying: “I love you.” You can see the panic in their eyes. They will normally say: “All right then, bye.”My gran died when I was about 18, and I was sad, of course, but in terms of tears there was nothing, no water. I never cried at movies. I didn’t cry on my wedding day, nor at the birth of either of my daughters. It never alarmed me. I actually thought I might have underactive tear glands. Looking back, it was probably all about control. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scrubs: the cast’s chemistry is still so sparky it totally carries this zinger-packed comeback
Dr Cox is still electrifying, the original cast’s interactions are a joy to watch, and after a couple of episodes it finds its tone – making it just the comfort TV we need right nowIt is possible to believe contradictory things. For instance, I believe TV’s reliance on reviving old shows is a risk-averse, creative regression. On the other hand, I love it. I particularly love it when fictional characters have visibly aged. There’s a broken humanity that you don’t get with flawless, collagen-rich skin. You sense you could talk to them about your sciatica and they’d get it.I got that feeling with the new series of Scrubs (Disney+, from Thursday 26 February), a show I once mainlined on E4. Scrubs was as comforting as tea and toast. Surprisingly malleable, too. In its bones, it was a coming-of-age workplace bromance between junior doctors JD and Turk, played by then newcomers Zach Braff and Donald Faison. Their chemistry was the show’s anchor, balancing sassy racial harmony with irreverence and heart, as they bore witness to universal human drama. But is it healthy enough to survive resuscitation, more than 15 years after its last episode aired? Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Rugby player ends up in hospital after falling in dog poo
Adam Lang says he did not realise a cut had become infected until he felt an "unbearable" pain in his arm.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Anna Murdoch-Mann, writer and former News Corp director, dies aged 81
The author, journalist and philanthropist died at home in Florida, according to Rupert Murdoch's news outlets.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How long can crocodiles stay under water without breathing? The kids’ quiz
Five multiple-choice questions – set by children – to test your knowledge, and a chance to submit your own junior brainteasers for future quizzes​Submit a questionMolly Oldfield hosts Everything Under the Sun, a podcast answering children’s questions. Do check out her books, Everything Under the Sun and Everything Under the Sun: Quiz Book, as well as her new title, Everything Under the Sun: All Around the World. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Which rock group’s name was inspired by a sewing machine? The Saturday quiz
From thorn, seat, shout and stew to Bruno Mars and Bette Midler, test your knowledge with the Saturday quiz1 What, in Spain, is the world’s largest Renaissance building? 2 Which rock group’s name was inspired by a label on a sewing machine?3 The body produces about 2 million what every second?4 What is the only non-US team to win baseball’s World Series?5 Who did Violet Gibson try to assassinate in Rome in 1926?6 Financially, what rose from £85,000 to £120,000 in December 2025?7 Which bird can dive to depths of more than 500m?8 The Sonderbund civil war in 1847 was what country’s last military conflict?What links:
9 Thorn; seat; shout; stew?10 Nicole Kidman; Bruno Mars; Bette Midler; Jason Momoa; Barack Obama?11 Circular orders; rectangular information; triangular warning?12 Hannah Montana: The Movie; Lara Croft: Tomb Raider; On Golden Pond; Paper Moon?13 Argentina; Mexico; New Zealand; Qatar; Senegal; Spain?14 Black; brown; Philippine forest; Polynesian; ricefield?15 John Flamsteed (1675) and Michele Dougherty (2025)? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Making Tax Digital: are you ready for HMRC’s self-assessment shake-up?
Tax authorities warn sole traders and landlords to act, as the biggest change to self-assessment in decades loomsSpring is “the time of plans and projects”, wrote Leo Tolstoy in Anna Karenina. For hundreds of thousands of self-employed people and property owners, those words are ringing true – and have never felt more daunting.This spring, HM Revenue and Customs is introducing the biggest shake-up of the self-assessment tax system in decades. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guide #231: ​How the ​hunt for the ​next James Bond ​became the ​franchise’s ​best ​marketing ​tool
In this week’s newsletter: The race to crown a new 007 has become its own long‑running spectacle, turning the search for​ Bond into an event as big as the films themselves• Don’t get The Guide delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereCallum Turner’s turn as James Bond lasted at most a couple of weeks. No sooner had he been enshrined as frontrunner to succeed Daniel Craig, than he was nudged from the DB5 driver’s seat by the latest heir apparent, Jacob Elordi, installed as the new bookies’ favourite after his smouldering, highly profitable performance in Wuthering Heights. Smarting somewhere in the background is Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who seemed locked in for the job a couple of years ago, enjoying the backing of former 007s Pierce Brosnan and George Lazenby, but now seems to have fallen out of favour. And don’t forget the succession of other dead cert Bonds now banished to the back of the odds market: the long-rumoured likes of Tom Hardy and Idris Elba (both now likely to have aged out of the role); Theo James; James Norton; Josh O’Connor; Harris Dickinson; Bridgerton’s Rége-Jean Page; and approximately 5,000 other predominately British actors who have enjoyed box office success/led a successful TV drama/look good in a tuxedo.On and on the hunt goes. Five years after Craig’s final outing, one that left absolutely no wriggle room for his return, and not far off a year since Denis Villeneuve was pegged as director of the next, still-untitled instalment, the next 007 has still not been found. Or if he has (and it seems certain to be a he), everyone involved in the Bond operation is keeping characteristically tight-lipped about it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The photos that have kept former Prince Andrew in the public eye
Images include Mountbatten-Windsor with Virginia Giuffre, Jeffrey Epstein and an unknown female lying on a floorAllegations about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links to Jeffrey Epstein have unfolded over several years – and in several pictures. Here is how they have dripped into the public’s consciousness and kept the pressure on the royal family. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea flower show seeks new charity sponsors after mystery donors end support
Exclusive: Project Giving Back, set up in 2022 to help charities exhibit show gardens, says this year will be its lastChelsea flower show is looking for new charity sponsors after the mystery philanthropic couple who have spent more than £23m on show gardens end their support.Project Giving Back was set up by two anonymous donors in 2022, and since then it has paid for 63 gardens at the most prestigious horticultural event in the world, held each summer at the Royal Hospital gardens in south-west London. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Survivor of financial abuse invited to advise ministers after Guardian report
City minister Lucy Rigby acts after woman faced repossession of house burned down by controlling husbandA woman who was nearly killed by her abusive husband has been invited to advise the government on measures to support victims of financial abuse after the Guardian highlighted her story last weekend.Francesca Onody was left homeless and penniless when her husband doused their cottage with petrol while she and her two children were inside. Her husband, Malcolm Baker, died when the property exploded. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Antiques auction selling neck shackles accused of ‘profiting from slavery’
Exclusive: Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy says treating these objects as collectors’ items ‘should be looked at in horror’An antiques auction selling chains linked to the enslavement of African people in Zanzibar has been accused of “profiting from slavery”.Neck irons dated to the Omani-Arab dominated trade in enslaved people in east Africa, which ended after African resistance and British pressure in the late 19th century, will go on sale this weekend in Scotland. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
What's eating Arsenal? North London derby now a test of Gunners' 'bottle'
What's eating Arsenal? Sunday's North London derby is now a test of the Gunners' "bottle", says chief football writer Phil McNulty.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'A shame' if Pakistan players excluded from Hundred, says Brook
England skipper Harry Brook says it would be "a shame" if Pakistan players were excluded from playing in The Hundred, and confirms he will not captain Sunrisers Leeds this year.

BBC World News
Open 
At least 10 killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, state media says
A senior Hezbollah official is among those reported killed in air strikes on the Bekaa Valley and southern Lebanon.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Goalkeeper hauled off at half-time after howler for the ages sparks A-League rout
Wellington’s Josh Oluwayemi heads into his own goal from outside boxAuckland FC run out 5-0 winners in New Zealand derbyA comical own goal from goalkeeper Josh Oluwayemi has moved Auckland within touching distance of first spot on the A-League Men table after a 5-0 New Zealand derby thrashing of Wellington.Oluwayemi’s 24th-minute howler looks destined to be a permanent feature on goalkeeper gaffe compilations after the Phoenix No 1 completely misjudged a Jake Girdwood-Reich clearance at Sky Stadium in Wellington on Saturday. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11047 Managed Hosting - Openstack Node Issues (New)
We are experiencing Openstack node issues. Our engineers are investigating the issues. Currently there is no impact to the customers other than reduced resiliency. More updates to follow soon.

Start: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:01

Edited: Sat, 21st Feb 2026 05:47

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran preparing nuclear counterproposal as Trump warns he is considering limited military strikes
Iranian foreign minister says draft could be ready for internal review in coming days while US president says ‘they better negotiate a fair deal’Iran’s foreign minister has said he expects to have a draft counterproposal ready within days after nuclear talks with the US this week, while Donald Trump said he was considering limited military strikes.Two US officials told Reuters that US military planning on Iran had reached an advanced stage, with options including targeting individuals as part of an attack and even pursuing leadership change in Tehran, if ordered by Trump. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Andrew and King Charles: A personal battle of royal brothers
The problems facing the monarchy over Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor are also a family problem between brothers.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
US Space Force requests parabolic‑flight services for summer cadet program
The United States Space Force has released a Request for Information seeking industry input on the provision of parabolic‑flight services for the Space Delta 1, Detachment 1 “Azimuth” summer training program.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany cuts funding for integration of refugees
The German Interior Ministry is restricting access to voluntary integration courses for immigrants, citing budget constraints. Many critics consider this a disastrous decision.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Bond, bagpipes & controversial Canadians - why curling is must-watch
Curling might seem a strange choice for prime-time Saturday night viewing, but at 18:05 GMT - live on the BBC - millions will find themselves staring at televisions, tablets, laptops and phones to see if Team GB can add a fourth gold medal of these Winter Olympics.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: the must-see new drama for Marian Keyes fans
The bestselling novelist brings her beloved Walsh sisters to the screen. Plus: Patrick Dempsey lets loose with Jonathan Ross. Here’s what to watch this evening Sat, 9.15pm, BBC One Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Why fake AI videos of UK urban decline are taking over social media
Deepfakes showing grim taxpayer-funded waterparks have gone viral and drawn some racist responses.

BBC World News
Open 
Family of Palestinian-American man killed in West Bank demand accountability
Nasrallah Abu Siyam was the sixth American citizen killed by Israeli settlers or soldiers in the West Bank in the last two years.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Does natural deodorant pass the sniff test? The Becky Barnicoat cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What to wear if you are bored of your winter coat
Can’t wait to ditch that heavy parka? Here are three lighter options for the warmer days ahead Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Meera Sodha’s recipe for rhubarb and custard trifle
Nostalgia and comfort combine in abundance in this retro dessert that’s strictly for kids of all agesThe first time I had rhubarb and custard together was in a boiled sweet from a big jar in my mum’s corner shop. You could flip the sweet in your mouth and rub the flavour you wanted with your tongue. Too tart? Flip to the custard side. Too creamy? Flip again. It was one of the best ways to spend 10 minutes as a seven-year-old in the early 1990s. A few decades on, a lot has changed. Mum no longer has a corner shop, I don’t love boiled sweets any more, but eating rhubarb and custard is still a fantastic way to spend 10 minutes (at the very least). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Secret Agent to Mitski: the week in rave reviews
A brilliant mystery drama about politics and corruption in 70s Brazil, and a wonderful wallow in misery from the US musician. Here’s the pick of the week’s culture, taken from the Guardian’s best-rated reviews Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die to Tracey Emin: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead
Sam Rockwell stars in Gore Verbinski’s madcap sci-fi comedy, and the YBA Goat is back with a new exhibition at the Tate ModernGood Luck, Have Fun, Don’t DieOut now
If Sam Rockwell materialised in an LA diner dressed like something that escaped from an off-Broadway production of Starlight Express, wouldn’t you hear him out? In visionary director Gore Verbinski’s new film, Rockwell plays a man from the future, who has come back to warn us about the perils of artificial intelligence. Sold. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Six great reads: dating in later life; a lost Amazon van, ‘gong bath’ freezers, and Toni Morrison
Need something brilliant to read this weekend? Here are six of our favourite pieces from the last seven days Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Doubling down on meat’: is the UK’s love affair with vegetarian food over?
McDonald’s, Wagamama and others scale back plant-based choices in the UK in favour of ‘high-margin’ meat-led dishesIn 2021, vegetarianism and veganism were booming and menus reflected it. Restaurants and fast-food chains rapidly expanded their meat-free offerings, racing to meet growing demand from diners. McDonald’s launched its first plant-based burger, joining a wave of operators embracing non-meat options.Fast forward to 2026 and the landscape looks markedly different. Last month, the fast food chain announced it was axing most of its vegetarian range – sparing only its McPlant burger – owing to weak sales. Wagamama has removed some vegan dishes from its menu, while Domino’s has also scaled back its plant-based options. The final Veggie Pret, a standalone concept store from the high street sandwich chain that started in 2016, closed in February 2024. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Relooted: the South African video game where players take back artefacts from western museums
Creators say they’re offering Africans a ‘hopeful, utopian feeling’ of retrieving objects looted by colonial armiesA new South African video game lets players take back African artefacts held in western museums in a series of heists, amid a growing campaign to repatriate treasures looted by colonial armies.Players of Relooted become South African sports scientist and parkour expert Nomali, as she leaps and dives through museums to retrieve 70 real objects. They include an Asante gold mask that was taken by the British army when it destroyed the Asante empire’s capital, Kumasi, and is now in the Wallace Collection in London. Another object is the skull of the Tanzanian king Mangi Meli, which was taken to Germany after its colonial regime executed him in 1900. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tim Dowling: the oldest one is moving out – and this time it feels final
I’ll have no one to watch Deadwood with any more, but at least we can fix the ceiling in his bedroomFor the last couple of months, a dining room table has been squatting over the coffee table in our living room, like one animal threatening another. It’s not in the way exactly, but it’s still a strangely oppressive use of space. Anyway, in a few days it will be gone.The oldest one is leaving home for the third time – or the fourth, if you count going to university, which I do, because I cried that time, my vision blurring as I tried to punch my registration number into a car park ticket machine. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs considering investigation into Andrew’s role as UK trade envoy
MPs will meet on Tuesday to discuss the former prince, as it emerged he pestered ministers for a bigger government roleAn influential committee of MPs could launch an inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s role as a UK trade envoy despite his arrest, it is understood, as it emerged that the disgraced former royal pestered ministers about getting a bigger government role.After his arrest on Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office, the cross-party business and trade committee said it would meet next Tuesday to discuss a possible investigation into the role he held from 2001 to 2011. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Blind date: ‘The best thing about her? Super easy to talk to. And pretty’
Freya, 23, a master’s student, meets Greg, 24, a civil servantWhat were you hoping for?
Somebody friendly and kind, and an interesting chat. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine is the biggest and most consequential of all the American betrayals | Simon Tisdall
As the war enters its fifth year, it’s time for Europe to take the fight to Putin on its own terms and tell Trump to get lostViewed from Europe, the US’s failure to defend the people of Ukraine against Russian aggression is the greatest and most consequential of a host of recent American betrayals. It’s not just the sickening subservience shown to Vladimir Putin, an indicted war criminal and mass killer. It’s not only the victim-blaming and bullying of Kyiv into making concessions. It’s not even Donald Trump’s crass attempts to monetise the war and milk the misery of millions for Nobel glory, while undercutting Nato allies and trampling sovereign rights.What really shocks, and hurts, is the sheer bad faith shown by a country that Europeans always counted a friend. As the 18th-century English gothic novelist Ann Radcliffe noted, “few circumstances are more afflicting than a discovery of perfidy in those whom we have trusted”. To echo Trump’s dark warning after he was rebuffed over Greenland: Europe will remember. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Don’t go to the US – not with Trump in charge’: the UK tourist with a valid visa detained by ICE for six weeks
Karen Newton was in America on the trip of a lifetime when she was shackled, transported and held for weeks on end. With tourism to the US under increasing strain, she says, ‘If it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone’When Karen Newton left home in late July 2025, she knew that international travellers were being locked up in immigration detention centres in the US. “I was aware,” she nods. “But I never thought it would have any impact on my holiday.” Karen, 65, had a British passport and a tourist visa. She hadn’t been abroad for eight years, and was keen for some guaranteed sun. “I really just wanted to get away from the house.”She and her husband, Bill, 66, had an ambitious itinerary that would take them through California, Nevada, Wyoming, Montana and then on to Canada over two months. Las Vegas wasn’t to Karen’s taste: “Way too commercialised.” She much preferred Yellowstone, where they saw Old Faithful, the famous geyser, as it shot boiling water into the air, and got up close with some extraordinary wildlife. “There was a bison right next to the car. Another time, a wolf walked past.” Her eyes sparkle at the memory. “It was just amazing.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Under water, in denial: is Europe drowning out the climate crisis?
Even as weather extremes worsen, the voices calling for the rolling back of environmental rules have grown louder and more influentialIn the timeless week between Christmas and the new year, two Spanish men in their early 50s – friends since childhood, popular around town – went to a restaurant and did not come home.Francisco Zea Bravo, a maths teacher active in a book club and rock band, and Antonio Morales Serrano, the owner of a popular cafe and ice-cream parlour, had gone to eat with friends in Málaga on Saturday 27 December. But as the pair drove back to Alhaurín el Grande that night, heavy rains turned the usually tranquil Fahala River into what the mayor would later call an “uncontrollable torrent”. Police found their van overturned the next day. Their bodies followed after an agonising search. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Country diary: Foraging for cockles feeling alive alive-o | Michael White
Romney Marsh, Kent: It’s a family outing, raking the wet sand looking for plump shellfish. Out of everyone, though, I’m the most enthusiasticThe vast tidal flats are empty save for the hunched figures of three black-backed gulls considering a decomposed dogfish, and four humans (one rather small) trudging through the endless silt. A light mist obscures the coast with its string of motley houses and, on the breeze, there is only the distant soughing of shallow waves chasing foam over the sand. There is the piquancy of seclusion and its attendant danger here, perhaps the closest thing Kent has to wilderness.I’m relishing the long walk in this lonely place, but my children are less enthusiastic about our annual pilgrimage to the cockle beds, a typically cold affair as the quality of shellfish diminishes in spring and summer. We’re travelling well armed, brandishing handmade rakes with formidable tines of six-inch nails, while the youngest carries a hopeful white bucket. About half a mile offshore, our labour begins. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US and EU battle over online censorship
The EU and the US have very different views about the critical topic of censorship. Donald Trump’s envoy, Sarah Rogers, has attacked the EU’s new big tech laws while Europe wrestles with its far-right content problem.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Gladiators season 3 from anywhere – it's *FREE*

Sky News Home
Open 
Trial into puberty blockers for children paused over 'wellbeing concerns'
A clinical trial into puberty blockers has been paused after the medicines regulator raised "new concerns directly related to the wellbeing of children", the government said.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Riyadh Seeks To Replace Israel With Syria For EU Fiber-Optic Cable Route
Riyadh Seeks To Replace Israel With Syria For EU Fiber-Optic Cable Route

Via Middle East Eye

Saudi Arabia wants to replace Israel with Syria as the transit country for a fiber-optic cable designed to connect the kingdom to Greece through the Mediterranean Sea, two regional officials familiar with the project told Middle East Eye.

Saudi Arabia's insistence that it be connected to Greece through Syria, and not Israel, as previously discussed, underscores how regional alignments are shifting as Riyadh looks to bolster Damascus’s standing in the region and potentially isolate Israel.
via AFP

Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has publicly accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, where over 72,000 Palestinians have been killed. Riyadh is also at odds with the UAE, Israel’s closest Arab partner, in Yemen, Sudan, and the Red Sea.

Athens is trying to position itself as a hub between Europe and the Middle East for energy, real estate and Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Greece has courted Qatar, the UAE and Saudi Arabia for investment, but it is particularly close to Israel, which policymakers in Athens view as an ally against Turkey, and an insurance policy to keep the US engaged in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Saudi Arabia's shift on the project could throw a wrench in Greece’s relationship with Israel, if it is indeed snubbed in the new route.

Fiber-optic cables carry essential digital services from country to country in milliseconds using pulses of light. Their importance is growing as Gulf states position themselves as exporters of AI, seeking to send data to Europe. 

Greece and Saudi Arabia announced the East to Med data Corridor, or the EMC project, in 2022. It is a joint partnership between Saudi Telecom (STC), the Greek electricity provider PPC, Greek telecoms and the satellite applications company, TTSA.

At the time, Saudi Arabia was in talks with the US on a deal that would see them normalize relations with Israel. Those negotiations were derailed by the Hamas-led 7 October 2023 attacks, which Israel retaliated against by launching an offensive on Gaza that the United Nations and human rights groups have deemed a genocide.

Israel also attacked Lebanon, Syria and Iran. “There were a number of projects that planned to go through Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Israel - this was one of them,” Julian Rawle, a US-based submarine fibre-optic cable consultant, told MEE.

“Saudi Arabia asking for transit through Syria is new. People are looking for additional terrestrial routes between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean. Syria is another option, if people feel comfortable with the evolving political situation there,” he added.

A presentation by Greece’s PPC dated November 2025, obtained by MEE, does not show Syria linked up to the EMC network. The corridor appears to move through Israel and its offshore waters. 

In addition, another regional official told MEE that Saudi Arabia envisions an electrical cable project with Greece bypassing Israel in favour of Syria. This project would link the Gulf state and Europe via a High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) interconnection. 

'Shift in attitude'

Saudi Arabia’s attempt to bring Syria into the projects underscores how it is using its wealth to bolster regional allies at a time when it is challenging the UAE and Israel in the region. It also hints at Riyadh's broader vision for the region. 

"For Saudi Arabia, Damascus is at the heart of regional connectivity," a western official familiar with Riyadh's investment drive told MEE. "The Saudis want the roads, cables and trains to go through Syria".  

Saudi Arabia’s STC announced in February that it will invest about $800m in Syria’s telecommunications infrastructure. The kingdom’s state news agency said the plan is to “connect Syria regionally and internationally through a fibre-optic network extending over more than 4,500 kilometres”.

Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Gulf expert at Rice University's Baker Institute, said Saudi Arabia's bid to include Syria at the expense of Israel reveals how much the region has reordered itself.
MEE: Saudi Arabia is surrounded by major fiber-optic cables - but the Trans Europe Asia System will be the first such project to cross the country (telegeography.com)

“A project like this is consistent with Saudi attempts to reintegrate Syria to the regional fold and play down any tangible links with Israel,” he added.

The year “2022 was the height of talk about normalization between Saudi Arabia-Israel normalisation. This is indicative of the shift in Riyadh’s attitude,” he told MEE.

Europe's ports of entry shifting east

Greece envisions itself serving as a hub for multiple cable routes, as the Gulf states boost their investments in AI data centres and link up to East Asian business capitals such as Singapore.

Originally, the port cities of Marseille and Genoa were the embarkation points for fibre-optic cables arriving in Europe. But the industry wants to diversify routes, and ports of entry to Europe have been shifting further east, putting Greece and Turkey on the map.

The Eastern Mediterranean is littered with the corpses of grand infrastructure projects dreamed up by regional leaders and by Washington-based think tanks. A gas pipeline to connect Greece, Cyprus and Israel never materialized. Likewise, the Great Sea Interconnector cable, envisioned to link Greece, Cyprus and Israel, has faced multiple delays.

Turkey, which lays claim to a wide swath of the Eastern Mediterranean disputed by Greece, has opposed the projects. A trade corridor under discussion also aims to link India to Greece, Israel and the UAE.

But Rawle told MEE that the East to Med data Corridor, or EMC West, is one of the more viable projects. He said that making a down payment to the system supplier is a key hurdle that the industry watches as a marker for progress.

Greek and Saudi banks signed an agreement to finance 60 percent of the project. In 2023, EMC signed a supply contract with Alcatel Submarine Networks to construct two subsea and terrestrial data cables.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 22:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AI Content 'Incidents' Skyrocket: A Growing Threat In The Digital Age
AI Content 'Incidents' Skyrocket: A Growing Threat In The Digital Age

The latest data from the OECD’s AI Incidents and Hazard Monitor reveals a staggering boom in monthly media-reported AI-related content incidents: from just about 50 in early 2020, to over 200 in early 2024 and nearly 500 by January 2026, representing a tenfold increase over the period.

As Statista's Tristan Gaudiaut details in the infographic below, the rise has been particularly strong since last year (doubling in the last twelve months).



You will find more infographics at Statista

This exponential rise underscores the rapid proliferation of AI-generated content worldwide, from synthetic media to deepfakes, flooding platforms like TikTok, X, Instagram or YouTube.

Teens are on the frontline: A 2025 Pew Research Center survey found that two-thirds of U.S. teens now use AI chatbots, with nearly 30 percent engaging with them daily.

More concerning, a 2026 Education Week report revealed that 1 in 17 teens (aged 13 to 17) have already been targeted by deepfake content, such as non-consensual synthetic imagery, with over 80 percent of surveyed teens acknowledging the harm caused by such manipulations.

Meanwhile, adults struggle to keep up.

Research shows that while humans can sometimes detect AI-generated voices or videos, accuracy rates vary widely: from around 60 percent to 90 percent, according to a study published by PMC in Jan. 2026.

Thus, many remain vulnerable to believing synthetic content is real, raising urgent concerns about the spread of misinformation, especially as AI tools become more sophisticated and accessible.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 23:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Is It Time To Reopen The Franklin Child Prostitution Case After Epstein Revelations?
Is It Time To Reopen The Franklin Child Prostitution Case After Epstein Revelations?

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us

The seriousness of a conspiracy can often be quantified by the amount of energy the establishment expends trying to bury it. Consider for a moment the fact that Jeffery Epstein’s monstrous club of elites faced near zero mainstream exposure for over 20 years, despite his arrest for human trafficking in 2006.

Think about the level of political and media interference, the highly organized propaganda, the targeted attacks against conspiracy researchers – Think about the amount of money and time that was expended just to shut us up and convince the public the Epstein situation was “overblown”.

The revelations of the “Lolita Express” and the flights to Little Saint James Island are nothing compared to what we now find in the millions of documents released in the past month. Hints of rape, torture, possible murder, and even cannibalism are present in the coded (and not so coded) language of Epstein’s emails. And, if the revelations of “Pizzagate” and the John Podesta emails are correct, then many of the horrors committed on Epstein’s Island involved young children.



As I noted in my last article, Epstein’s private emails contain coded references to “pizza” (an FBI confirmed code used by pedophiles to describe young boys) over 900 times. They mention “jerky” over 380 times, including mentions of “freezing jerky”, “walking” jerky from one location to another, and getting jerky tested in a lab for “safety”.

The establishment machine is going into panic mode, once again trying to obcure the darker aspects of the Epstein files as “conspiracy theory” and “moral panic”. There is a clear attempt being made to mitigate and run damage control.

In other words, the elites are willing to give up the fight on the issue of underage sex trafficking. They know that the abuse of teens will not trigger enough outrage to get them killed by mobs of angry citizens. However, they are DESPERATE to silence any discussion on the abuse of very young children including babies. They will do anything to prevent the investigation from escalating to issues of cannibalism and occultism.

As long as the public thinks it was all about rich and powerful perverts getting their jollies with 16 and 17-year-old girls, the elites think they can weather the storm. After all, in most states the age of consent is 16. They might even be able to convince a large percentage of the populace that those girls did those things “of their own free will.”

I can already see them generating the spin in the event that any of the perpetrators actually go to trial. By the time it’s over, people will be questioning if anything criminal happened at all? That’s how the system works. It demands that the public ignore the obvious and wait for official confirmation of guilt, which rarely ever comes when oligarchs are involved.

I would continue to warn people NOT to put too much hope in the notion that any of the Epstein suspects will face legitimate legal consequences. Just look at how many corrupt judges we have encountered in the US when it comes to the immigration issue. Now imagine the army of left wing judges that will slither out of the woodwork to protect Epstein’s clients.

The Epstein case does not represent a silver bullet for eliminating the elites and their cabal, but it does represent a moment of mass awakening that cannot be stopped. Never before have conspiracy analysts been so close to exposing the reality of the “New World Order” to the normies. It creates a pathway to other opportunities, including reopening conspiracy events that were buried by the establishment a long time ago.

One such conspiracy of evil from the past stands out to me as directly related to the Epstein case, and I think it should be reexamined in light of the release of the Epstein files.

The Franklin Child Prostitution Case

In Omaha, Nebraska in the 1980s, a child sex abuse scandal was uncovered which involved high profile politicians and business moguls. The central figure, Lawrence King Jr, was a GOP favorite and the manager of the Franklin Federal Credit Union, an institution which would eventually be caught up in an embezzlement investigation.

He was accused of hosting lavish parties where minors were sexually abused and ritual occultism was practiced.

Victims, often from foster care or a regional Boys Town orphanage, alleged they were tricked into recruitment, then flown to locations like Washington, D.C. for exploitation by high-ranking individuals, including politicians, businessmen, and law enforcement. Key accusers included Alisha Owen, Paul Bonacci, and Troy Boner. They claimed the existence of an elitist network engaged in ritualistic practices, drug use, and coercion.

The accusers faced extreme pressure to recant. Alisha Owen was imprisoned for “perjury” by a grand jury – She never recanted her story. Troy Boner recanted due to threats of legal ramifications, then returned to assert that everything he originally said was true after the untimely death of investigator Gary Candori. Boner died mysteriously at the age of 36 in Texas in 2003 with no public information on the cause.

Paul Bonacci would go on to win a civil case against Lawrence King and received a $1 million default judgment for child abuse. King failed to defend the case and the judge found Bonacci’s claims to be credible.

Gary Caradori, a private investigator hired in August 1989 by the Nebraska Legislature’s special “Franklin Committee” to look into evidence of child exploitation, conducted extensive interviews. He gathered over 21 hours of videotaped testimony from alleged victims like Alisha Owen, Paul Bonacci, and others. He uncovered what he described as breakthrough evidence, including photographs and leads implicating prominent individuals.

In 1990, Candori died along with his 8-year-old son while flying his single engine plane over Illinois. The plane reportedly “disintegrated in mid-air” and the wreckage was found strewn across a field near Ashton in Lee County. The FAA ultimately ruled that the incident was “accidental.”

The Buried Documentary

In 1993 a 60 minute documentary called “Conspiracy Of Silence” was produced by a UK company called Yorkshire Television for the Discovery Channel. The production focused on the investigations of John Decamp, a US Army Captain, lawyer and former aide to CIA Director William Colby (who also mysteriously died by “drowning” in the Wicomico river near his home in 1996).

Decamp was a Republican legislator in Nebraska at the time the Franklin case broke. He asserted that the claims of abuse were true, and that the politicians involved had ties to the Iran/Contra drug running scandal.

He also named five prominent local officials and businessmen, including:


Harold Andersen: Publisher of the Omaha World-Herald newspaper (frequently cited as central to the alleged cover-up; DeCamp accused the paper of bias and suppression).


Alan Baer: A wealthy Omaha businessman (indicted on pandering charges in 1990 related to the scandal, though not directly for child abuse; he pleaded to lesser charges).


Robert Wadman: Former Omaha Police Chief (accused in victim testimonies of involvement; he denied it and sued over the claims).


Peter Citron: A former World-Herald columnist (convicted in 1990 on separate child sexual assault charges; linked in allegations to the network).


Lawrence E. “Larry” King Jr.: The Franklin Credit Union manager (central figure; convicted on financial embezzlement but never on abuse charges).

These figures were named for alleged involvement in procuring child victims for political elites in Washington DC, or for covering up the crimes.

The Discovery documentary focused on this thread as well as interviews with the victims, then outlined the government and media suppression campaign that was used to threaten them. It was set to air in May of 1994, but it was abruptly pulled weeks before broadcast, apparently due to pressure from political officials in the US. All master copies were ordered destroyed.

The only reason we know about its existence is because some anonymous hero released a rough edit to a lawyer involved in the case.  The full documentary can be VIEWED HERE.

The suppression of this documentary is clear evidence of a conspiracy. At the time, the majority of accusations surrounding the Franklin case were dismissed by the media as “Satanic Panic.” This is a narrative that has also been used to dismiss the darker crimes behind the Epstein case and others. It is time to crush this lie and expose these people for what they truly are.

Furthermore, it’s time to acknowledge the fact that ritual child abuse has been happening in the shadows, in dark and grotesque places, for many decades and long before Epstein. His island is only one of many elitist retreats where such evils are practiced. Esptein was merely a middle-man in a much larger network of pedophiles and luciferians that have operated with impunity for generations.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 23:25

Mail Online
Open 
Wounded Trump's tariff humiliation gives him no choice but to attack Iran, close ally says
The president, who has been going back and forth on the issue with advisers for days as the military sends dozens of air and sea crafts to the region, has a heavy focus on his legacy.

The Hill
Open 
Ontario premier allows early alcohol sales for US-Canada gold medal game
Bars and restaurants across Ontario will be allowed to start serving alcohol early on Sunday in anticipation of the gold medal men’s hockey game between the U.S. and Canada, according to the province’s government. The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) announced Friday that the hours for liquor sales would be extended so that...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Who is Tucker Carlson and what does he tell us about the future of MAGA?
And what does MAGA look like post-Trump?

Sky News Home
Open 
'There's something about this place - hopefully we don't ruin it': Abbey Road holds first-ever rave
"You will receive a text message after this call. Just follow the instructions...."

Sky News Home
Open 
'There's something about this place... hopefully we don't ruin it': Abbey Road holds first-ever rave
"You will receive a text message after this call. Just follow the instructions...."

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The splinternet: how online shutdowns are getting cheaper and easier to impose
Iran has shown how plausible blackouts now are, with far-reaching consequences for the internet as we know itDuring the height of Iran’s blackout in January, people could still access a platform that, in some senses, was like the internet.Iranians could message family members on a government-monitored app and watch clips of Manchester United on a Farsi-language video-sharing site. They could read state news and use a local navigation service. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Trump Imposes New Tariffs to Sidestep Supreme Court Ruling
The president signed an executive order implementing 10 percent global tariffs after calling the justices who struck down his signature trade policy a “disgrace.”

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Russia to convert Gulag museum into Nazi crimes memorial
The museum was one of the last institutions dedicated to documenting Soviet-era political repression in Russia.

Sky News Home
Open 
Abbey Road is opening its doors for a rave
"You will receive a text message after this call. Just follow the instructions...."

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Slow this thing down’: Sanders warns US has no clue about speed and scale of coming AI revolution
After meeting with unspecified tech leaders, senator calls for urgent policy action as companies race to build ever more powerful systemsBernie Sanders has warned that Congress and the American public have “not a clue” about the scale and speed of the coming AI revolution, pressing for urgent policy action to “slow this thing down” as tech companies race to build ever-more powerful systems.Speaking at Stanford University on Friday alongside congressman Ro Khanna after a series of meetings with industry leaders in California, Sanders was blunt about what he called the “most dangerous moment in the modern history of this country”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
The Ballad Of Wallis Island stars on becoming a word-of-mouth hit - and asking A-listers for selfies
After finding out about his BAFTA nominations, Tom Basden contemplated the red carpet. Specifically the stars, "your Chalamets, your DiCaprios", he might bump into as he walks it.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Saturday, Feb. 21
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 21.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 21, #516
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 21, No. 516.

The Hill
Open 
US sets up gold-medal game against Canada at the Olympics by cruising past Slovakia
The much-anticipated but never guaranteed U.S.-Canada showdown for gold in men's hockey at the Olympics is on.

The Hill
Open 
Pentagon blocked from using UK bases in potential Iran strike
The United Kingdom has blocked a request by the U.S. to use the country’s bases for a potential strike on Iran, according to multiple British media reports. The decision by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, first reported by The Times, was reportedly made due to concerns that such action could violate international law. President Trump...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Multi-cancer blood test missed key goal in NHS trial
The company behind the test said there were positive signs that some of the most aggressive cancers could be prevented.

Sky News Home
Open 
Abbey Road is opening its doors for a rave: 'There's something about this place - hopefully we don't ruin it'
"You will receive a text message after this call. Just follow the instructions...."

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The government is reforming the SEND system. This is what those impacted want changing
Some government plans for SEND were leaked earlier this week. But what else do families want to change?

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK puffins in peril as winter storms threaten mass seabird 'wreck'
Hundreds of dead and dying seabirds are washing up on British beaches.

Techdirt
Open 
Court Orders Slavery Exhibit At George Washington’s House Restored After Trump Admin Pulled It Down
The Trump administration&#8217;s project for erasing the parts of American history they find inconvenient continues unabated. But that doesn&#8217;t mean it doesn&#8217;t hit the occasional roadblock. In January, the administration removed portions of an exhibit at the former Philadelphia home of George Washington that made reference to 9 slaves he owned that spent time at [&#8230;]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Hungary threatens to block €90bn EU loan to Kyiv in oil row
Viktor Orbán demands Ukraine reopen Druzhba pipeline for Russian deliveries; Zelenskyy says Ukraine is not losing the war. What we know on day 1,459 Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Over 1,000 councillors sign Palestine solidarity pledge amid claims of 'political opportunism'
More than a thousand local councillors have signed a pledge of solidarity with the Palestinian people.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Trump Imposes New Tariffs to Sidestep Supreme Court Ruling
The president signed an executive order implementing 10 percent global tariffs after calling the justices who struck down his signature trade policy a "disgrace."

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US strike kills three on boat in eastern Pacific
The US military destroyed another boat with an airstrike in the eastern Pacific, killing three people. It's the sixth known US boat strike of the year and brings the total death toll to at least 148.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tactical, influential and mad about Rupert: Anna Murdoch-Mann remembered after her death aged 81
Philanthropist and mother of Elisabeth, James and Lachlan Murdoch died at home in Palm Beach, FloridaThe author and philanthropist Anna Murdoch-Mann, the ex-wife of the Australian media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, died at her home in Palm Beach, Florida, on Tuesday. She was 81.Murdoch-Mann’s death was reported Friday by the New York Post, one of her ex-husband’s media properties. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Free ChatGPT is surprisingly expensive, here's why

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Super Rugby Pacific 2026: Free Streams, TV Info, Preview for rugby union season

Slashdot
Open 
NASA Eyes March 6 To Launch 4 Astronauts To the Moon On Artemis II Mission
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: NASA could launch four astronauts on a mission to fly around the moon as soon as March 6th. That's the launch date (PDF) that the space agency is now working towards following a successful test fueling of its big, 322-foot-tall moon rocket, which is standing on a launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

"This is really getting real," says Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator of NASA's exploration systems development mission directorate. "It's time to get serious and start getting excited." But she cautioned that there's still some pending work that remains to be done out at the launch pad, and officials will have to conduct a multi-day flight readiness review late next week to make sure that every aspect of the mission is truly ready to go. "We need to successfully navigate all of those, but assuming that happens, it puts us in a very good position to target March 6th," she says, noting that the flight readiness review will be "extensive and detailed." [...]

When NASA workers first tested out fueling the rocket earlier this month, they encountered problems like a liquid hydrogen leak. Swapping out some seals and other work seems to have fixed these issues, according to officials who say that the latest countdown dress rehearsal went smoothly, despite glitches such as a loss of ground communications in the Launch Control Center that forced workers to temporarily use backups.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC World News
Open 
How will Trump's new 10% global tariffs work and what's next?
The Supreme Court's decision has led questions over whether people can get a refund over the unlawful tariffs.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
A Year Into Trump's 2nd Term: When Does Accountability For The Deep State Begin?
A Year Into Trump's 2nd Term: When Does Accountability For The Deep State Begin?

Authored by Jeff Dornik via American Greatness,

We were told this time would be different. We were told that a second Trump administration would not repeat the mistakes of the first, that hard lessons had been learned, and that the Deep State would finally be confronted rather than tolerated. One year into President Trump’s second term, it is both fair and necessary to ask whether those assurances are being honored—not from hostility but from a sincere desire to see the America First agenda succeed, endure, and become irreversible.

During President Trump’s first term, Congress squandered its moment. The first two years were consumed by infighting, hesitation, and internal paralysis, even with Republican control. Then came the midterms, control was lost, and meaningful legislative progress effectively ended. What followed were impeachment spectacles and relentless political warfare, while entrenched corruption inside the federal government remained untouched. Now, just past the first year of President Trump’s second term, the pattern feels disturbingly familiar. The urgency voters demanded is not being matched by the actions of those entrusted to deliver it.

The question that must be asked plainly is this: when is the Trump administration actually going to root out the Deep State?



Executive Orders are being signed at a rapid pace, but Executive Orders are not reform. They are temporary directives that can be erased with a single signature the moment someone like Gavin Newsom takes office. Without legislation, without prosecutions, and without accountability, nothing is secured. Power is being exercised, but it is not being anchored, and lasting change is never achieved that way.

Kash Patel built his credibility by telling the truth about corruption in Washington. His book and documentary, Government Gangsters, documented in detail how entrenched bureaucrats and intelligence officials worked against President Trump from within the federal government. He even came on my show and spoke openly about this corruption, and he stated repeatedly across multiple platforms that the FBI, particularly at its highest levels, was deeply compromised and required fundamental reform. He did not argue that the Bureau should be abandoned, but that it could not be trusted without aggressive leadership, restructuring, and accountability for the Deep State operatives within the bureau. He warned that the Deep State would never reform itself and would have to be confronted directly. He also told Glenn Beck that the head of the FBI possessed Jeffrey Epstein’s client list. These were not casual remarks. They were core assertions made publicly and repeatedly.

Now Kash Patel is the head of the FBI, and the public posture has shifted dramatically. The same institution he once described as captured is now treated as credible and restrained. The Epstein client list, once discussed as a known reality, is now dismissed as conspiracy, even as new Epstein-related documents continue to be released to the public over the protest of the Trump administration. Each document release raises more questions, not fewer, and every delay from federal law enforcement deepens public distrust rather than restoring confidence. A reversal this significant demands explanation. Trust is not rebuilt through silence, and credibility is not preserved by pretending prior statements were never made.

These questions extend far beyond the FBI and land squarely on the Department of Justice, where accountability appears to collapse the moment it threatens entrenched power. The removal of Ed Martin from his role inside the DOJ is not just a minor personnel decision; it appears to be a clear signal that real investigations into weaponization and lawfare are not being tolerated. Ed Martin was positioned to expose how the Biden Department of Justice targeted Americans, abused prosecutorial authority, and used federal power as a political weapon. According to Emerald Robinson, whose reporting has repeatedly exposed corruption others refuse to confront, Martin was removed from his position by the same people who refer to parents as terrorists: “Vance Day, senior counsel for Todd Blanche, refers to parents targeted by Biden DOJ as ‘terrorists’ in recent meeting with one parent asking for accountability. Blanche’s office also removed Ed Martin from his role at the DOJ.” That disclosure alone should alarm every American paying attention.

Parents who were targeted and persecuted by the Biden Department of Justice are now being labeled terrorists by senior DOJ leadership, while the man tasked with investigating that persecution is sidelined. Whether this is described as a firing or a demotion is irrelevant, because the outcome is the same. Another one of the good guys has been removed from doing the work voters were promised would finally drain the swamp. This is not an isolated incident or a misunderstanding but a pattern that repeats with disturbing consistency. Every time someone begins making real progress against the Deep State, authority is stripped, investigations are stalled, and momentum is deliberately crushed before accountability can be delivered.

So the questions must be asked:

Where are the arrests?

Where are the prosecutions?

Why has Attorney General Pam Bondi not brought cases against members of the January 6 Committee despite documented misconduct and destroyed records?

Why has the Department of Justice taken no action against Anthony Fauci even after Sen. Rand Paul issued criminal referrals? 

Why is the DOJ actively fighting to shut down Brook Jackson’s case against Pfizer instead of allowing it to proceed and standing with a whistleblower who exposed documented fraud?

Why do Epstein-related documents continue to surface while no meaningful accountability follows?

What happened to transparency, and what happened to equal justice under the law?

Congress bears equal responsibility for this failure. DOGE exposed widespread corruption, fraud, and waste throughout the federal government, yet Republican spending bills continue to fund the very programs DOGE identified. If fraud has been uncovered, there is no justification for continuing to finance it. Where is the legislation to codify President Trump’s Executive Orders so they cannot be casually undone by the next administration? Where is the structural reform that fixes what is broken instead of managing its decay?

It increasingly appears that Republican leadership is content to run out the clock while President Trump absorbs the political risk. That approach is not strategic. It is reckless. We are less than one year away from the midterms, and the possibility of losing congressional control is very real. If that happens before reforms are locked into law, the opportunity may be lost entirely.

So what is the agenda for this year? What are we fighting to accomplish while the window is still open? America First cannot remain a slogan. It must become law, policy, and precedent. And by America, I mean Americans first, not institutions, not bureaucracies, and not federal agencies that operate without consequence.

The stakes are higher than many are willing to acknowledge. A future Democrat administration, particularly one led by Gavin Newsom, would inherit not only an unrestrained administrative state but a vastly expanded and centralized federal system increasingly powered by artificial intelligence. The Trump administration is already integrating AI throughout government. Without moral clarity, legal restraint, and decentralization, that power will inevitably be turned against the people it claims to serve.

This is not an attack on President Trump. It is a call to fulfill the mandate voters gave him. The American people did not vote for symbolism. We voted for accountability. We voted for justice. We voted for a government that serves the people rather than ruling over them.

Time is running out. If decisive action is not taken this year, there is a real chance it never will be. If that happens, no one should be surprised when everything collapses the moment power changes hands. Truth demands courage, and courage demands action.

The question is no longer whether the Deep State exists, but whether those in power are willing to confront it while they still can.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 21:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iranian Starlink Black Market Prices Soar As War Risks Rise
Iranian Starlink Black Market Prices Soar As War Risks Rise

Iran's black market for Starlink terminals has rapidly repriced, with reported street quotes of $4,000 per terminal, up from $700 to $1,000 last summer, as war risks surge and renewed fears grow over stricter internet censorship and another blackout.

Bloomberg spoke with Starlink terminal sellers and human rights groups that said satellite internet via Starlink terminals is one of the only ways to stay connected to the rest of the world, as the Iranian government has cut access or forced traffic onto a highly monitored national intranet amid social uprisings.

Now the terminals cost upwards of $4,000 per unit as war risks rise, and President Donald Trump has set a deadline for Iran to reach a "meaningful deal" on its nuclear program or face conflict with the US.



Last month, the Iranian government implemented a two-week full-scale internet blackout to quell unrest, and connectivity to the outside world remains heavily throttled. There are about 50,000 terminals in the country, according to digital rights group Holistic Resilience.

A Starlink seller on Telegram told the media outlet that units were extremely expensive in Iran, despite retailing in many parts of the world for a fraction of the price. In the US, Starlink terminals retail for several hundred dollars.

SpaceX waived Starlink subscription fees across Iran, and millions of Iranians have used U.S.-funded VPNs.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that the Trump administration covertly sent 6,000 Starlink terminals into Iran.


🇺🇸🇮🇷 US smuggled 6000 Starlink terminals into Iran last month in an effort to keep protesters online after Iran cut internet access – WSJ pic.twitter.com/8cRoa8oCEc
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) February 12, 2026
Anyone using or distributing a Starlink terminal in Iran risks a lengthy prison sentence.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 22:10

Mail Online
Open 
Wounded Trump's tariff humiliation gives him no choice but to attack Iran, close ally says
The president, who has been going back and forth on the issue with advisors for days as the military sends dozens of air and sea crafts to the region, has a heavy focus on his legacy.

The Hill
Open 
What the Supreme Court's tariff ruling could mean for your wallet
Don't expect a cheaper grocery bill tomorrow even after the Supreme Court struck down most of President Donald Trump's tariffs.

Mail Online
Open 
See all the best looks from the SS26 runways, from Louis Vuitton to Burberry
From sculptural dresses to elevated everyday looks, the S/S 26 designer collections are true works of art

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
OpenAI considered alerting Canadian police about school shooting suspect months ago
Company behind ChatGPT last year flagged Jesse Van Rootselaar’s account for ‘furtherance of violent activities’ChatGPT-maker OpenAI has said it considered alerting Canadian police last year about the activities of a person who months later committed one of the worst school shootings in the country’s history.OpenAI said last June the company identified the account of Jesse Van Rootselaar via abuse detection efforts for “furtherance of violent activities”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Throne Out' and 'Liberation Day levies ruled illegal'
Plans to remove Andrew from royal succession and Supreme Court ruling on Trump's tariffs leads Saturday's papers.

Mail Online
Open 
Eric Dane's grieving widow Rebecca Gayheart seen for first time since actor's death as friends launch $250k GoFundMe to support couple's two daughters
Gayheart cut a somber figure while visiting the Los Angeles house where Dane had been living at the time of his death.

Mail Online
Open 
The Green Party's Brexit-mocking, eco-zealot candidate in Gorton and Denton... who drives a petrol car, owns TWO homes and has a taste for globetrotting holidays
The Green Party's candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election faces allegations of hypocrisy for jetting off on foreign holidays and co-owning homes worth over £1m.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Left wing, tactical and mad about Rupert: Anna Murdoch-Mann remembered after her death aged 81
Philanthropist and mother of Elisabeth, James and Lachlan Murdoch died at home in Palm Beach, FloridaThe author and philanthropist Anna Murdoch-Mann, the ex-wife of the Australian media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, died at her home in Palm Beach, Florida, on Tuesday. She was 81.Murdoch-Mann’s death was reported Friday by the New York Post, one of her ex-husband’s media properties. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Tesla must pay quarter of a BILLION dollars to family of woman killed after Model S driver crashed into her while bending down to pick up his phone
Naibel Benavides Leon, 22, was thrown 75 feet and was pronounced dead a the scene in the devastating accident.

BBC World News
Open 
Anna Murdoch-Mann, mother of News Corp heir, dies aged 81
The author, journalist and philanthropist died at home in Florida, according to Rupert Murdoch's news outlets.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Israel says it hit Hezbollah sites in eastern Lebanon
The strikes targeted Hezbollah command centers in the Baalbek area, part of eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, the Israeli military said. They are among the deadliest reported in the region in recent weeks.

Sky News Home
Open 
Inside the lab that could be crucial for the future of women's rugby
In a white-walled university laboratory, four female student rugby players are strapped face-down onto what look like upside-down rowing machines.

Mail Online
Open 
Police investigate 'accomplice' theory in Nancy Guthrie case as neighbors hand over new surveillance video
Police are not rulilng out the possibility that multiple people helped kidnap Nancy Guthrie, who has been was last seen at her home in Tucson, Arizona, on January 31.

Mail Online
Open 
Coleen Rooney 'signs multi-million-pound deal with high-street retailer Primark' after I'm A Celebrity success
Coleen Rooney has reportedly signed a multi-million-pound deal with international high-street retailer Primark following her jungle success on I'm A Celebrity. 

Mail Online
Open 
Prawn toast is back! But which supermarket's take on the 70s favourite is tastier than a £25 version in a top Mayfair restaurant
With Chinese New Year falling this week, the supermarkets are full of delicious-looking Asian dishes to enjoy at home.

Mail Online
Open 
Rita Ora sends pulses racing in a skimpy neon green bikini as she soaks up the sun in Australia
The singer, 35, looked incredible as she shared snaps of her trip to her Instagram Story on Friday.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: Mia Goth's hopes for her troubled estranged husband Shia LaBeouf after his New Orleans arrest
The 32-year-old star's split from LaBeouf was recently revealed, with the separation occurring last year following nine years of marriage. The pair share daughter Isabel, three.

BBC World News
Open 
At least 10 killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon - state media
A senior Hezbollah official was among those reported killed in air strikes on the Bekaa Valley and southern Lebanon.

Mail Online
Open 
Former newspaper executive accused of asking private investigator to hack phones brands allegations 'a litany of lies'
Paul Henderson, ex-investigations editor and news editor at The Mail on Sunday, told the High Court it was 'grotesque' to claim he commissioned Gavin Burrows to target celebrities.

Mail Online
Open 
Want ethically made pieces that last? Here's where to shop this spring...
Style setters are buying British as they want ethically made, traceable pieces, says Jessica Carroll. Here's what to buy and how to wear it

Mail Online
Open 
BRIAN VINER reviews Baz Luhrmann's 'EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert': Extravagant, exuberant... this is archive Elvis at his most riveting
It's rather glorious to find that another audience, 49 years after his death, can still be electrified by the king of rock 'n' roll. The film is riveting, and won't leave only diehard Elvis fans all shook up.

Mail Online
Open 
Prisoners given alarm clocks so they can be woken gently each morning - rather than being jolted awake by officers banging cell doors
The calmer approach to early mornings is being trialled on a wing at scandal-hit HMP Wandsworth in south London.

Mail Online
Open 
Jennifer Aniston and boyfriend Jim Curtis appear to take romance to next level as they tour apartments together in NYC
The couple's outing comes after Curtis recently explained how they address arguments that 'flare up' as a result of being in one another's company so much.

Mail Online
Open 
Cannabis use by teenagers doubles their risk of developing psychotic and bipolar disorders
Teenage cannabis users double their risk of psychotic and bipolar disorders, according to the latest research.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US military strike kills three in second alleged drug boat attack this week
Move brings total number of people killed in US strikes on suspected boats since September to at least 148The US military launched a strike on an alleged drug smuggling boat in the eastern Pacific on Friday, killing three men in its second strike this week.“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” US Southern Command, which oversees operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, said on Twitter/X. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Fury Over Discord's Age Checks Explodes After Shady Persona Test In UK
Backlash intensified against Discord's age verification rollout after it briefly disclosed a UK age-verification test involving vendor Persona, contradicting earlier claims about minimal ID storage and transparency. Ars Technica explains: One of the major complaints was that Discord planned to collect more government IDs as part of its global age verification process. It shocked many that Discord would be so bold so soon after a third-party breach of a former age check partner's services recently exposed 70,000 Discord users' government IDs.

Attempting to reassure users, Discord claimed that most users wouldn't have to show ID, instead relying on video selfies using AI to estimate ages, which raised separate privacy concerns. In the future, perhaps behavioral signals would override the need for age checks for most users, Discord suggested, seemingly downplaying the risk that sensitive data would be improperly stored. Discord didn't hide that it planned to continue requesting IDs for any user appealing an incorrect age assessment, and users weren't happy, since that is exactly how the prior breach happened. Responding to critics, Discord claimed that the majority of ID data was promptly deleted. Specifically, Savannah Badalich, Discord's global head of product policy, told The Verge that IDs shared during appeals "are deleted quickly -- in most cases, immediately after age confirmation."

It's unsurprising then that backlash exploded after Discord posted, and then weirdly deleted, a disclaimer on an FAQ about Discord's age assurance policies that contradicted Discord's hyped short timeline for storing IDs. An archived version of the page shows the note shared this warning: "Important: If you're located in the UK, you may be part of an experiment where your information will be processed by an age-assurance vendor, Persona. The information you submit will be temporarily stored for up to 7 days, then deleted. For ID document verification, all details are blurred except your photo and date of birth, so only what's truly needed for age verification is used."

Critics felt that Discord was obscuring not just how long IDs may be stored, but also the entities collecting information. Discord did not provide details on what the experiment was testing or how many users were affected, and Persona was not listed as a partner on its platform. Asked for comment, Discord told Ars that only a small number of users was included in the experiment, which ran for less than one month. That test has since concluded, Discord confirmed, and Persona is no longer an active vendor partnering with Discord. Moving forward, Discord promised to "keep our users informed as vendors are added or updated." While Discord seeks to distance itself from Persona, Rick Song, Persona's CEO [...] told Ars that all the data of verified individuals involved in Discord's test has been deleted. Ars also notes that hackers "quickly exposed a 'workaround' to avoid Persona's age checks on Discord" and "found a Persona frontend exposed to the open internet on a U.S. government authorized server."

The Rage, an independent publication that covers financial surveillance, reported: "In 2,456 publicly accessible files, the code revealed the extensive surveillance Persona software performs on its users, bundled in an interface that pairs facial recognition with financial reporting -- and a parallel implementation that appears designed to serve federal agencies." While Persona does not have any government contracts, the exposed service "appears to be powered by an OpenAI chatbot," The Rage noted.

Hackers warned "that OpenAI may have created an internal database for Persona identity checks that spans all OpenAI users via its internal watchlistdb," seemingly exploiting the "opportunity to go from comparing users against a single federal watchlist, to creating the watchlist of all users themselves."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mobile home park residents fear radiation from below
Health officials have said they think there is "suitable justification" to look again at Tollerton Park.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The animal rescue centre that became a mass graveyard of dogs
A senior police officer of 30 years says he has never seen animal cruelty on such a scale.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
I might not get uni Covid compensation - but I'm claiming it out of principle
Dozens of universities have received legal letters over what students say they missed out on during Covid.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
How Co-op Live went from falling air con units to hosting the Brits
The opening of the Co-op Live was in every headline, but not quite for the right reasons.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Welcome to Australia's hottest beach event - nowhere near the sea
Tonnes of sand and flocks of tourists are ferried into Cootamundra for its annual volleyball tournament.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The government is reforming the SEND system. This is what those impacted want changing.
Some government plans for SEND were leaked earlier this week. But what else do families want to change?

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Is £70 becoming harder to justify? The rise of cheaper blockbuster games
As top games such as GTA 6 are speculated to cost $100 (£74), some developers are deliberately pricing lower.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK Puffins in peril as winter storms threaten mass seabird 'wreck'
Hundreds of dead and dying seabirds are washing up on British beaches.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
FDA Dropping Requirement For 2 Studies For New Drug Approvals
FDA Dropping Requirement For 2 Studies For New Drug Approvals

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will approve many new drugs based on one trial moving forward, agency leaders have said.
FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary in Washington on July 29, 2025. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

The FDA has typically required two studies from companies seeking approval for most new drugs, although in recent years it has approved some drugs based on a single well-run trial.

“The FDA has demonstrated disease-by-disease flexibility and has granted approvals based on a single premarket study with confirmatory evidence. In some fields, such as oncology, single trials have supported the majority of drug approvals,” Dr. Marty Makary, the FDA’s commissioner, and Dr. Vinay Prasad, head of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said in an article published on Feb. 18 by the New England Journal of Medicine.

“However, although we have exercised flexibility in the past, there remains confusion from manufacturers regarding settings in which a single trial will be accepted. Moving forward, we are announcing that a one-trial requirement will be the FDA’s new default standard. This reform is being rolled out synchronously with the agency’s postmarket initiative to collect robust data on all drugs and devices.”

The two-study standard for drugs dates to the early 1960s, when Congress passed a law requiring the FDA to review data from “adequate and well-controlled investigations” before clearing new medications. For decades, the agency interpreted that requirement as meaning at least two studies, preferably with a large number of patients and significant follow-up time.

The second study would, in theory, confirm that the first trial’s results weren’t a fluke and could be reproduced.

Beginning in the 1990s, the FDA increasingly began accepting single studies for the approval of treatments for rare or fatal diseases that companies often struggle to test in large numbers of patients. Over the past five years, roughly 60 percent of first-of-a-kind drugs approved each year have been cleared based on a single study.

Makary and Prasad said that the historical reliance on multiple studies “was intended to provide credible causal evidence that a therapy could improve clinical outcomes with acceptable safety in a world where biologic understanding was more limited than it is today.”

They later added: “In the modern world, as drug discovery becomes increasingly precise and scientific, the FDA considers not just effects on survival, but biochemical and intermediate changes that tell a complete biologic story: does this drug actually work? In this setting, overreliance on two trials no longer makes sense.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in White Oak, Md., on June 5, 2023. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

The change will save drug developers money and reduce the time it takes to get drugs to market, the officials said. They expect more drug development in response.

Dr. Janet Woodcock, the FDA director who led the agency’s drug center for about 20 years before retiring in 2024, said the change makes sense and reflects the FDA’s decades-long move toward relying on one trial, combined with supporting evidence, for various life-threatening diseases, including cancer.

“The scientific point is well taken that as we move toward greater understanding of biology and disease we don’t need to do two trials all the time,” Woodcock said.

Dr. Reshma Ramachandran, assistant professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine, said in a post on X that it’s true most FDA approvals in recent years have been based on single, strong trials.

“But as the authors noted (& have for years!), patients are increasingly left with uncertainty of their effectiveness,” she wrote, “so why set a standard continuing the (bad) same old instead of demanding more?”

Makary and Prasad said that they reserve the right to demand additional testing if a trial has limitations or deficiencies.

“Instead of prioritizing finite reviewer time reading and assessing two or more pivotal trials, we will focus our energies on ensuring that the one clinical trial we require provides the most up-to-date and useful information for American patients,” they wrote.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 20:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Intelligence: 15,000+ Were Let Free From ISIS Detention Camp After Collapse
US Intelligence: 15,000+ Were Let Free From ISIS Detention Camp After Collapse

Another 'win' for America's disastrous Syria policy, long predicated on overthrowing the Assad government and installing a 'moderate' Sunni regime - though it turns out Jolani's bearded Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) militants are anything but...

"U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that 15,000 to 20,000 people, including Islamic State affiliates are now at large in Syria, after an exodus from a camp that held jihadists’ families, U.S. officials familiar with the estimate said," The Wall Street Journal reports Friday.

Who could have predicted that chaos, instability, and terrorism would come out of the CIA's Operation Timber Sycamore? Well, we did, and every rational observer of the Syria situation.
Al Hol camp last year, AFP/Getty Images

A billion plus dollars and hundreds of thousands of lives after the decade-long proxy war, and this is all Washington has to show for it:  


Security experts have long warned that the wives of Islamic State fighters were effectively raising the next generation of militants at the sprawling Al-Hol facility. Security at the camp fell apart in recent weeks after Syria’s government routed the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, which had guarded Al-Hol for years, raising concerns about the release of people who might have become radicalized during the years held behind the razor wire.

The size of a small city, the camp in Syria’s eastern desert at one point held more than 70,000 people after U.S.-backed forces destroyed what remained of Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliphate in Syria in 2019. At the end of 2025, more than 23,000 people were there, according to a report this week from the Pentagon’s Inspector General.


The US military is rapidly backing out of this region after the years-long occupation, effectively throwing the Kurds (SDF) under the bus, as HTS radicals move in and take control. 

Given many analysts have pointed to HTS being 'ISIS-lite' to begin with, the following WSJ note is no surprise: "The vast majority have left Al-Hol after the Syrian government took control last month. Western diplomats in Damascus assessed that more than 20,000 people fled the camp in a matter of days earlier amid rioting and a surge of escape attempts."

There were even reports that the ISIS prisoners greeted the government HTS troops rolling in as 'liberators'. The new government is certainly not "fighting" Islamic State cells... quite the contrary:


As the Asayish is set to re-take the control of the Al hol camp and region (including everything north of it) - the Syrian Government Forces currently in charge of Al Hol Camp have opened the gates of the camp and are releasing+transporting as many ISIS members and families out… pic.twitter.com/2jQOR4hisI
— ScharoMaroof (@ScharoMaroof) February 13, 2026
And now the Washington blob is simply moving on to the next regime change operation, this time a little further east in Iran, which it turns out was a key Assad ally.

So in place of the secular nationalist Baath party (under the Assad family), the West has the literal founder of Syrian al-Qaeda as president of Damascus, letting ISIS prisoners and affiliates walk free.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 20:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
India Boosts Saudi Oil Imports, Slows Russian Buying, Amid US Pressure
India Boosts Saudi Oil Imports, Slows Russian Buying, Amid US Pressure

Via The Cradle

Saudi crude shipments to India are set to reach their highest level since 2020 this month, narrowing the gap with Russian supplies as New Delhi faces ongoing US pressure to reduce its purchases of Russian oil, according to data from Kpler cited by Bloomberg on Friday.

Flows from Saudi Arabia are projected at between 1 million and 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd), Kpler lead research analyst Sumit Ritolia said, describing the volumes as the strongest since November 2019, bringing Saudi exports broadly in line with Russian deliveries.
Saudi Aramco

Kpler estimates Russian crude shipments to India at around 1.2 million bpd this month, which would keep Moscow as India’s largest supplier, though at levels well below the more than 2 million bpd seen at peak periods over the past three years.

For March, Kpler forecasts Russian flows easing further to between 800,000 and 1 million bpd, noting that such a drop could allow Saudi Arabia to retake the top spot if Indian refiners keep replacing Russian crude with Saudi shipments.

In early February, US President Donald Trump announced a trade deal with India that linked tariff reductions to India halting purchases of Russian crude oil. 

He said he would cut punitive tariffs on Indian goods in exchange for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s agreement that India would stop buying Russian oil. He even suggested New Delhi would increase purchases of US – and potentially Venezuelan – oil.

Current import levels indicate that Indian buyers have not moved abruptly to cut Russian intake.

India emerged as a major buyer of Russian crude after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, when discounted barrels diverted from Europe were rerouted to Asian markets – meaning that any loss of market share in India would shrink one of Moscow’s main export outlets.

Meanwhile, as Indian spot purchases soften, China's imports of Russian oil are on track for a record month. 


Russian share of India's January oil imports lowest since late 2022, data showshttps://t.co/w6wClXRX1Z
— Economic Times (@EconomicTimes) February 18, 2026
Data from Vortexa and Kpler, cited by Reuters, shows Chinese inflows at roughly 2.07–2.08 million bpd in February, underscoring a shift in trade patterns rather than a collapse in overall Russian exports.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 20:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Washington Post Editorial Board Brutally Mocks Mamdani
Washington Post Editorial Board Brutally Mocks Mamdani

Margaret Thatcher once said, “The trouble with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money,” and New York City's new socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani, is learning just how right she was, and New Yorkers are going to pay a hefty price for it.



On Tuesday, a mere two months after declaring he would “replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism,” Mamdani announced a $127 billion preliminary budget for fiscal year 2027, a $5 billion increase from the prior year, while simultaneously warning residents of "painful" tax hikes if state officials refused to bail him out to cover his socialist policies. 

“That’s a city budget bigger than the state budgets of 47 states. Even the state government of Florida (population 23 million) spends less than New York City’s,” explains The Washington Post editorial board. “And the state still managed to attract hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers in recent years.”

“The reality is that The reality is that Americans may like the idea of ‘free’ stuff — it’s how socialists win elections — but they are less excited about having to pay for it” they continued. “They’re even less excited when they live in a state that ranks at the very bottom of the Tax Foundation’s State Tax Competitiveness Index.”

During a press conference earlier this week, Mamdani called on New York Gov. Kathy Hochul to raise income taxes on the “ultra-wealthy” help fund his budget for New York City.

“The onus for resolving this crisis should not be placed on the backs of working and middle-class New Yorkers,” Mamdani said. “If we do not fix this structural imbalance and do not heed the calls of New Yorkers to raise taxes on the wealthy, this crisis will not disappear. It will simply return, year after year, forcing harder and harsher choices each time. And if we do not go down the first path, the city will be forced down a second, more harmful path. Faced with no other choice, the city would have to exercise the only revenue lever fully within our own control. We would have to raise property taxes.”


Mamdani says if Hochul doesn't allow NYC to raise taxes on corporations and highest earners, he will raise property taxes on New York City homeowners. pic.twitter.com/Bm07LxS9OH
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) February 17, 2026
Hochul rejected the tax hike demand without hesitation, telling Mamdani to expand his "ridiculously low" proposed spending cuts instead. 

Mamdani has claimed his administration identified $1.7 billion in cuts. The Post's editorial board was not impressed, calling it a “laughable number.”

“The reality is that Mamdani is trying to expand a city government that already does way too much,” they argued. “ The city should provide basic services, such as law and order, but instead it pours billions into social spending like housing and health care.”

They even cited California as a cautionary tale, warning that in the Golden State, “a slew of billionaires are fleeing at the mere possibility of a wealth tax. They’ll avoid the wealth tax — and California will miss out on the billions that these individuals otherwise would have contributed before a wealth tax was even imposed.”

More experienced Democrats in New York understand this. Gov. Kathy Hochul, no one’s idea of a fiscal hawk, nevertheless instigated Mamdani’s tantrum by refusing to go along with more tax hikes. The city council speaker and comptroller also have sway and are skeptical of new taxes.

This week, it was revealed that acclaimed director and filmmaker Steven Spielberg officially became a New York resident on January 1, effectively avoiding the billionaire tax—though a representative for Spielberg and his wife Cate Capshaw claimed the move was to be closer to family.

Mamdani's pre-election promises — free buses, expanded child care, cash assistance, rental aid, and smaller class sizes for teachers' unions — were crowd-pleasers that earned him "tax the rich" chants at campaign rallies. The problem is that governing a city with a structural deficit requires something more than slogans. His preliminary budget now acknowledges a $5.4 billion shortfall for the current fiscal year, with projections that worsen over time. 

“No one in New York is ambitious enough to dramatically reshape city government, and residents either vote for class warfare or vote with their feet. A reckoning will have to come eventually. The question is how bad it gets before reality sets in,” the board concluded.

Ouch.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/20/2026 - 21:20