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S1Ask Ethan: Could gravitational waves collapse into a black hole? Back when Einstein’s general relativity first came out, there was a fascinating consequence that was recognized almost immediately: that masses didn’t just move through curved space, but as they did so, they would be compelled to emit gravitational radiation. Orbits between gravitationally bound masses would no longer be eternally stable, but would slowly decay over time, as the energy carried away by this radiation — gravitational waves — would have to be “stolen” from the moving masses themselves. Over time, all objects that were bound in a co-orbiting gravitational dance would eventually inspiral and merge.with gravitational waves detected directly for each one. In fact, the first black hole-black hole merger ever seen emitted so much energy in gravitational waves that for a few tens of milliseconds, they emitted more energy than all the stars within the observable Universe combined. With so much energy there, one can’t help but wonder about what could be possible, which inspires this week’s Ask Ethan question from Patreon supporter Chad Marler:
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S2She studied extreme psychopaths. Here's what it taught her about human nature Abigail Marsh, a psychology and neuroscience professor at Georgetown University, explains how the world is impacted by those with psychopathy, and, additionally, those who practice extreme altruism. Psychopathy, she says, is a neurodevelopmental disorder affecting a small percentage of people, who are different from a very early age due to their unique brain development. Conversely, she talks about people who are exceptionally altruistic—those who go out of their way to help others, often at great personal risk. These individuals are humble, believe in the goodness of others, and are highly empathetic.
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S3Everyday Philosophy: Thanos and an economist debate overpopulation I’ve always wondering if we are controlled by an unknown force, not discovered or recognized, that prevents the overpopulation of the earth and performs this feat by causing us to war with each other?One of the most common motifs in mythology is the epic flood. If you dip into almost any tradition in world history, you will find a story about a great flood or an apocalyptic deluge. One of the earliest recorded examples is the Akkadian myth of Atra-Hasis, from around 1700 B.C. Atra-Hasis has the gods flood the earth not because of any sinfulness on humanity’s part (as the Genesis story has it) but rather as a conscious act of population control. Atra-Hasis tells us that “the land was bellowing like a bull” under the stress of an overpopulated world. The epic ends with the argument that stillbirth and natural disasters were all part of a cosmic order to balance the numbers on land.
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S4Presidential Debate Prep Ramps Up, Focused on Mental Sharpness President Joe Biden is hunkered down with aides at Camp David for several days to get ready to debate rival Donald Trump, who is eschewing traditional preparation and instead holding informal policy discussions between campaign stops."It's an incredible test of their cognitive competence," said Patrick Stewart, a political science professor at the University of Arkansas who has written a book on presidential debates. "This is our chance to see how much they've declined or if they've declined."
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S5Amazon: 'Alexa, Charge People Money to Use Your AI' Amazon is planning a major revamp of its decade-old money-losing Alexa service to include a conversational generative AI with two tiers of service and has considered a monthly fee of around $5 to access the superior version, according to people with direct knowledge of the company's plans. Known internally as "Banyan," a reference to the sprawling ficus trees, the project would represent the first major overhaul of the voice assistant since it was introduced in 2014 along with the Echo line of speakers. Amazon has dubbed the new voice assistant "Remarkable Alexa," the people said.
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S6Boeing Nears Deal to Buy Back Supplier Spirit Aero Systems Boeing is nearing a deal to buy back Spirit AeroSystems after its former subsidiary made substantial progress in separate talks with Airbus over a transatlantic breakup of the struggling supplier, people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.Boeing initiated talks earlier this year to buy back the Wichita, Kansas-based supplier it spun off in 2005, seeking to stabilize a key part of the supply chain for its strongest-selling jet following a mid-air blow out on a new 737 MAX in January. However, talks hit a stumbling block over Spirit's work for Airbus, with the European group threatening to block any deal that involved Boeing building parts for its newest models.
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S7A Closer Look at Trump's Tax-Free Tips Proposal Former President Donald Trump's new proposal to exclude tips from federal taxes is getting strong reviews from some Republican lawmakers, though major questions remain about the impact of the policy and how it would work.What's certain is that a change in the taxation of tips would affect millions. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates there are 2.24 million waiters and waitresses across the country, with tips making up a large percentage of their income.
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S8AT&T Wanted to Stop Landline Service in Some California Areas. The State Said No The California Public Utilities Commission said in rejecting AT&T's request that the decision did not prevent AT&T from retiring copper facilities or from investing in fiber or other facilities or technologies to improve its network.AT&T California President Marc Blakeman said "we are fully committed to keeping our customers connected while we work with state leaders on policies that create a thoughtful transition that brings modern communications to all Californians."Â
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| S9For Small Businesses, a Lack of Affordable Child Care Stifles Growth Hiring is challenging for any business -- but particularly for small businesses that lack the resources to offer child care benefits, according to a new survey by Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses Voices, the investment banking company's support program for small businesses.The April 2024 survey, which polled more than 1,200 small business owners across nearly every state, reported that most small and medium-sized businesses can't provide subsidized child care the way many larger businesses can, and it's affecting their ability to recruit and retain talent.
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| S10OpenAI Acquires Database Analytics Startup Rockset for an Undisclosed Amount A technology Rockset offers called vector search has benefited from increased adoption as more applications use artificial intelligence to power recommendation engines, voice assistants, chatbots and detect anomalies.This means Rockset's expertise in real-time data processing and vector search will enhance OpenAI's ability to quickly access and analyze vast amounts of information, likely leading to faster and more accurate responses from AI models.
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| S11Disney Workers Sue, Say They Were Misled Into Leaving California for Florida Disney workers are suing their employer, claiming they were fraudulently induced to move from California to Florida to work in a new office campus only to have those plans later scrapped amid a fight between the entertainment giant and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.In July 2021, the Disney Parks' chief told workers in California that most white-collar employees would be transferred to the new campus in Orlando to consolidate different teams and allow for greater collaboration.
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| S12Virtual Queuing Software Company QLess Files for Bankruptcy The Pasadena, California-based company, a key player in the fast-growing market for queuing management software, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware on Wednesday. According to court documents, its liabilities total $13.5 million, over double its total assets.On its website, QLess lists several colleges as clients, including the University of Florida, University of California Berkeley, and NYU. It also provides services to small businesses, as well as healthcare, education, and government organizations, according to its LinkedIn profile. QLess also has a mobile app that allows users to join virtual lines at businesses near them. The company did not make a public announcement about whether the bankruptcy procedings would affect its services.
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| S13How Micro-Choices and Games Motivate Gig Workers As gig work grows ever more prevalent, critics have voiced major issues with these jobs, from their lack of labor protections to income instability and more. But if gig work is so bad, why do so many people do it? Platform companies tout its flexibility, but in the author’s recent series of articles — in which she coupled her own experience driving for ride-hail companies with more than 100 interviews and a review of online discussion boards — suggests it’s more complicated than that. Specifically, the author identified two reasons why ride-hail drivers feel motivated to work despite the known pitfalls of gig work: First, drivers’ ability to make micro-choices about when, where, and how they work helps them feel a sense of agency and fulfillment. And second, platforms’ structures enable workplace games (whether motivated by a desire to maximize customer satisfaction or earnings), which also helps drivers find meaning in their work.
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| S14Research: Warehouse and Logistics Automation Works Better with Human Partners A study of automation usage in warehouse and logistics companies around the world suggests that blending human labor with robotics leads to greater efficiency than full automation alone. While scalable robotic systems can handle up to 1,000 tasks per hour, they often face limitations where additional robots don’t improve performance. Human-robot collaboration, employed by companies like DHL and CEVA, enhances productivity, reduces worker fatigue, and increases job satisfaction. The incremental approach of integrating human roles with automated systems not only keeps operations cost effective but also leverages human adaptability for continuous improvements.
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| S15How to Vet Information Before Making a Decision The daily decisions modern leaders face are increasingly complex. But executives have a tool to combat these challenges – information. At the click of a mouse or the press of a thumb, they can call up cutting edge research on virtually any topic. With so much information available, how do we know what to trust? What executives need is a simple taxonomy of misinformation so they know what to look out for. Drawing on the tools of social science research we can categorize misinformation into four missteps. This framework can be useful to leaders of all kinds who need to ask better questions to manage their own information onslaughts.
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| S16When It Comes to Long-Term Value, Incumbents Should Think Like Digital Disruptors Measuring earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBIDTA) profits may be the gold standard for assessing traditional companies, but it is not the way digital businesses think. Successful digital disruptors focus on creating long-term value through two distinct levers: customer lifetime value (CLV) / customer acquisition cost and the end-to-end customer experience. While digital disruptors have pioneered this approach, established companies are actually often better positioned to take advantage of this “digital growth engine” because they have one thing startups lack: customers. To kickstart their own digital growth engine, companies should: 1) Align their customer experience ambition with financial ambitions and operational reality, 2) Optimize their customer data strategy, 3) Differentiate engineering for experience, data and AI, and enterprise, 4) Develop an “electronic brain” powered by predictive AI models (with feedback loops). 5) Launch a data and AI-enabled omnichannel customer outreach program, and 6) Transform KPIs, structure, and incentives.
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| S17Before Smartphones, an Army of Real People Helped You Find Stuff on Google The Eiffel Tower is 330 meters tall, and the nearest pizza parlor is 1.3 miles from my house. These facts were astoundingly easy to ascertain. All I had to do was type some words into Google, and I didn't even have to spell them right.For the vast majority of human history, this is not how people found stuff out. They went to the library, asked a priest, or wandered the streets following the scent of pepperoni. But then, for a brief period when search engines existed but it was too expensive to use them on your shiny new phone, people could call or text a stranger and ask them anything.
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| S18Green Chef's Meal Kit Makes Dinner Delicious--and Organic If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDGreen Chef (owned by HelloFresh) is a great meal kit subscription for beginners. I said as much in our Meal Kit Buying Guide. The recipe cards are full of helpful pictures, and the intuitively grouped instructions don't skip important steps. IâÂÂve spent weeks testing meal kit subscriptions during my tenure at WIRED, but weâÂÂre testing them again in order to give them individual reviews. Green Chef has been an honorable mention in our guide since I first tested it, and I still think itâÂÂs a good option for anyone looking to build up their culinary prowess.
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| S19Best Apple Watch (2024): Which Model Should You Buy? If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDWe on the WIRED Gear team agree: If you have an iPhone, the Apple Watch is the best wearable to go with it. But which version should you buy? This question has recently gotten more complicated. Last year, a court ruling dictated that Apple could no longer sell its two latest watches, the Series 9 and the Ultra Watch 2, with the blood oxygen sensor. The medical technology company Masimo alleged that Apple had infringed on its patent. (Apple later defeated a lawsuit alleging that it had a monopoly on heart rate apps, but a larger antitrust lawsuit is ongoing.)
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| S20Dnsys X1 Exoskeleton Review: A Great Idea In Need of Finesse If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDFrom the Matrix via Alien to Starship Troopers and Iron Man, exoskeletons have littered sci-fi (and adorable dog-based animations) with the promise of superhuman power for all. While medical, industrial, and military exoskeletons are advancing rapidly, nobody has managed to bring this branch of wearable tech to the masses.
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| S21My Memories Are Just Meta's Training Data Now In R. C. Sherriff's novel The Hopkins Manuscript, readers are transported to a world 800 years after a cataclysmic event ended Western civilization. In pursuit of clues about a blank spot in their planet's history, scientists belonging to a new world order discover diary entries in a swamp-infested wasteland formerly known as England. For the inhabitants of this new empire, it is only through this record of a retired school teacher's humdrum rural life, his petty vanities and attempts to breed prize-winning chickens, that they begin to learn about 20th-century Britain.If I were to teach futuristic beings about life on earth, I once believed I could produce a time capsule more profound than Sherriff's small-minded protagonist, Edgar Hopkins. But scrolling through my decade-old Facebook posts this week, I was presented with the possibility that my legacy may be even more drab.
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| S22Sony Bravia 7 mini LED TV Review: A Lovely Screen From Center Stage If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDIt's a great time to buy a new TV. Never in my years as a reviewer have I been flanked by so many fantastic options, from the brightest OLEDs ever made to mid-tier mini LED TVs that perform more like premium models. You can easily spend a mint on a killer flagship display, but with so many choices, you can tailor a great buy to your needs and budgetâand save a lot of cash in the process.
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| S23Polyend Tracker+ Review: Powerful but Niche If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDPolyend's Tracker+ is a significant update to its powerful (if somewhat anachronistic) sample-based groovebox, the Tracker. What made the Tracker so unique, and also confounding, was that it was a tracker (small t), but in hardware form. Trackers were an early form of music-making software that emerged in the late '80s. They were initially used mainly for video game music but eventually found favor with a certain strain of electronic musicians, most famously Aphex Twin.
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| S247 Best Mechanical Keyboards (2024): Tested and Reviewed If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDYour keyboard is the most direct line of communication between yourself and your computer âwhether gaming, working from home, or doing anything else in front of a screen. Why not invest in one that's reliable, fun, and enjoyable? I love mechanical keyboardsâI even open up boards and tinker with them. Over the past few years, I have tested dozens, ranging from the fastest gaming keyboards to those offering elevated typing experiences. These are the best mechanical keyboards of the hundreds you can find online.
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| S25Perplexity Plagiarized Our Story About How Perplexity Is a Bullshit Machine Earlier this week, WIRED published a story about the AI-powered search startup Perplexity, which Forbes has accused of plagiarism. In it, my colleague Dhruv Mehrotra and I reported that the company was surreptitiously scraping, using crawlers to visit and download parts of websites from which developers had tried to block it, in violation of its own publicly stated policy of honoring the Robots Exclusion Protocol.Our findings, as well as those of the developer Robb Knight, identified a specific IP address almost certainly linked to Perplexity and not listed in its public IP range, which we observed scraping test sites in apparent response to prompts given to the company's public-facing chatbot. According to server logs, that same IP visited properties belonging to Condé Nast, the media company that owns WIRED, at least 822 times in the past three monthsâlikely a significant undercount, because the company retains only a small portion of its records.
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| S26The Studio Executive Who Wants Hollywood to Get Real About Bad Storytelling Hollywood has an inclusivity problem. How is this possible, in 2024, you wonder, when films like King Richard or Sound of Metal or Everything Everywhere All at Onceâall nominated for Best Picture Oscarsâsuggest otherwise. They are films rich in story, dimension, and purpose. They are also exceptions to a long-established rule: White men still run Hollywood. Women remain almost entirely shut out, compared to their male colleagues, while disabled and Black actors are underrepresented in all major employment arenas for theatrical film, according to UCLA's most recent Hollywood diversity report.In the face of this, Kamala Avila-Salmon wants better for Hollywood and its storytellers. Avila-Salmon is the head of inclusive content at Lionsgate Motion Picture Group, where she began her stint in 2020 and has since leveraged her experience as a marketing savant (she has held top-level roles at RCA, Universal Pictures, Google, and Facebook) to shift how the studio makes movies. At Lionsgate, her main directive is simple: to create a creative economy that allows for more attentive storytelling. Stories of magnitude and conviction, yes, but also ones with as much reach as possible. It begins, she tells me, by having an "audience-first" mindset.
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| S27Open the Door Wider for Refugees I'm here today only because of the kindness of strangers who fought to open the door for those fleeing unthinkable circumstances. Others should have the same chance.Of the many titles I holdâcongresswoman, mother, sister, organizerâone represents a part of my identity that I hold particularly close to my heart: refugee.
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| S29The 1970s Movie That Explains 2020s America Chinatown, released 50 years ago today, shone a bleak light on the machinations of money and powerâa theme that still animates U.S. politics.This spring, I went to see Chinatown in a theater for the first time since its release, on June 20, 1974. The movie was headlining at the annual TCM Classic Film Festival on Hollywood Boulevard. Inside, every seat in the huge IMAX theater was taken. When Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway kissed for the first time, they filled the towering screen with every bit as much star power as Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall did in Hollywood's golden age. But the rapid descent into tragedy during the film's second half had the audience rapt, eliciting audible gasps when the film's director, Roman Polanski, in a cameo role, slit open the nose of the private eye J. J. Gittes (Nicholson) in one of the movie's more notorious moments. In the scene when Evelyn Mulwray (Dunaway) admits that her daughter is also her sister, conceived through incest with her father, Noah Cross (played by John Huston), the auditorium was utterly silent.
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| S30Trump Dreams of a Swifter Death Penalty In recent speeches, the former president has been praising China's approach to criminal justice.During a recent campaign event in Phoenix, Arizona, Donald Trump mused about capital punishment. "We've never had [such] massive amounts of drugs pouring into our country," he said. "And by the way, you'll never solve the problem without the death penalty." Trump also said he had made a deal with Xi Jinping prior to the end of his term that would have seen China executing anyone found to be manufacturing fentanyl for sale in America, though the only verifiable fact related to this claim is that China cracked down on fentanyl sales to America under pressure from the Trump administration.
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| S31The 2024 Audubon Photography Awards The winners of the 15th annual Audubon Photography Awards were just announced. Photographers competed for nine prizes, submitting more than 2,300 entries depicting birdlife from all 50 U.S. states and nine Canadian provinces and territories. The National Audubon Society was once again kind enough to share some of the winning photographs with us. Red-necked Grebe. Youth Honorable Mention. Two red-necked grebe chicks ride on the back of an adult, as another adult feeds one of the chicks at Colonel Samuel Smith Park in Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada. #
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| S32How a Band Falls Apart, According to 'Stereophonic' The Tony-winning play explores the heartbreak and turmoil that sometimes accompany great music.Like the members of Fleetwood Mac, or the Mamas & the Papas, or the Beatles, or Van Halen, the rock band at the center of the Broadway play Stereophonic can't seem to keep its act together. The bassist stumbles drunk and late into a recording session; the guitarist keeps futzing with the tempo on a song. The musicians are clearly close with one anotherâlots of inside jokes, lots of casual touchingâbut that only makes the bickering more personal.
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| S33The Books The Atlantic Loved--And Hated This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic's archives to contextualize the present and surface delightful treasures. Sign up here.Working on the Books desk of a 167-year-old publication offers incredible opportunitiesâand dredges up some insecurities. Will our judgment hold up to future readers' evaluations? Is the work we're putting out worthy of the magazine's illustrious traditions? Over the years, The Atlantic's literary coverage has taken on both the task of criticismâor situating a work in its era, evaluating its ideas, and considering its symbolsâand of reviewing which titles are worth people's time and why. Today, my job includes editing book recommendations and essays on new releases, and contributing to avowedly ambitious projects such as our recent list of great American novels. This involves listening to the opinions and disagreements of our contemporary readers. But there's also an entire archive full of people who talk back, disagree, and weigh in, too.
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| S34The Flimsiness of Trumponomics Trump's latest reported idea would result in massive tax cuts for the ultrarichâat the expense of other Americans.This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.
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| S35An Attack on Free Speech at Harvard Universities require a culture of open inquiry, viewpoint diversity, and constructive disagreement.In a recent op-ed in The Harvard Crimsonâ"Faculty Speech Must Have Limits"âthe university's dean of social science, Lawrence Bobo, made an extraordinary set of claims that seriously threaten academic freedom, including the chilling idea that faculty members who dare to criticize the university should be punished. Bobo is a senior administrator at Harvard, overseeing centers and departments including history, economics, sociology, and African and African American studies. When he writes about faculty free speech, those within and outside his division listen.
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| S36Dog Food Is So Fancy Now That I Ate Some Canumi's yellowfin tuna is caught in the Atlantic and then gently steamed and packed with fresh water in a storied factory in Galicia, Spain. A tin costs about $6 and comes inside an Instagram-ready, peach-colored box designed with spunky typefaces. (The brand also makes tote bags.) I am, honestly, desperate to try it, but it's been sold out in America for weeks. Also, it's for dogs.If you are old enough to be reading this and you grew up with a dog, he probably did not eat anything that would appeal to a human adult with a reasonably sophisticated palate. What he ate, in all likelihood, was kibble: hard, stinky, cereal-like pellets of grains and a small amount of meat, processed at high heat and pressure and sold by a global food mega-conglomerate in a big, unphotogenic bag. Whoever was in charge of buying the kibble may have had a choice among, say, salmon, chicken, and beef, but those distinctions were less about a meaningful difference in taste or composition than about the feeble work of flavoring agents. Your dog might have liked the food; your dog might have hated the food. He almost certainly didn't know anything better.
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| S37'The Party of the Ultrarich and the Ultra-poor' When the Supreme Court blocked President Joe Biden's plan to cancel student debt, his administration hurried to find a work-around. Less than a year later, Biden has now forgiven more than $160 billion in college loans for nearly 5 million borrowersâtotals that, as he often notes, would be much higher if not for the Court.To Representative Seth Moulton, the policy that Biden tried so hard to implement is a prime example of how the Democratic Party has gone astray and why Biden might lose to Donald Trump. "In many ways, we have become the party of the ultrarich and the ultra-poor, and a lot of people in the middle think Democrats are out of touch," Moulton told me. Student-debt relief is "a terrible priority because it sends a message to everyone who didn't get the opportunity to go to college that they're less important than the people who did."
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| S38'Kinds of Kindness' May Test Your Patience With his new film, Yorgos Lanthimos returns to his freaky-deaky rootsâwith mixed results.When I saw Yorgos Lanthimos's breakout 2009 film, the surreal and violent fable Dogtooth, I did not think the director was destined to grow into a Hollywood brand. Yet that's exactly what has happened to the Greek filmmaker, whose fascination with human brutality has not stopped him from becoming a recurring Oscar favorite who makes crossover art-house hits. Lanthimos's steady rise culminated in last year's Poor Things, which was somehow one of the feel-good hits of the fall: a freaky tale set in steampunk Victorian England about a woman's corpse that is revived with a baby's brain.
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| S39Aileen Cannon Is Who Critics Feared She Was The judge handling Trump's classified-documents case has shown that she's not fit for the task.One year ago, when former President Donald Trump was indicted on charges related to his hoarding of classified documents, the case was randomly assigned to Aileen Cannon, a federal judge for the Southern District of Florida.
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| S40Google Is Turning Into a Libel Machine A few weeks ago, I witnessed Google Search make what could have been the most expensive error in its history. In response to a query about cheating in chess, Google's new AI Overview told me that the young American player Hans Niemann had "admitted to using an engine," or a chess-playing AI, after defeating Magnus Carlsen in 2022âimplying that Niemann had confessed to cheating against the world's top-ranked player. Suspicion about the American's play against Carlsen that September indeed sparked controversy, one that reverberated even beyond the world of professional chess, garnering mainstream news coverage and the attention of Elon Musk.Except, Niemann admitted no such thing. Quite the opposite: He has vigorously defended himself against the allegations, going so far as to file a $100 million defamation lawsuit against Carlsen and several others who had accused him of cheating or punished him for the unproven allegationâChess.com, for example, had banned Niemann from its website and tournaments. Although a judge dismissed the suit on procedural grounds, Niemann has been cleared of wrongdoing, and Carlsen has agreed to play him again. But the prodigy is still seething: Niemann recently spoke of an "undying and unwavering resolve" to silence his haters, saying, "I'm going to be their biggest nightmare for the rest of their lives." Could he insist that Google and its AI, too, are on the hook for harming his reputation?
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