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F1 in Miami: That’s what it looks like when an upgrade works

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F1 in Miami: That’s what it looks like when an upgrade works

After an unanticipated five-week break in the season, Formula One resumed action this past weekend in Miami. Held at a temporary circuit around Hard Rock Stadium, the event is emblematic of the Liberty era of F1: a turbocharged marketing extravaganza crammed full of hospitality suites with ticket prices as high as $95,000. It might be miles from the sea—the original plans to race across a bridge over Biscayne Bay did not survive contact with locals—but the sport is doing its best to make this a modern Monaco, playing up the host city’s glamorous reputation and pastel color palette.

As we learned a couple of weeks ago, there have been tweaks to the amount of energy that the cars’ new hybrid power units can regenerate and deploy via the electric motor that contributes almost half of the car’s power output. The first three races of this season were frenetic, but they alarmed many longtime fans, as the cars are now too energy-limited to be driven flat-out during qualifying; that energy limitation also led to cars swapping positions multiple times, derisively dubbed “yo-yo” racing by critics.

The new limits on harvesting energy from the V6 to charge the battery on the move should reduce the potential for huge speed differentials like the one that caused Oliver Bearman’s crash in Japan, and energy management was (thankfully) not much of a topic this weekend. Miami’s layout definitely helps there, with plenty of braking zones to help regenerate much of the now-allowed 7 MJ each lap.

Correlation is causation

In a more conventional season, you might not bring any upgrades to Miami. It’s one of F1’s six sprint weekends, with just a single hour’s practice session on Friday morning; the other two are replaced by a shortened qualifying session on Friday afternoon, then a (roughly) half-hour sprint race on Saturday morning, before normal qualifying later that day and the proper race on Sunday. Mindful that it had imposed new rules for this round, the sport’s organizers increased practice time to 90 minutes on Friday.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 01: Lando Norris of Great Britain driving the (1) McLaren MCL40 Mercedes on track during practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 01, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)

McLaren wasn’t the fastest car at the start of the season, but it might be now.

McLaren wasn’t the fastest car at the start of the season, but it might be now. Credit: Clive Mason/Getty Images

Every team, except the troubled Aston Martin, brought an upgrade package to Florida. Coming out of the blocks strong as Mercedes did this year is all well and good, but the 2009 season showed us what happens when a team with a huge advantage at the start fails to develop its car: Everyone else catches up.

Well, that’s assuming those upgrade packages work. A new wing or wishbone or whatever design might look like an improvement when you simulate it in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) or a wind tunnel, but if those aren’t well-correlated with the full-size car on track, that work was for naught. Many’s a time a team has brought what it hoped was a step forward only to find out it’s now even less competitive—just ask the closest tifosi.

Over the past few years, McLaren has nailed that correlation problem, causing all of its upgrade packages to add performance. What’s more, that ability has now spanned across three different sets of technical regulations. It caught up to the front of the pack in 2021 after years in the wilderness, then was the only team to overhaul Red Bull in the ground-effect era. Now it looks set to do that again.

Ferrari and Red Bull have both also taken a step forward. The Mercedes might have looked awfully dominant in Australia, China, and Japan, but as of now, the season looks like a four-way fight.

The flag drops

Audi's Brazilian driver Gabriel Bortoleto races during a practice session for the 2026 Miami Formula One Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida, on May 1, 2026. (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images)

The vast stadium looms over the track.

The vast stadium looms over the track. Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images

The changes to energy harvesting in qualifying looked successful, at least in Miami. Cars weren’t losing speed precipitously three-quarters of the way down the straight, and I doubt anyone could tell they were a second and a bit slower than last year’s machines in qualifying trim.

Lando Norris took pole in sprint qualifying, a couple of tenths of a second faster than McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri. Between 19-year-old Kimi Antonelli and teammate George Russell, Antonelli was able to make his Mercedes do things that his more experienced teammate could not. Charles Leclerc was similarly more at home in his Ferrari than Lewis Hamilton was around the Hard Rock Stadium, but the gap between teammates was nothing like that separating Max Verstappen’s Red Bull from that of Isack Hadjar.

Verstappen, the four-time champion, has been vocal about his dislike of the new cars and the new racing style, and he has increasingly signaled that he could walk away from F1 to pursue other racing interests. This weekend, the Red Bull upgrade package seems more to his liking, and the gap to Hadjar was more than a second in practice.

Both Mercedes made atrocious getaways at the start of the sprint, and the two McLarens drove off to an uneventful 1–2 finish that seemed reminiscent of 2025. Leclerc demonstrated the Ferrari’s superior performance off the line and held third until the end.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 01: Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing prepares to drive prior to practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 01, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images)

Verstappen got Miami-fied with his helmet.

Verstappen got Miami-fied with his helmet. Credit: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Fears of a wet race on Sunday did not materialize, although the potential for weather chaos saw the race start moved forward by three hours. Antonelli had secured the pole on Saturday afternoon, his third in a row. Lining up next to him? Verstappen’s Red Bull. Leclerc was third, then Norris, Russell, Hamilton, and Piastri filled out rows three and four.

When Ferrari designed its 2026 power unit, it went for a small turbocharger in large part because it knew engines with larger turbos, and therefore more lag, would struggle with standing starts. Leclerc made mighty use of that and was in first place by turn three. Verstappen tried to stay alongside him but spun at turn three; Verstappen’s resulting pirouette left him facing the right way and still in the race, which is one of his party tricks.

Antonelli got a much better start than the sprint but was the man on the outside as he, Leclerc, and Verstappen went into the first corner, and he ran wide and resumed third. The two McLarens were next, then Russell and Hamilton’s Ferrari, which was damaged in a tussle with Franco Colapinto’s Alpine. The midfield team has also made clear progress and may well trouble the top four a lot more this year.

Lap six was eventful. Hadjar misjudged the apex at turn 13 and destroyed his front left suspension. At about the same time, the other Alpine of Pierre Gasly diced with the Racing Bulls of Liam Lawson before they made contact, rolling Gasly and depositing him partially on the tire barrier at turn 17. Norris got past Antonelli before the safety car came out, then a lap later took the lead from Leclerc. Antonelli also passed the Ferrari quickly, and by lap 22, Leclerc’s race was looking pretty mediocre, stuck behind Russell after both had made relatively early pit stops for the mandatory tire change.

Verstappen was on a different trajectory. After falling to ninth with his spin, he stopped for hard tires and was maneuvering his way back up the running order. As the leaders stopped, they rejoined on track just behind his Red Bull, Antonelli beating Norris to be the one in the middle. As Piastri made his stop, he relinquished the lead to Verstappen, but the Dutch driver was on tires that were 21 laps older than Antonelli’s new rubber, and by halfway around the lap, the Mercedes was through into first with Norris’ McLaren following.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 03: Isack Hadjar of France and Oracle Red Bull Racing climbs out of his crashed car during the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 03, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)

Isack Hadjar was furious with himself for crashing on lap six.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 03: Alexander Albon of Thailand driving the (23) Williams FW48 Mercedes leads as Pierre Gasly of France driving the (10) Alpine F1 A526 Mercedes crashes during the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 03, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Rudy Carezzevoli/Getty Images)

With a 10th place finish on Sunday, it was a good weekend at last for Alex Albon in the Williams. Pierre Gasly’s weekend ended about as well as the rolling Alpine in the background suggests.

The Antonelli hype is real

Norris harried Antonelli for the rest of the 57-lap race, but the reigning world champion could not force the Mercedes sophomore into a fault. Behind them, Piastri was able to overtake Russell, although he was almost half a minute behind the winner. After a spirited defense, Verstappen’s much older tires meant he surrendered third to Leclerc with 12 laps to go. Piastri was next, then Russell too, clipping the Red Bull’s rear tire with his Mercedes’ front wing.

Piastri wasn’t done; he caught Leclerc with a lap to go, then passed him on the final lap for third place. It went downhill from there for the Ferrari man, who spun, then biffed the wall and broke his suspension, then earned a penalty that dropped him from sixth to eighth place for leaving the track and gaining a lasting advantage.

Between Leclerc’s travails and Hamilton’s somewhat-damaged, mostly anonymous race, it was a weekend without much glory for Ferrari. Audi didn’t have the best time either; Nico Hulkenberg’s car caught fire on the way to the sprint grid, and Gabriel Bortoleto was disqualified from the sprint after finishing 11th for a technical infringement.

Williams went home with smiles, though. It has had a very poor start to 2026, with a car that’s overweight and exhibiting some difficult handling characteristics that saw it mired at the back of the pack if not quite as slow as Cadillac or Aston Martin. But in Miami, the two Williams cars looked far more at home, especially in the race where they both finished in the points. Even Cadillac and Aston Martin will probably be content with their performances on Sunday; both teams got both cars to the flag, and Perez managed to split the two Astons.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 03: Race winner Andrea Kimi Antonelli of Italy and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team lifts his trophy on the podium during the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 03, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images)

Kimi Antonelli (middle) is too young to spray champagne if he wins a race in America. Lando Norris (left) and Oscar Piastri (right) did not have to abstain.

Kimi Antonelli (middle) is too young to spray champagne if he wins a race in America. Lando Norris (left) and Oscar Piastri (right) did not have to abstain. Credit: Mark Sutton – Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

Antonelli has now converted three consecutive pole positions into three consecutive race wins, the first driver to do so in 76 years of F1’s history. And none of those three wins has been a simple lights-to-flag victory, given how sluggish his car is when the five red lights go out. He leaves Florida with a 20-point margin in the championship over Russell in second, albeit with 18 races left to go.

Lawmakers Demand Answers About Growing Number of Unfixed Mistakes on Credit Reports

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Lawmakers Demand Answers About Growing Number of Unfixed Mistakes on Credit Reports

Four U.S. senators sent letters grilling the nation’s major credit bureaus on Thursday after a ProPublica investigation showed two of the bureaus were fixing fewer consumers’ credit reports.

The letters came in response to a ProPublica investigation from March, which found that two of the three major credit bureaus — TransUnion and Experian — had substantially scaled back how often they provided relief to complaints filed through the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The decline in relief coincided with the Trump administration’s attempts to conduct mass layoffs at the CFPB and roll back much of its oversight of the financial sector.

The letters’ lead author is Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee and a key architect in the creation of the CFPB. Democratic Sens. Tammy Duckworth, Andy Kim and Lisa Blunt Rochester also joined the letters.

ProPublica found that TransUnion’s rate of relief, which had remained relatively steady for several years, dropped sharply in the summer of 2025. By October it was providing relief roughly half as often. Experian, which had provided relief to nearly 20% of consumer complaints in 2024, provided relief to less than 1% of complaints in 2025, according to the CFPB’s data.

Companies are required to respond to consumer complaints filed through the CFPB, and relief can be financial or nonmonetary, for instance, fixing an error on a credit report.

In the letters to Experian and TransUnion, the senators called ProPublica’s findings “greatly concerning” and said that the reporting “raises significant questions about the legality” of the companies’ practices. The “drastic drop in responsiveness means that American consumers may be getting denied a mortgage or housing simply due to an error on their report that your company failed to correct.”

In a statement, TransUnion said, “We appreciate the opportunity for meaningful engagement with policymakers regarding the robust and compliant processes TransUnion deploys,” and that it would respond to the letter. Experian did not respond to a request for comment. The company previously told ProPublica it investigates “all legitimate” complaints.

The third major credit bureau, Equifax, did not see a similar decline in relief, ProPublica found. Last year, just prior to President Donald Trump’s inauguration, the company entered a settlement with the CFPB that aimed to fix the company’s deficiencies in its consumer dispute processes, although the agreement did not mention CFPB complaints specifically.

Three men wearing suits sit at a green table with people sitting behind them in a wood paneled room.
From left: Mark Begor, chief executive officer of Equifax; Chris Cartwright, president and CEO of TransUnion; and Brian Cassin, CEO of Experian, during a Senate Banking Committee hearing in April 2023 Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Equifax said it would engage with the letter and that the company works to make it easier for consumers to “correct any potential errors quickly.”

In the letters, the senators requested data on disputes and complaints sent to the companies, as well as information on their dispute handling processes and staffing. The senators also asked for correspondence with the CFPB, including communication regarding dropped and halted enforcement actions against TransUnion that were identified in ProPublica’s investigation.

Consumer complaints about credit reporting have risen dramatically, with over 4 million filed last year with the CFPB. The credit bureaus have said that many recent complaints are illegitimate, including a large volume filed by third-party credit repair organizations that charge customers to challenge negative information on their reports.

Errors on a credit report can be difficult and time-consuming to fix. ProPublica spoke with a Colorado accountant, Rebecca Sheppard, who had spent nearly a year trying to get a $240,000 debt that she did not owe removed from her credit report. The error caused her credit score to plunge roughly 85 points and jeopardized her plans to move with her disabled father into a more accessible home.

Sheppard contacted the credit bureaus on four occasions, including through the CFPB’s complaint system, but they did not remove the debt. In response to her fourth attempt, via certified mail, TransUnion sent her a postcard stating it believed the submission had not come from her.

She eventually sued the credit bureaus in January. TransUnion settled the claim shortly after ProPublica’s story was published, while the case is still pending against Equifax and Experian, which have denied the allegations in court.

A woman with shoulder-length blond hair and glasses wearing a green sweater, beige top and jeans stands outside. Behind her are conifer bushes, a tan house and ornaments hanging from the porch.
Rebecca Sheppard at her home in February. The Colorado accountant spent nearly a year trying to get a $240,000 debt that she did not owe removed from her credit report. Theo Stroomer for ProPublica

The CFPB previously had been putting pressure on the credit bureaus to fix errors and engage with consumers, and relief rates had risen during the Biden administration. However, upon the change of administrations, Trump appointed Russell Vought as acting head of the CFPB. He quickly ordered a stop to nearly all agency work. Under Vought, the agency also attempted to fire much of its staff, an effort that has been paused by litigation.

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Heeding the concerns voiced by the credit reporting industry’s lobbying group, the CFPB in February added notices for consumers to click through before filing a complaint, warning them that their requests might be ignored if they had not already disputed issues directly with credit bureaus.

A CFPB spokesperson told ProPublica in March that the complaint system was inundated with submissions from bots and third-party credit repair firms, and the agency was working to address that so legitimate consumers can more effectively get help.

In the letters, the senators also highlighted the consequences of the system. “It is hard to overstate the extent to which credit reports and credit scores produced by credit reporting companies permeate nearly every aspect of modern American life,” they wrote.

French Salted Butter Cookies – Delicate, Buttery & Irresistibly Elegant

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French Salted Butter Cookies – Delicate, Buttery & Irresistibly Elegant

You are here: Home / Desserts / French Salted Butter Cookies – Delicate, Buttery & Irresistibly Elegant

There’s something magical about the aroma of butter cookies baking in the oven. It fills the kitchen with warmth, comfort, and memories of homemade treats shared with family. These French Salted Butter Cookies bring that same nostalgic feeling—but with a sophisticated European twist.

Each cookie is delicately crisp around the edges, tender in the center, and rich with deep buttery flavor. A touch of brown sugar adds subtle caramel notes, while a sprinkle of flaky sea salt creates that irresistible sweet-and-salty finish that keeps everyone reaching for another.

Simple ingredients, effortless preparation, and bakery-quality results—these cookies are pure French-inspired perfection.


Why You’ll Love These French Salted Butter Cookies

These cookies may look simple, but their flavor is anything but ordinary.

✔ Rich, buttery melt-in-your-mouth texture
✔ Perfect balance of sweet and salty
✔ Crisp edges with tender centers
✔ Made with pantry staples
✔ Elegant enough for holidays, gifts, or afternoon tea
✔ Ready in just 30 minutes

Whether served with coffee, tea, or enjoyed straight from the cooling rack, these cookies always disappear fast.


Ingredients You’ll Need

Main Ingredients

  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • ¾ cup granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • Flaky sea salt, for topping

Ingredient Notes

Butter

Use high-quality unsalted butter for the richest flavor. European-style butter works beautifully if available.

Brown Sugar

Adds warmth and subtle caramel flavor.

Flaky Sea Salt

The finishing touch that transforms these cookies from simple to unforgettable.


How to Make French Salted Butter Cookies

Step 1: Preheat the Oven

Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C).

Line baking sheets with parchment paper.


Step 2: Cream Butter and Sugars

In a large mixing bowl, combine:

  • Softened butter
  • Granulated sugar
  • Brown sugar
  • Vanilla extract

Beat for 3–5 minutes until light, fluffy, and creamy.

This step creates the perfect tender texture.


Step 3: Add Dry Ingredients

Gradually mix in:

  • Flour
  • Salt

Mix gently until the dough just comes together.

Do not overmix—this keeps the cookies soft and delicate.


Step 4: Shape the Cookies

Roll the dough into small balls.

Place them on prepared baking sheets, leaving space between each.

Flatten each slightly with your palm.


Step 5: Add Sea Salt

Sprinkle each cookie with a pinch of flaky sea salt.

This adds texture, flavor, and beautiful presentation.


Step 6: Bake

Bake for 12–15 minutes, until the edges are lightly golden.

The centers should remain pale and tender.


Step 7: Cool

Allow cookies to rest on the baking sheet for 2 minutes.

Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.


Expert Baking Tips

Use Softened Butter

Butter should be soft but not melted.

Don’t Overmix

Mix flour until just combined for a tender crumb.

Chill If Needed

If your kitchen is warm, chill dough for 15–20 minutes before baking.

Bake One Tray at a Time

This ensures even baking and perfect color.


Flavor Variations

Want to customize these cookies? Try:

Almond Butter Cookies

Add ½ teaspoon almond extract.

Citrus Butter Cookies

Mix in lemon or orange zest.

Chocolate Salted Cookies

Fold in mini chocolate chips.

Nutty Crunch

Add finely chopped pecans or almonds.

Cinnamon Sugar Version

Roll dough in cinnamon sugar before baking.


How to Serve

These cookies are perfect served with:

  • Hot coffee
  • Earl Grey tea
  • Espresso
  • Hot chocolate
  • Vanilla ice cream

For holidays, arrange them on a dessert platter or package them in gift boxes.


Storage Instructions

Room Temperature

Store in an airtight container for up to 1 week.

Freezer

Freeze unbaked dough balls for up to 2 months.

Bake directly from frozen, adding 2–3 extra minutes.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use salted butter?

Yes—simply reduce added salt to ¼ teaspoon.

Why did my cookies spread too much?

Usually caused by butter that’s too warm. Chill the dough before baking.

Can I make the dough ahead?

Absolutely. Refrigerate for up to 3 days.

Can I freeze baked cookies?

Yes. Store in freezer-safe containers for up to 2 months.


Final Thoughts

These French Salted Butter Cookies prove that simple ingredients can create something truly extraordinary. Buttery, delicate, lightly caramelized, and finished with flaky sea salt, they deliver the perfect bite every single time.

Once you make them, they may just become your new signature cookie.

Indonesian president’s ties to personal aide go viral

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Indonesian president’s ties to personal aide go viral

Out came the cake, while the president applauded. The surroundings were palatial, but what else could you expect from the Four Seasons George V in Paris, whose most expensive rooms run to US$30,000 a night.

Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto was visiting France in April on official business, but for many watching the video, it seemed no expense was spared to celebrate the birthday of the president’s close personal aide, Cabinet Secretary Lieutenant Colonel Teddy Indra Wijaya.

Posted on Teddy’s official Instagram on April 14, and surprisingly not since deleted, the video went viral. At a time when Indonesians are feeling the pinch and government department budgets are being slashed in the name of efficiency, the reaction was decidedly negative.

Last week, the backlash took a dramatic turn on April 30. Amien Rais, former leader of the powerful Muslim organization Muhammadiyah and head of a small political party, posted a video on YouTube making hot allegations about Teddy and his relationship with Prabowo.

In the context of a socially conservative Muslim country the claims were explosive. He further urged Prabowo to assert his warrior spirit and ditch Teddy.

The video was quickly deleted after the Minister of Communication and Digital Affairs, Meutya Hafid, condemned it as defamatory. But clips of its most provocative sections are still circulating widely online. Amien Rais is sticking to his guns, inviting Teddy to sue him over the allegations.

Some might dismiss this as merely another scurrilous episode in Indonesian politics. But the fact that these allegations were made reflects growing elite disquiet about Prabowo’s leadership.

Indonesia’s presidency has long had a regal element. The 37-year-old Teddy occupies the often unfortunate role of royal favorite. He is someone whose trusted personal relationship with the de facto monarch has propelled them to power and influence far beyond their usual status, which in turn has sparked resentment.

So why the disquiet? Prabowo rose to power in 2024, promising good economic times. He predicted 8% GDP growth, which in turn would fund laudable social programs like free school meals and make the country respected on the world stage.

Instead, in 2025, growth remained stubbornly around the usual 5%, government revenues fell, and cost-of-living issues began to bite.

Grumbling spread to privileged classes as well. Sweeping cuts to departmental budgets to free up money for the school meals program ruffled bureaucratic feathers. And, Indonesia’s oligarchs faced mass confiscation of land alleged to have been acquired corruptly and pressure to subscribe to “Patriot Bonds” at 2%.

In August, the country saw its worst riots since 1998 when the dictatorial President Suharto, Prabowo’s former father-in-law, was forced to step down.

Being too critical of the president carries big risks. With little real opposition in parliament, former vice president Jusuf Kalla had become an unofficial spokesman for loyal criticism.

Last month, he was suddenly reported to the police for alleged blasphemy over anodyne comments in a speech to university students. Other critics have been jailed and then showily granted presidential pardons.

But even if they won’t voice it publicly, many in elite circles feel the country is adrift and blame it on Prabowo’s leadership style.

The president, many find, is hard to reach, especially for those bearing bad news or unwelcome views. Access is governed by a tight-knit circle of young male aides, hand-picked and patronized by Prabowo.

The luckless Teddy is the most prominent of these. A promising young officer in Indonesia’s military, he served as an aide to former president Joko Widodo and then from 2020 to Prabowo, then the defense minister.

When Prabowo assumed the presidency, Teddy’s professional trajectory went meteoric, raising eyebrows along the way. He was appointed Cabinet Secretary, a position usually reserved for veteran political wranglers.

And, to give him a status suitable to the role, he was promoted from major to lieutenant colonel, in a process that contravened military regulations governing promotions.

This rise would have always raised hackles. Combined with his status as gatekeeper to presidential access at a time of growing disquiet about the country’s leadership, plus alleged personal lines of attack, and attitudes towards him in some quarters are positively sulfurous.

Malicious rumor and innuendo proliferated behind closed doors, then in internet comment sections, until finally it burst out into the public domain.

Under different circumstances, such rumors would likely not matter. In neighboring Malaysia, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has long been subjected to similar attacks by opponents. But time has taken away their sting, and his political grip is such that he has been able to shrug them off.

However, in Indonesia, things are shakier. And, if economic conditions continue to worsen, if privileged groups, not just the poor, begin to feel squeezed, if the executive continues to be seen as out of touch and if open criticism of Prabowo is seen as risky, then popular anger is going to settle on a soft target.

Israeli army ‘on high alert’ for possible resumption of Iran war

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Israeli army ‘on high alert’ for possible resumption of Iran war

The Israeli army said Monday evening it is on high alert for a possible resumption of war with Iran amid rising escalation between Tehran and Washington in the Strait of Hormuz, Anadolu reports.

“We are monitoring the situation and are on high alert amid the escalation in the Gulf,” the army said in a statement.

“We confirm that there is no change in the instructions of the Home Front Command,” it added.

The public broadcaster KAN said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held “a series of security consultations” throughout Monday to discuss the situation in the Gulf.

Regional tensions have escalated after the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on Feb. 28, triggering retaliation from Tehran against Israel, as well as US allies in the Gulf, along with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

A ceasefire took effect on April 8 through Pakistani mediation, but talks in Islamabad failed to produce a lasting agreement. The truce was later extended by US President Donald Trump without a set deadline.

Since April 13, the United States has enforced a naval blockade targeting Iranian maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.

GameStop offers $56 billion for eBay, struggles to explain how it’ll pay for it

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GameStop offers $56 billion for eBay, struggles to explain how it’ll pay for it

GameStop yesterday made an unsolicited offer to buy eBay for $55.5 billion. GameStop claims that eBay has underperformed and spends too much on sales and marketing and argues that it would become a stronger company if it cuts costs and is combined with GameStop’s physical retail locations.

“GameStop’s ~1,600 US locations give eBay a national network for authentication, intake, fulfillment, and live commerce,” GameStop Chairman and CEO Ryan Cohen wrote in a letter to eBay Chairman Paul Pressler.

eBay’s market capitalization is over four times larger than GameStop’s. GameStop faces skepticism about the viability of its offer but says it will obtain debt financing and pay with a mix of cash and stock.

GameStop’s proposal envisions a system in which GameStop staff inspect and verify items to be listed on eBay. “GameStop staff already inspect and grade hardware and trading cards every day. Sellers walk in, items are verified on the spot, and listings carry a trust badge,” the proposal said.

The stores will “serve as drop-off and shipping nodes,” providing “a national fulfillment network without incremental eBay capital expenditure,” GameStop said. The stores, according to GameStop’s plan, will “double as broadcasting studios. eBay supplies the inventory and the buyer base; GameStop supplies the physical footprint to compete in the live-commerce category.” This would apparently help eBay sellers use livestreaming to promote their products.

Cohen intends to become CEO of the post-merger company if eBay accepts the deal and completes it. A GameStop press release said that Cohen “owns ~9% of GameStop and receives no salary, no cash bonuses, and no golden parachute. He will be compensated solely based on the performance of the combined company.”

Doubts about GameStop’s ability to finance deal

GameStop is still chugging along five years after its meme-stock mania, though it reportedly closed about 470 stores in the US at the beginning of 2026. It also closed 590 US-based stores in 2024. As of this writing, GameStop’s stock price had fallen about 2 percent today, while eBay’s had risen about 5 percent.

Unsurprisingly, GameStop faces skepticism about its ability to finance a deal to buy a much larger company. GameStop has a market capitalization of about $11 billion, while eBay is worth about $48 billion. GameStop’s offer for eBay is $125 per share, half in cash and half in GameStop stock.

Cohen said GameStop had about $9.4 billion in cash and liquid investments as of January 31 and will fund the cash portion of the offer with “cash and liquid investments on GameStop’s balance sheet and third-party equity and debt financing.” Cohen’s letter said GameStop has “a highly-confident letter from TD Securities for up to $20 billion,” indicating that TD is confident it can arrange financing but that the debt portion of GameStop’s offer is not yet finalized.

Cohen took questions about the financing on CNBC’s Squawk Box today, but co-anchor Andrew Ross Sorkin said the deal math doesn’t make sense. Sorkin noted that GameStop’s market capitalization, cash, investments, and potential financing from TD add up to $40 billion, leaving a gap of $16 billion to complete the $56 billion deal.

“We’ll see what happens,” Cohen responded.

Sorkin followed up by asking where the rest of the money comes from. Cohen answered, “it’s half cash, half stock.”

Sorkin tried again, saying, “that math doesn’t get you to the price that you’re offering.” Cohen responded, “I don’t understand your question. We’re offering half cash, half stock, and we have the ability to issue stock in order to get the deal done.”

CNBC hosts also asked Cohen for evidence that he can grow a consumer business that can rival Amazon, given that GameStop revenue has declined sharply the past few years. GameStop’s net sales were $3.6 billion in fiscal year 2025, compared to $6 billion in 2021.

“Didn’t you guys call for GameStop’s demise multiple times? Like, it should have been bankrupt by now?” Cohen said. “Look at our financial performance. Is it better than you guys anticipated? Because you guys said it was going to be doing really, really poorly, and it’s actually doing okay.”

“Fundamentally different” business models

Describing his ambitions, Cohen said that “eBay has the second largest commerce franchise and there’s a big opportunity to do something much larger and pull costs out of the system as well as accelerate revenue growth and leveraging our physical infrastructure, our focus on collectibles. It could be a much larger business, but bringing in an entrepreneurial mindset is what I plan on doing.”

At another point, Cohen said that GameStop is in a “very difficult business” and “should have been bankrupt multiple times over, and it’s doing okay, it’s making a few bucks. eBay is in a very, very strong position but it could be in a much stronger position.”

GameStop’s press release said its $125-per-share offer amounts to a 46 percent premium over eBay’s closing price on February 4, the day GameStop started accumulating a stake in the company. GameStop’s current stake in eBay is 5 percent.

eBay confirmed that it received the offer in a press release today and said that “eBay had no discussions with or outreach from GameStop prior to receiving the proposal.” eBay said its board “will review this proposal with a focus on the value to be delivered to eBay shareholders, including the value of the GameStop stock consideration and the ability of GameStop to deliver a binding, actionable proposal.”

Morgan Stanley analysts issued a research note saying that eBay and GameStop have “fundamentally different” business models. “eBay is a 3P [third-party] eCommerce marketplace that doesn’t take inventory risk while GameStop is primarily an in-store wholesaler,” stated the research note, which was provided to Ars. “Given those dynamics, we struggle to outline meaningful potential cross-sell synergies as most of GameStop’s inventory is already available on eBay while the long-tail inventory base of eBay isn’t well suited for in-store retail.”

GameStop wants to slash eBay marketing budget

Morgan Stanley similarly doubted the potential cost savings. “On the expense side, we also think the potential opportunities would likely be minimal as physical and digital business require different cost bases, as do 3P marketplaces vs. 1P wholesalers. To add another challenge, GameStop has already undergone a series of large cost cuts,” the research note said.

Morgan Stanley analysts expressed skepticism about “how a deal would be financed given the material valuation gap.” If completed, they said it could end up as the largest leveraged buyout ever, “surpassing the recently announced $55 billion Electronic Arts transaction.”

GameStop said that eBay spent $2.4 billion on sales and marketing in fiscal 2025 but added only 1 million net active buyers, increasing the total from 134 million to 135 million. GameStop said it would cut $1.2 billion from eBay’s sales and marketing budget, arguing that the current spending “is not producing more users on a marketplace with near-universal brand recognition.”

GameStop proposed cutting another $300 million from eBay’s product development expenses and $500 million from general and administrative functions. The combined company will consolidate its finance, HR, real estate, legal, IT, and professional services after the merger to save money, GameStop said.

GameStop touted its own financial performance under Cohen, saying that it “moved from a $381 million net loss in fiscal 2021 to $418 million of net income in fiscal 2025.” eBay meanwhile said in its press release today that its “board and leadership team are executing a focused strategy to drive sustainable growth and long-term shareholder value.”

eBay last week reported Q1 2026 revenue of $3.1 billion, up 19 percent year over year. eBay’s GAAP net income was $512 million, up 2 percent.

GameStop, which is on a different fiscal schedule, reported net sales of $1.1 billion in Q4 2026. That was down from $1.28 billion in the prior year’s fourth quarter. GameStop’s Q4 net income also fell year over year, from $131.3 million to $127.9 million.

Trump team denies Iran hit US warship entering Hormuz Strait

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Trump team denies Iran hit US warship entering Hormuz Strait

Photo: ITVX

The Trump administration has denied reports from Iranian media on Monday that a US Navy warship was hit in the Strait of Hormuz.

After US President Donald Trump said this weekend that the US Navy would help “guide” commercial ships through the strait, in what was referred to as “Project Freedom,” an Iranian official described it as a ploy to “provoke” retaliation and pledged that any vessels attempting to navigate the waterway without authorization would be “promptly intercepted” by Iranian forces.

According to Iranian news agencies, that is just what occurred on Monday morning. The Fars News Agency, which is linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), said that according to local news sources, “two missiles” had made impact in an attack on a US Navy frigate that had entered the strait without permission from the Iranian government.

It said the ship “violated security protocols for transit and navigation near Jask with the intent to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, [and] came under missile attack after ignoring warnings from the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Navy.” Fars added that the ship “has been prevented from continuing its course due to these strikes and has been forced to retreat and flee the area.”

In a comment to Reuters, a senior Iranian official added that it was unclear whether the warship had sustained any damage.

The Tasnim news agency published a statement from the Iranian army’s public relations department, saying that “with the decisive and swift warning from the Navy of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the entry of enemy American Zionist destroyers into the Strait of Hormuz area was prevented.”

US Central Command (CENTCOM) quickly denied the claim, posting a “fact check” on social media.

“CLAIM: Iranian state media claims that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps hit a US warship with two missiles,” the post said. “TRUTH: No US Navy ships have been struck. US forces are supporting Project Freedom and enforcing the naval blockade on Iranian ports.”

Another post stated that “US Navy guided-missile destroyers are currently operating in the Arabian [Persian] Gulf after transiting the Strait of Hormuz in support of Project Freedom” and that “American forces are actively assisting efforts to restore transit for commercial shipping.”

It added that “as a first step, two US-flagged merchant vessels have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz and are safely headed on their journey.”

Iran’s shuttering of the Strait of Hormuz to unauthorized ships has allowed it to wreak havoc on the Western economy in retaliation for the war launched by the US and Israel at the end of February.

About 20% of the globe’s seaborne oil shipments pass through the waterway, and its closure has caused global oil prices to spike, driving US gas prices to more than $4 on average and rippling inflation through the economy.

Observers of open-source marine tracking reports have said tracking did not show that two US-flagged merchant ships passed through the strait on Monday. However, it is possible the ships could have navigated the strait with the tracking technology disabled.

While information from the strait remains scarce, Matt Duss, a former foreign policy adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has said the public should remain skeptical of the Trump administration’s denials given its track record.

“Watch closely,” he wrote on social media. “The Trump administration’s consistent pattern has been immediate, unequivocal denial, then slowly dribbling out confirmation that ‘yeah, that happened, it was bad, actually very bad,’ and hope coverage has already moved on, and no one notices.”

As an example, he pointed to the first Trump administration’s claim following the 2020 assassination of IRGC Gen. Qassem Soleimani that retaliatory attacks against the Al Asad airbase, a US military installation, had resulted in zero casualties.

“Initially, Trump claimed, ‘We suffered no casualties,’” Duss said. “In the weeks that followed, we learned that there were actually over 100 casualties.” At least 109 US troops had suffered brain injuries from the strikes, according to the Pentagon.

More recently, CENTCOM initially denied claims that Iran had shot down US fighter jets in early April, claiming that “all aircraft are accounted for” when a plane had, in fact, been shot down, requiring a multi-day operation to rescue two pilots from Iranian territory.

-Common Dreams

President Trump Warns Iran Will Be ‘Blown Off the Face of the Earth’ if US Vessels Attacked 

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President Trump Warns Iran Will Be ‘Blown Off the Face of the Earth’ if US Vessels Attacked 


President Donald Trump said Monday that Iran would be “blown off the face of the Earth” if it targets US vessels, as tensions persisted in the Strait of Hormuz alongside reports of strikes on  UAE oil infrastructure. 

Speaking to Fox News’ Trey Yingst, President Trump said Iran has become “much more malleable” in peace negotiations. He also highlighted ongoing US military readiness. 

“We have more weapons and ammunition at a much higher grade than we had before,” President Trump said. “We have the best equipment. We have stuff all over the world. We have these bases all over the world. They’re all stocked up with equipment. We can use all of that stuff, and we will, if we need it.” 

US Central Command said Monday that claims Iran struck an American warship near the Strait of Hormuz were incorrect. “The truth is, no US military vessel has been attacked,” the command said in a statement posted on X. 

Elsewhere, Iran struck an oil industry complex in Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates on Monday, injuring three Indian citizens, according to Fujairah’s media office. UAE authorities said they intercepted three missiles the same day, while a fourth landed in the sea. 

The incidents came after what was described as an Iranian attack on the United Arab Emirates and Oman on Monday night. President Trump had rejected Iran’s ceasefire proposal a day earlier. 

A senior Israel Defense Forces official said Israel has not altered its home front directives. “The IDF is following the situation and is at a high level of readiness,” the official said. “We emphasize that there are no changes to the home front rules.” 

The official said Israel’s military posture remains unchanged. “Our air defense systems and attack capabilities are prepared at a high level, which is something that has not changed since the ceasefire decision.” 

Israeli security officials said tensions in the Persian Gulf have reached a peak, warning that a single spark or misunderstanding could collapse the ceasefire with the Iranian regime and lead to renewed fighting, according to Walla. 

 

Canadian election databases use “canary traps”—and they work

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Canadian election databases use “canary traps”—and they work

In a world awash in high-tech security tools like passkeys, quantum-safe algorithms, and public-key cryptography, it can be refreshing to get back to the simple things… like a good old-fashioned canary trap.

The canary trap is a simple tool often used to identify leakers or double agents. To make one, you simply share a document, image, or database but make tiny changes that are unique to each recipient. That way, if those changes show up verbatim in any leak of the information, you know immediately which recipient was behind the leak.

You don’t often see canary traps in the news, though they have long been a staple of spy fiction (and practice), so an account out of Canada last week caught my eye.

The Canadian province of Alberta has been the site of recent drama around its electoral list, a database that contains information such as names, addresses, and voting districts for millions of citizens. Political parties can legally get access to the electoral list, though they operate under significant restrictions on how they can use the data. They cannot, for instance, share the list with a third party.

Despite this, The Centurion Project, described by the CBC as a “separatist group,” used the list to power an online database of voters. Elections Alberta, which maintains the list, went to court last week and obtained an order to shut down the Centurion site.

But how had Centurion obtained the data?

Elections Alberta quickly investigated and announced that the list used by Centurion was a copy of one legitimately released to the Republican Party of Alberta. Election officials were confident in their claim because, whenever they release a copy of the electoral list, they salt it with additional but bogus entries. The fake entries inserted in the Republican Party version of the list showed up in Centurion’s online tool, too.

Exactly how the data had passed from the Republican Party to Centurion remains unclear, but the canary trap enabled Elections Alberta to lean quickly on both groups. Each publicly pledged to respect the law, and Centurion took down its tool.

Canaries—from Clancy to AI

The canary trap has been used by companies ranging from Tesla to Apple; it was even used to stop the leak of Star Trek film scripts. Though the concept comes from the world of espionage, the actual term appears to stem from Tom Clancy’s 1980s thriller, Patriot Games. The idea is to find out which “canary” did the “singing.”

Ars Technica’s own Clancy aficionado, Lee Hutchinson, tracked down his copy of the book and found the passage in which protagonist Jack Ryan explains the term after an admiral asks him, “What the devil is this Canary Trap?” Ryan says:

“Well, you know about all the problems CIA has with leaks. When I was finishing off the first draft of the report, I came up with an idea to make each one unique…

“Each summary paragraph has six different versions, and the mixture of those paragraphs is unique to each numbered copy of the paper. There are over a thousand possible permutations, but only ninety-six numbered copies of the actual document. The reason the summary paragraphs are so—well, lurid, I guess—is to entice a reporter to quote them verbatim in the public media. If he quotes something from two or three of those paragraphs, we know which copy he saw and, therefore, who leaked it. They’ve got an even more refined version of the trap working now. You can do it by computer. You use a thesaurus program to shuffle through synonyms, and you can make every copy of the document totally unique.”

Thesaurus program? We can do better than that, Jack Ryan; this is the age of artificial intelligence!

Indeed, as far back as 2021, Dartmouth professor V.S. Subrahmanian built an AI tool called (really) WE-FORGE that “automatically creates false documents to protect intellectual property such as drug design and military technology.” The goal was to create “documents that are sufficiently similar to the original to be plausible, but sufficiently different to be incorrect,” said Subrahmanian at the time.

However it’s done, this old system continues to work pretty well. Just ask Elections Alberta.

UK set to enter talks to join the European Union’s $105.9 billion Ukraine loan

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UK set to enter talks to join the European Union’s $105.9 billion Ukraine loan


Britain is set to enter talks to join the European Union’s 78 billion ‌pound loan ($106 billion) to Ukraine, the government said, in a further sign of deepening European defence ties under rising U.S. pressure.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected on Monday to tell a summit in Armenia’s capital Yerevan of the European Political Community – a discussion forum set up after Russia’s invasion in 2022 – that Britain wants ⁠to work with the EU to support Ukraine in getting vital military equipment, his office said.
The loan, approved by the EU last month, is set to cover two-thirds of Ukraine’s needs for the next two years, with the bulk of that amount earmarked for military spending as Kyiv defends itself against Russia’s four-year war.
The extra funding could also unlock opportunities for British businesses to meet Ukraine’s urgent needs, particularly in the defence sector, the government said in a statement.

FURTHER SANCTIONS ON RUSSIAN COMPANIES
Britain, which has imposed wide-ranging sanctions on Russia since the war ‌began ⁠in 2022, will also announce another tranche of “stinging sanctions” on Russian companies this week to disrupt military supply chains, it said.
Starmer’s visit, the first by a British leader to Armenia since former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1990, comes as the Trump administration pushes Europe to take more responsibility ⁠for the continent’s defence.
European countries, including Germany, France and Britain, have recently come under further pressure from Washington after refusing to join the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran.
“When the UK and the European Union work ⁠together, we all reap the benefits — and in these volatile times we need to go further and faster on defence to keep people safe,” Starmer said in the statement.
He ⁠has previously called for stronger defence integration within the continent to cut NATO’s over-reliance on the U.S., hinting at further alignment with the EU’s single market and deeper economic integration, six years after Brexit.

Source:  Reuters

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