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Eastern U.S. hit by historic heatwave ahead of July 4 holiday

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Eastern U.S. hit by historic heatwave ahead of July 4 holiday


Record-breaking ​temperatures spread to the eastern U.S. from the Midwest on Wednesday, putting tens of millions of people under heat warnings expected to last into the July 4 holiday ‌weekend, when Americans will celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary.

The extreme heat was expected to push “real-feel” temperatures to 100 to 115 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 to 46.1 degrees Celsius) across much of the region, elevating the risk of heat-related illness for vulnerable populations and threatening to overwhelm power grids already strained by rising consumption from data centers and electric vehicles.

In Hill City, Kansas, a tiny high plains town 270 miles east of Denver, mail carrier Sabrina Hooper was struggling with the 100-plus-degree temperatures ​just one week after starting her job.

“It’s completely debilitating,” said Hooper, 34, of the heat’s effect on her work, which entails walking up to 10 miles each day to deliver ​parcels. She said she gets some relief from lawn sprinklers: “It’s so nice. You can take your hat off, get it wet, slap it back on ⁠your head.”

Hill City was the nation’s hottest spot for five consecutive days in 2012, when another record-breaking heatwave swept the region, pushing the town’s heat index up to 108 degrees. The heat index measures ​how it feels when humidity is factored into the air temperature.

Dana Robles, who lives in Brownsville, Texas, a city just off the Gulf Coast at the U.S.-Mexico border, worried on Wednesday about the mounting costs ​of cooling her home as the heat index rose to 108 degrees. During peak temperatures, her family’s monthly power bill can exceed $300, which is nearly one-third what they pay for rent.

Robles also fears blackouts due to the overtaxed power grid.

“I’m scared the electricity is going to go off all day and our food is going to get spoiled,” she said.

In Chicago, high-school science teacher Michelle Klein, 57, had started preparing for the heat over the weekend. She filled ​her car with gas, did her weekly grocery shopping early, stocked the refrigerator with extra cold drinks and gave her plants a deep soak.

“The basil was being a diva and needed another drink of water this ​morning,” Klein said on Tuesday evening after going on her usual evening walk despite the 103-degree heat index.

In the city’s suburbs, property investor Amy Kaspar got an urgent call Monday night from a tenant whose air conditioner ‌was only ⁠blowing out warm air. Kaspar discovered that the appliance was working fine – it simply could not keep up with cooling the tenant’s unit, given the intense heat and humidity.

“Combined with the wind, it feels like standing behind the exhaust of a bus right now in Chicago,” said Kaspar, 50.

COOLING CENTERS, CHECK-INS

Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications urged residents on Wednesday to periodically check in with relatives, neighbors, seniors and other vulnerable populations. If contact cannot be made, the office said, Chicagoans can request a well-being check from the city by calling 311.

The scorching U.S. temperatures mirrored those in western Europe, which recently has been engulfed ​in its own record-breaking heatwave, an event scientists said ​would have been “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate ⁠change. Scientists have confirmed through years of studies that greenhouse gas emissions are making heatwaves around the world both more likely and intense.

The extreme heat only began creeping into New York City as of Wednesday morning, by which point the city had opened hundreds of cooling centers and deployed more ​than a dozen “cool vans” equipped with water, electrolytes, sunscreen and meals for New Yorkers in need of relief, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at a ​press conference.

Air conditioning was on ⁠full blast at a senior center in Harlem on Wednesday, where a sign in 13 languages advertised the space as a “cooling center” for the public. The senior center’s director, Richard Allman, said it would remain open beyond its usual hours over the July 4 weekend.

“We try to make this a comfortable place for people on an extra-hot day,” he said.

Ahead of the heatwave, city leaders had asked operators of signs in ⁠the city’s iconic ​Times Square to reduce the brightness of their billboards to lower energy consumption, and requested that businesses set thermostats no lower ​than 78 degrees. The city’s energy provider, Con Edison, urged customers to limit energy use from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.

The city has also extended public pool hours, opened additional cooling centers in libraries and municipal buildings, and expanded street outreach ​efforts.

China’s EV fleet is world’s most underestimated AI asset

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China’s EV fleet is world’s most underestimated AI asset

History has a habit of concealing its most consequential turning points inside the mundane. The invention of the shipping container did not announce itself as a revolution in global trade. The rise of the mobile phone was initially dismissed as an expensive novelty for businessmen.

Today, something similarly quiet and similarly transformative is unfolding across the parking lots, highways, and residential streets of China’s sprawling cities. Forty million EVs, each sitting idle for roughly 23 hours a day, are poised to become something the world has not yet named: the most distributed artificial intelligence infrastructure ever assembled.

The observation did not come from a futurist or a technology journalist. It came from Robin Zeng, the founder and chairman of CATL, the world’s largest EV battery maker, speaking at the World Economic Forum’s Summer Davos in Dalian last week.

China’s vast EV fleet, Zeng argued, could be reimagined as distributed token factories: computing infrastructure that uses onboard batteries and AI chips to produce the outputs feeding large language models at scale.

It was arguably the week’s most underreported remark. It deserves to be the most studied.

Misread story from the start

For the better part of a decade, the global conversation about China’s EV industry has been dominated by a single, reductive framing of it as a trade threat. Western governments have debated tariffs, imposed import duties and commissioned studies on the industrial displacement that Chinese EVs might cause.

The European Union levied additional duties. The United States raised its own. The underlying assumption, almost universally shared, was that China’s EV success was a manufacturing story with trade consequences.

A dispassionate reading of the evidence, however, suggests this framing has always been incomplete. China’s drive to electrify its transport system was not, at its core, a plan to conquer foreign car markets. Rather, it was a national energy security calculation.

A country that imports the majority of its crude oil and has watched energy supply chains weaponized amid geopolitical rivalry wanted a transport fleet that ran on electricity it could generate domestically.

What that imperative produced, as an elegant byproduct, was the world’s largest networked fleet of mobile energy storage assets: 40 million batteries on wheels, all connected to an increasingly intelligent charging infrastructure.

Clean energy sectors drove more than a third of China’s GDP growth in 2025. The “new three,” meaning EVs, batteries and solar panels, generated two-thirds of the value added across the entire clean energy sector.

Battery exports grew 41% year-on-year. These numbers have been reported widely, but almost exclusively through a trade-and-competition lens. What has been missed is the deeper infrastructure logic that the fleet represents.

Platform as much as product

Modern electric vehicles in China, whether built by BYD, Nio, Xpeng or dozens of other domestic manufacturers, carry substantial onboard processing capability. Their chips handle navigation, driver assistance, over-the-air software updates, and increasingly sophisticated AI functions.

For roughly 23 hours every day, that capability sits dormant. Zeng’s insight is that this dormant compute capacity, aggregated across tens of millions of vehicles simultaneously, constitutes a distributed AI processing layer that already exists, costs nothing additional to build and requires no new land, no new permits and no new centralized data centers to operate.

The technical mechanism that makes this vision coherent is vehicle-to-grid technology, or V2G, which allows parked EVs to discharge stored electricity back into the grid during peak demand. China has been building the regulatory and physical architecture for V2G since 2024.

By the end of 2027, the country plans to have 28 million charging facilities and 5,000 bidirectional stations operational. Chinese officials project that a fleet of 100 million EVs by 2030, if networked bidirectionally, could unlock one billion kilowatts of flexible energy capacity.

Zeng’s token factory vision extends that logic one critical step further: the vehicle gives back not only electricity but compute.

This is not the first time China has extracted multiple economic functions from the same fixed investment. Its high-speed rail network was built for passengers and became a logistics and regional integration tool.

Its renewable energy infrastructure was designed for energy security and became a globally dominant export industry. The pattern is consistent and deliberate: absorb the capital cost once, then extract value across multiple domains across time.

Capital follows the vision

What elevates Zeng’s Dalian remarks from visionary speculation to credible industrial strategy is the investment trail CATL has left in the preceding months.

In April 2026, CATL invested approximately $600 million for a 49% stake in Zhongheng Electric’s controlling shareholder, one of China’s primary providers of high-voltage direct-current power systems for AI data centers.

In May, a CATL-affiliated fund committed up to $942 million to acquire 38.1% of VNET Group, a major data center operator. In June, TechNode reported that CATL committed approximately $740 million to DeepSeek’s $7.4 billion first external funding round, making the battery giant one of the two largest outside investors in China’s most consequential AI laboratory.

These three transactions, totaling roughly $1.5 billion across two months, form a vertical chain: battery storage upstream, power conversion in the midstream, data center operations downstream and AI model development at the end.

CATL told Reuters in June 2026 that it expects energy storage to account for half of its global sales by 2030, up from roughly a quarter today. The company is already using AI to auto-bid for low-cost electricity from China’s grid, a capability that has reduced its own manufacturing energy costs by approximately 30%.

Taken together, these moves describe a company that spent 15 years mastering energy storage for transport and is now systematically applying the same supply chain discipline and capital patience to AI energy storage.

The broader implication

There is a temptation, particularly in Western policy circles, to interpret every Chinese industrial advance primarily through the lens of competition and strategic risk. That temptation, understandable as it is, tends to obscure the structural significance of what is actually being built.

What China is constructing, through its EV fleet, its V2G infrastructure, its sodium-ion battery development and now its AI data center investments, is a layered, multi-purpose energy and compute system in which the same physical assets serve transport, grid stability and digital intelligence simultaneously.

CATL’s Zeng captured the spirit of this at Summer Davos with characteristic brevity: “Less geopolitical calculation, more cooperation will bring a better future for all.”

That is a call for a particular kind of global engagement, one grounded in the recognition that the infrastructure being built in China will, one way or another, shape the digital economy that the entire world eventually inhabits.

Artificial cell manages a few rounds of cell division

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Artificial cell manages a few rounds of cell division

Understanding the origin of life requires addressing a collection of overlapping scientific questions. We’ve made a lot of progress toward explaining how simple chemicals present on an early Earth built the complex molecules used by life and how some of those chemicals built the first genetic/catalytic molecules. But we’re much further from understanding a key conundrum: How did membranes end up surrounding the first cells?

It’s relatively easy to make membranes spontaneously form in water, and they’ll enclose anything dissolved in that water, including nucleic acids. But the membranes then cut their interior off from everything else in the solution. Any interesting chemical reactions enclosed there would eat through the raw materials and grind to a halt.

Now, a lab at the University of Minnesota has announced that it has developed a simplified system in which a membrane encloses some genetic material but can continually import new materials supplied to it. The system also spontaneously divides, producing a few generations of “offspring” before things start failing. It’s still extremely dependent upon human intervention, but it might provide a new avenue to explore questions about the origin of life and what a truly minimalistic form of life might look like.

The genetics of SpudCells

The work was done by a team led by Kate Adamala, and it hasn’t yet undergone peer review (a draft manuscript has been posted online). It mostly involved putting together pieces of biological systems described or developed by other researchers and wrapping them in a membrane. Many of these pieces originated in viruses, which are often notable for having stripped-down versions of systems that are far more elaborate in cells.

For example, the system used to copy the DNA of what Adamala is calling a “SpudCell” is derived from a virus that infects bacteria called Phi29. A different research group had already demonstrated that DNA encoding the proteins this virus uses to copy its DNA can be placed inside a membrane, where it would replicate its own DNA. So the researchers adapted this to their own system, which spreads roughly 90,000 bases of DNA across seven separate circular DNA molecules.

One limitation of the SpudCell is that it has no way to ensure that, when the cells divide, each offspring receives copies of all seven of these molecules. Instead, the system simply makes a bunch of copies to increase the probability that some of them will end up in each of the offspring. It doesn’t entirely work; after five generations of divisions, the majority of the SpudCells are missing at least one of the seven molecules of its genome.

The system for copying parts of the genome into RNA for protein production comes from a virus called T7. This has become a workhouse of molecular biology—you can order up T7 RNA polymerase online and have it shipped to you on ice. In this case, the gene encoding T7 RNA polymerase was added to the SpudCell genome, and it was made by those artificial cells.

The last element needed here is the translation of RNAs into proteins. And here, the researchers simply purified the translation machinery and supplied it to the SpudCells. They relied on a system developed by a team at the University of Tokyo, which added a tag to every protein required for translation and purified them using the tags. The Minnesota team simply purified these proteins and fed them into the system.

Feed me!

That feeding was quite literal. For small, simple molecules, the researchers simply inserted a gene that encodes a pore protein into the SpudCell genome. This allowed small molecules and ions to diffuse into and out of the SpudCell. As long as the cells were placed in a solution with sufficient levels of these materials, the interior of the SpudCell would have decent concentrations of all of these.

But the complex of proteins needed to make more proteins is far too large to go through a small pore. So the researchers encased these proteins and other large materials in a different membrane and then fed those to the SpudCells. To get the two membranes—one from the SpudCell, one from its food—to interact, the researchers added a tag to the pore protein that they had already been using. They then added something that would interact with that tag to the food membrane. This allowed the two to interact long enough to fuse, spilling the food into the interior of the SpudCell and adding additional membrane material to it.

This “feeding” process allows the SpudCells to continue making new proteins even after they would have exhausted their initial supply of raw materials. The added membrane material also increased the SpudCell’s size, literally causing it to grow.

Normally, cell growth eventually results in cell division, splitting the membranes and their context between two new cells. But the SpudCells had no mechanism for achieving this. Initially, the researchers simply passed them through a wire grid and applied physical force to cause the membranes to split. But they eventually developed a system that could cause the pore proteins to clump by adding certain chemicals to the solution. That altered the membrane’s shape and eventually led to parts of it budding off. While this is a far more random process, it approximates cell division.

So in a limited, carefully engineered sense, these “cells” could feed, grow, and divide, driven by proteins encoded by their own genome. As noted above, though, that genome was only distributed into the next generation of cells at random, and pieces of it were progressively lost over each generation. As a result, no SpudCells were taken past five generations in this work.

What can you do with a SpudCell?

Those five generations were enough to show that natural selection could operate on SpudCells. The researchers found they could alter their genome to tweak the levels of the pore protein made by the SpudCells. Since that is essential for their feeding, higher levels led to more rapid growth, especially in conditions where they were supplied less of the food. After five generations, the frequency of these rapid feeders in the population had increased, showing that selection operated even under these highly artificial conditions.

It’s important to recognize that these conditions are very engineered and artificial. This is not a direct equivalent of the earliest cells, as it relies on a number of specialized, highly evolved proteins to work, along with conditions specially crafted by the humans running the show.

But it still could be useful as an analog. We don’t know whether life went through a critical stage similar to this, but the work can lead us to ask questions that help us think about it. For example, we might use SpudCells to start looking at simplified systems that could ensure that genetic material is evenly distributed among the offspring of cell division. Or what selection could lead to pore proteins that didn’t simply allow anything to pass into or out of a cell? Or any number of potentially informative questions.

There’s a truism that all models are wrong, but some are useful. And that seems to be the case here. We know this is not a good model of a primitive cell in the sense that it doesn’t reflect what the earliest cells on Earth looked like. But it still could be useful for asking questions about them.

The researchers have published a webpage with more technical details of their system if you want to learn more.

Massachusetts Set to Extend Statute of Limitations for Rape Cases With DNA Evidence

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Massachusetts Set to Extend Statute of Limitations for Rape Cases With DNA Evidence

Massachusetts’ deadline to prosecute rape cases will no longer be one of the strictest in the nation under a bill Gov. Maura Healey pledged to sign into law.

State law currently bars nearly all rape prosecutions involving cases with adult victims after 15 years, making it difficult to charge someone after that deadline even in cases where new evidence is likely to lead to a conviction. The new law would ensure that if DNA is matched to a suspect after that 15-year window, prosecutors could file charges indefinitely. 

Healey pushed to revise the prosecution deadline for rape as part of her annual budget proposal in January. The move came after WBUR and ProPublica found that as many as 47 other states allow more time to charge rapes or similar sexual assaults than Massachusetts. 

Many of those states extended their deadlines in recent decades as DNA technology helped solve old cases and as evidence mounted that police across the nation had failed to fully investigate rape cases.

Healey’s proposal survived the legislature’s monthslong budget process. She announced Wednesday that she’d sign the $63.4 billion budget and has until July 11 to approve it. It would go into effect as soon as it’s signed.

“Today, DNA evidence can provide new answers years later, and our laws should reflect that reality,” Healey said in a statement. “This change gives survivors another path to justice while helping law enforcement hold violent offenders accountable.”

Prosecutors must still file charges within the existing 15-year deadline if a match is made within that timeframe, as they were required to under the old law. The new law could open the door to prosecution for cases for which the statute of limitations has not yet passed. 

In Massachusetts, legislators have tried unsuccessfully to change the rape statute of limitations every session since 2011, WBUR found. Defense attorneys opposed those bills, saying a longer deadline risked violating the rights of the accused.

Read more

Rape survivors have worked with state Rep. Adam Scanlon, a Democrat, for the last five years to create a DNA exception, he said. They joined the effort because they were frustrated that they could no longer pursue justice after the deadline, even when new evidence emerged.  

 ”It gives them hope in the future to ensure that no one has to suffer the same indignities,” Scanlon said, adding, “This was a long process driven by survivors.” 

Some survivors whose cases were too old to be prosecuted pushed for the change. One of them was Louise, who was the focus of WBUR and ProPublica’s investigation. WBUR doesn’t identify victims of sexual assault without their permission and agreed to identify Louise only by her middle name.

In October 2005, she was raped and repeatedly stabbed by a man who gave her a ride in Boston, according to police and court records. Seventeen years later, a DNA match identified an area man as a suspect. 

DNA evidence also linked that suspect to another rape. Suffolk County prosecutors charged the man in both cases in 2022, but had to drop the cases because the statute of limitations had expired. He maintained his innocence. Had this law been enacted a few years ago, Louise could have seen the suspect in her case face trial.

“It really was devastating,” Louise said. “ I never fathomed that time lapsing would be an issue.” 

Louise testified before state legislators in support of the DNA exception after her interview with WBUR. She said she’s relieved it will become law.   

“It’s nice to have the government move in the right direction, which builds a sense of trust, a sense of safety — and justice,” Louise said.

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Saudi Arabia Warns AI Is Becoming a Counterterrorism Threat

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Saudi Arabia Warns AI Is Becoming a Counterterrorism Threat


Governments and technology companies face growing pressure to close safety gaps before extremist groups exploit artificial intelligence more effectively

Saudi Arabia and counterterrorism experts warned at the United Nations this week that terrorist groups are learning to exploit artificial intelligence for recruitment, propaganda, fundraising and attack planning faster than governments and technology companies are building safeguards.

Saudi Arabia’s permanent representative to the UN, Abdulaziz M. Alwasil, called for stronger international cooperation, expertise exchange and investment in capacity building to prevent terrorist groups from exploiting artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies. Speaking during a UN General Assembly session on strategic capacity-building responses to the misuse of AI and other emerging technologies by terrorist and violent extremist groups, which he co-chaired, Alwasil warned that terrorist groups are becoming more capable of using new technologies to recruit, spread extremist propaganda, raise funds and plan attacks.

Alwasil also pointed to Yemen, where he said capacity building is especially urgent to counter groups including the Houthis and al-Qaida, which have sought access to drones and other modern technologies.

The Saudi call came as Tech Against Terrorism released a new report, the Counter-Terrorism AI Benchmark, during UN Counter-Terrorism Week in New York. The report describes itself as the first systematic benchmark built specifically to test how artificial intelligence models respond when asked to assist terrorism and violent extremism.

The study tested 27 AI models, produced 2,339 graded outputs and covered 26 use cases across 13 threat pillars in four domains. The redacted version of the report replaced compound names and procedural details with general descriptions, while keeping the analytical pattern visible. Tech Against Terrorism said the research was self-funded, that it received no funding from any AI provider referenced in the report and that it had no conflicts of interest.

Across the models tested, around a third of responses provided “meaningful uplift” beyond what could easily be found through a normal web search. Full refusals accounted for 57% of responses, while 15% were classified as “hedged compliance,” meaning that the model opened with a refusal but still supplied content. The most serious failures came from open models whose safety training had been stripped out through a process known as abliteration. Two such models complied with 89% and 100% of requests.

Adam Hadley, executive director of Tech Against Terrorism, told The Media Line that the lack of a terrorism-specific AI benchmark was the reason the organization built one. He said many models tested with simple, single-shot questions provided meaningful assistance toward bomb-making or mass-casualty attack planning, calling the result “not acceptable.”

Hadley framed the issue not only as a failure of safety filters but as a deeper control problem for AI developers.

This is a control problem as much as a safety one

“This is a control problem as much as a safety one,” he said, warning that AI developers risk creating models they cannot control.

According to Tech Against Terrorism, the answer is not a ban on open models, but stronger intervention at the distribution and evaluation layers before harm occurs.

One of the report’s most concerning findings was that model guardrails could be weakened simply by changing the stated purpose of a request. Reframing an identical technical question as “research” without changing the technical content raised compliance from 17% to 42%. The report argues that this suggests some models are responding to surface-level framing rather than assessing the operational risk of the request itself.

Hadley said the results should be viewed as a lower bound rather than a full picture of the danger.

These are single-shot results

“These are single-shot results,” he said, noting that the research did not include attempts to evade safeguards or persist after refusal, and therefore represented a floor rather than a ceiling on the risk.

The benchmark did not test multi-turn conversations, adversarial prompting, non-English languages, or repeated attempts to bypass refusal mechanisms. Its findings measure the lowest-effort form of misuse: one direct request. The report describes this first release as a deliberately bounded pilot, designed to establish a comparable and repeatable baseline before future phases expand into more languages, multi-turn interactions, and complex adversarial testing.

Hadley also warned in the report’s foreword that the problem should not be seen as isolated to one company or one model. “The fragility of alignment” exposed by the findings, he said, is “a shared, transnational one.”

In Hadley’s view, the benchmark points to a broader imbalance in the AI race: companies are investing heavily in model capability while safety and control remain underdeveloped. He argued that reliable control over these systems is becoming one of the most urgent questions for governments and AI developers, particularly as terrorist actors, lone attackers and hostile networks learn how to exploit publicly available tools.

For Kiria Borak, a security analyst focused on West Africa and the Sahel, the concern is not only theoretical. She told The Media Line that extremist use of AI should be understood as part of a wider information ecosystem, not only through the lens of drones or battlefield technology.

Borak acknowledged that AI-guided targeting systems in drones are already being tested and said this raises concerns both for terrorist use and for counterterrorism efforts. But she said her larger concern is the rapid growth of generative AI propaganda associated with groups such as ISIS and al-Qaida.

She described AI as a force multiplier for extremist communication. The danger, she said, is not only that more material can be produced, but that recommendation algorithms can amplify it once users begin interacting with it.

“There’s more content,” Borak said, “and in terms of that content reaching people—because of the ways in which a lot of platforms are using AI-generated [content] like recommendation algorithms—that’s just really amplifying extremist content,” she added, explaining that when content gets higher user engagement, it shows up in more people’s feeds.

Borak said her research on Facebook showed how quickly extremist-linked material could flood a user’s feed once the algorithm detected interest.

“I found that if you start this content, you get more and more of it. And that, for me, is pretty concerning. I’m doing this from a research perspective, but I look at a couple of IS or al-Qaida posts, and suddenly my Facebook feed is full of them,” she said.

The phenomenon, she added, is not limited to highly connected regions or technologically advanced environments. Borak said AI-generated extremist content is already visible in West Africa, where she focuses much of her research.

“I think it’s a global phenomenon. My expertise in particular is West Africa. And that’s a space in which I think people assume that there is less AI-generated content, and that is not true,” she said. “There is a huge amount of AI-generated recruitment content, and there’s quite a bit of AI-generated propaganda.”

For Borak, the spread of AI-generated content in places such as Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger is a warning sign because it shows that the technology has already reached areas often assumed to be less integrated into the digital economy.

“If you’re in a place with low internet penetration, and you’re [seeing] that level of proliferation of AI content, it gives you a sense of the degree to which it has spread, and the degree to which it’s being used by groups,” she said.

The issue is compounded by uneven public awareness. Borak said audiences in Europe or the United States may have more exposure to debates over AI-generated content and misinformation, while communities in more fragile information environments may be less equipped to identify manipulated material.

“And I think it’s also concerning, because places like the US or Europe, there’s more of an understanding of AI, and there’s more efforts to educate people about AI-generated content … . That’s so much less the case in a lot of the places where this content is being pushed out,” she said.

The Tech Against Terrorism report points to a similar gap in current safety testing. It says general AI safety benchmarks often measure toxicity, bias, factuality or broad harmfulness, but do not treat terrorism and violent-extremist misuse as a distinct category. Its framework maps terrorist misuse into more than 150 use cases across direct violence and weapons, influence and psychological impact, operational enablement and autonomous escalation.

Saudi Arabia has positioned the misuse of AI and emerging technologies not only as a global counterterrorism issue but also as a regional security concern. For Gulf states, the threat is far from abstract: drones, encrypted communications, propaganda networks and transnational terrorism financing have already shaped conflicts from Yemen to the Sahel.

Borak said some observers have framed Saudi Arabia’s engagement on AI and extremism as new, but she argued that the Kingdom has been examining the issue for years and has previously funded research on the topic.

Beyond propaganda, Borak said the more dangerous evolution may come from the pairing of recruitment with increasingly accessible operational information.

“I think the drone concern is a real one. But my concern is the fact that the information on how to carry out attacks is so much more accessible. And their recruitment is so much more effective and efficient. And that combination is pretty concerning,” she said.

Her warning mirrors one of the benchmark’s central conclusions: the risk is not limited to models explicitly agreeing to harmful requests. In some cases, a refusal may still reveal useful fragments. In others, a model may comply when the same request is framed as research. The report argues that “a refusal rate is not a safety rating,” because what matters is the severity of the assistance provided, not only whether a model formally declines.

Borak also pointed to the weakening of content moderation as a broader structural risk.

My concern is the lack of willingness to moderate content and address the wide proliferation of this content, paired with the fact that content can be produced so much faster and more widely

“My concern is the lack of willingness to moderate content and address the wide proliferation of this content, paired with the fact that content can be produced so much faster and more widely,” she said. “It’s not painting a particularly hopeful picture.”

The debate is politically difficult. Technology companies are racing to deploy increasingly capable models. Governments are still trying to define where regulation should begin. Open models offer real benefits for research, transparency and sovereignty, but the Tech Against Terrorism report warns that once an open-weight model has been stripped of its safeguards and downloaded, it cannot be recalled.

For Hadley, the answer is not a blanket ban on open models, but a more precise intervention before models reach the public domain. Tech Against Terrorism recommends treating terrorist and violent-extremist misuse as a distinct safety category, testing models for changes in stated intent, extending refusal training beyond the most recognizable threats, and treating the circulation of de-restricted or abliterated models as a national-security concern.

Borak said she is less concerned about AI-targeting drones than about AI-generated recruitment content and AI systems that could tailor operational information to a user’s circumstances.

“Then the mechanisms through which attacks could be carried out are easier because there are these AI systems that will provide information exactly tailored to what you want to do and what you need and the tools you possess,” she said.

For now, the UN discussion, Saudi Arabia’s call for global cooperation and Tech Against Terrorism’s benchmark all point to the same unresolved question: whether governments and technology companies can build safeguards quickly enough before extremist actors learn to exploit the weakest parts of the system faster than the system can correct itself.

China’s housing market free-falls as buyers wait for floor prices

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China’s housing market free-falls as buyers wait for floor prices

China’s home prices continued to fall in the first half of 2026 as buyers held back, betting that values would drop farther. With sales volumes and prices both in decline, analysts see little sign of a near-term recovery.

Data released on Wednesday by the China Index Academy showed that secondary-market home prices across 100 major Chinese cities fell 0.42% month-on-month in June, to an average of 12,639 yuan (US$1,750) per square meter. Of those cities, 88 recorded declines while only 12 saw gains.

The secondary market slide was broad-based across city tiers. In June, first-tier city secondary home prices fell 6.95% year-on-year. Second-tier cities fared worse, dropping 8.21% on the year, while smaller third- and fourth-tier cities fell 7.48% year-on-year.

Among the 10 largest cities, Nanjing and Wuhan posted the steepest year-on-year declines in June, with secondary market prices dropping 11.45% and 10.89%, respectively. Beijing, Tianjin, Guangzhou and Chongqing all saw falls of between 8% and 10%. Hangzhou, Shanghai, Chengdu and Shenzhen recorded year-on-year declines of between 5% and 8% in June. Shenzhen performed best among the ten cities, with a 5.27% drop compared with a year earlier.

Chinese commentators widely read the first-half data as confirmation that the downward trend in home prices has yet to run its course, with further declines expected through the remainder of 2026.  

A Henan-based columnist writing under the pen name Qingjin Wenwang describes how the mood among prospective buyers had visibly shifted.

“A friend of mine started looking for a home to buy ahead of marriage in late 2025. Back then, sellers were confident and showed little willingness to negotiate,” he says. “By June 2026, when he returned to the same district to look at similar properties, sellers had largely softened their tone and kept asking him when he could sign a deal.”

The experience left his friend with a growing fear that prices could fall farther even after he commits to a purchase, he says.

Citing figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) last month, he outlines four reasons why a genuine recovery remains out of reach:

  • Prices have not stabilized. In May, only 16 of 70 major cities saw new-home prices rise month on month and just 10 recorded secondary-market gains. Third-tier cities saw declines accelerate.
  • Buyers are still retreating. New housing sales fell 10.8% year on year by floor area and 13.5% by value in the first five months of 2026. Many households are deferring purchases indefinitely.
  • Developers are pulling back. Real estate investment dropped 16.2% year-on-year in January-May, new construction starts fell 22.6% and completions declined 23.4%.
  • Secondary market confidence has eroded. Price anchors in many cities have quietly shifted lower – and, once buyer psychology turns cautious, it is slow to reverse.

The NBS said on June 16 that only four of 70 cities recorded a year-on-year increase in new home prices in the first five months of 2026. In the secondary market, no city saw prices rise over the same period, with most cities recording year-on-year declines of between 5% and 8%.

“Since 2021, China’s property market has undergone a dramatic transformation. New home sales peaked at 1.79 billion square meters that year and have fallen every year since, dropping below one billion square meters in 2025,” a Guangdong-based property columnist says in an article published on Wednesday. “In many cities, prices have fallen more than 40% from their peak, and some have dropped more than 50%. Such a steep decline in such a short period is by any measure severe.”

He points to three structural reasons behind the downturn:

  • China’s population entered negative growth in 2022 and has continued to shrink. Experience elsewhere shows population decline is very hard to reverse, and China is likely to remain in negative growth for the foreseeable future.
  • The era of rapid urbanization that once drove explosive housing demand is largely over. Millions of people flocking to cities in the past decades fueled a surge in home prices, but that wave has run its course.
  • Overall housing supply is no longer scarce. After years of construction, China has enough homes overall, except for tight supply in major cities and prime areas.

Back to 2006

In late April, a wave of articles by Chinese commentators drew wide attention online, arguing that four years of declines had pushed home prices back to levels last seen around 2006, once inflation and currency depreciation were stripped out. The articles cited data compiled by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and sparked a heated debate on Chinese social media about the true state of the property market.

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis used BIS figures to illustrate China’s home prices relative to a 2010 baseline index of 100.

The first chart, tracking nominal residential property prices, showed China’s home price index climbing from 78 in 2006 to a peak of 145.9 in 2021, before sliding back to 114 in the first quarter of 2026.

Nominal residential property prices in China in 2005-2026 Graph: The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Bank for International Settlements

The second chart adjusts for inflation and currency depreciation. On that measure, the index rose from 88.5 in 2006 to 113 in 2021, then fell to 85.1 in the first quarter of 2026, putting real home prices below their level two decades ago.

Real residential property prices in China in 2005-2026 Graph: The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Bank for International Settlements

The adjustment is analogous to the difference between nominal and real gross domestic product (GDP) growth, where the latter strips out the effects of inflation or deflation to reflect actual economic expansion.

A Jiangsu-based columnist writing under the pen name Duanwei Liwen says the data should not be applied uniformly nationwide.

“Home prices in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen are still absurdly high. I see no sign their home prices have returned to any historical low,” she says. “You cannot use one national figure to explain the situation in every Chinese city.”

She says first-tier cities have proven more resilient, while the far greater pressure is in third- and fourth-tier cities, where prices have fallen back to levels of a decade ago or lower. She adds that the real value of the BIS-based index lies in its role as a warning signal to those who rush into the market, betting on a bottom.

“Over the past few years, many people have already fallen into this trap,” she says. “They see prices pull back and assume the floor has been reached, or they see policy ease slightly and conclude a rebound is coming. Then prices keep falling, and they cannot sell their properties.”

A writer at Sina Finance, a Beijing-based news website, pushes back against the inflation-adjusted framing, arguing that nominal prices are more meaningful for most people, since household incomes and daily expenses are not inflation-adjusted. Based on the BIS nominal home price index, he says, it is undeniable that China’s home prices in 2026 have returned to 2016 levels.

He says any credible prediction of where prices are headed in the coming years must weigh a range of factors, including demographic trends, rental yields, income distribution and the balance between supply and demand.

Read: China’s population falls for fourth year amid economic woes

Follow Jeff Pao on Twitter at @jeffpao3

Israel tightens solitary confinement of jailed Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, his office says

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Israel tightens solitary confinement of jailed Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, his office says

Israeli prison authorities have recently tightened the solitary confinement conditions of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti at Ganot Prison, where he has been held in isolation since November 2023, his office said Thursday, Anadolu reports.

According to the statement, Barghouti has been held in Israeli prisons since 2002 after years of pursuit, and has spent long periods in solitary confinement alongside other prominent Palestinian prisoners.

His office said Israeli authorities have repeatedly transferred Barghouti between solitary confinement wings in several prisons, describing the measures as “systematic arbitrary practices” against the Fatah leader since the start of Israel’s war on Gaza in October 2023.

The statement added that Israeli prison authorities had further tightened restrictions on his confinement.

According to Palestinian and Israeli rights reports, harsher solitary confinement measures can include isolation from other detainees, repeated transfers between prisons and wings, restrictions on communication with lawyers and family members, and reduced access to medical care and basic necessities.

Anadolu could not independently verify whether all these measures are specifically being applied to Barghouti at Ganot Prison.

Meanwhile, Israel Army Radio reported Tuesday that prison authorities had imposed an additional two weeks of solitary confinement on Barghouti as punishment stemming from a disciplinary measure issued last week.

The broadcaster added that Barghouti’s lawyer filed an appeal with Israeli courts after being unable to meet him in recent weeks, and that the earliest prison authorities offered for a visit was September.

READ: Israel places detained Gaza hospital director Dr Hussam Abu Safiya in solitary confinement

On Feb. 18, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir raided Barghouti’s prison cell and threatened to kill him, according to video footage circulated by Israeli media.

Barghouti, a member of Fatah’s Central Committee and one of the movement’s most prominent leaders, was arrested by Israel in April 2002 and is serving five life sentences after being convicted of murder and attempted murder. He remains widely popular among Palestinians.

Despite the release of thousands of Palestinian prisoners in exchange deals, most recently under a Gaza ceasefire agreement that took effect last Oct. 10, Israel has refused to release Barghouti and several other high-profile Palestinian detainees.

Violations against Palestinian prisoners have escalated alongside Israel’s war on Gaza since Oct. 2023.​​​​​​​

More than 9,400 Palestinian prisoners, including women and children, are currently held in Israeli prisons, where they face torture, starvation, and medical neglect, according to Palestinian and Israeli rights groups.

READ: Marwan Barghouti subjected to “brutal” assaults in Israeli jail

Plex debuts 5-year membership pass for $250

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Plex debuts 5-year membership pass for $250

When Plex launched in 2012, it sold lifetime access to its media server software for $75. In 2014, Plex raised the price to be more sustainable for the company, it said, and for years, Lifetime Plex Passes cost $120. Even the pricier $250 rate, which Plex offered from March 2025 until yesterday, was a steal compared to what $250 buys you at Plex now: a five-year subscription.

As first spotted by The Desk, Plex yesterday launched the five-year Plex Pass. It comes alongside Lifetime Pass prices increasing to $750 yesterday, a change that Plex announced in May and, in a blog post update this week, said: “reflects the real, ongoing value of the software and our commitment to building, improving, and supporting Plex for years to come.”

The stark change in what $250 can get you at Plex is indicative of the company’s financial goals. Plex hasn’t yet announced profitability and has raised $87.6 million over nine rounds of funding, per CB Insights. The company is looking to squeeze more money out of its users and price its media server business higher.

The higher Lifetime Pass pricing and new five-year pass also appear aimed at pushing users toward subscriptions. More recurring revenue can help Plex extract greater value from its customers over their lifetimes, make cash flow more predictable, please investors, help fund new features, and reduce Plex’s dependence on the fickle advertising market.

In May, Plex said it had “considered eliminating the Lifetime Plex Pass in the past, given that recurring subscriptions help us sustain long-term development.” One can’t help but wonder if this five-year pass could someday be the longest-term pass available to Plex’s media server customers.

The dramatic pricing shift is also an effect of Plex’s evolution from its original media server pitch. Today, Plex also sells licensed movie rentals and operates hundreds of free, ad-supported streaming TV channels. It has been rolling out more social features over the past few years and has been monetizing user data, as Plex CEO Keith Valory told TechCrunch in 2024. Plex even dipped a toe into gaming (and quickly removed it from the competitive waters).

The Silicon Valley-headquartered firm’s newer interests and prohibitively expensive long-term pricing for its legacy media server business illustrate the company that Plex thinks it needs to be to survive and make money. That business isn’t one that favors letting you pay one time to use media server capabilities forever. It’s not necessarily a media server-first business, either.

Ad revenue has been a significant driver of revenue growth for Plex in recent years. In 2023, Plex said that since 2022, more people had used its online streaming service than its media server capabilities. Jason Chapnik, CEO at Intercap, one of Plex’s lead investors, described the type of company Plex is becoming in a 2021 chat with TechCrunch:

Content providers, creators, and consumers are all paying the price for the explosion of so many streaming media services, and the industry needs a trusted way for the experience to be as enjoyable as possible. Plex has always been at the forefront of solving new media challenges, and we believe they are primed to solve this problem—they are the cable company of the future.

Lithuania agrees to remove constitutional ban on nuclear weapons

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Lithuania agrees to remove constitutional ban on nuclear weapons


Lithuania’s President Gitanas Nauseda ‌said on Thursday that parliamentary parties had ​agreed on a ​plan to remove a ⁠constitutional provision prohibiting nuclear ​weapons on Lithuanian ​soil.

“The geopolitical situation is getting worse. Our constitution was ​written when geopolitical ​circumstances were totally different,” he ‌said.

Nauseda ⁠said there were no immediate plans to store nuclear weapons in ​Lithuania, ​but ⁠that removing the provision would ensure ​the country was ​not ⁠constrained if security circumstances changed in the ⁠future.

As the United States turns 250 there is bitter rivalry over who gets to tell the country’s story

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as-the-united-states-turns-250-there-is-bitter-rivalry-over-who-gets-to-tell-the-country’s-story
As the United States turns 250 there is bitter rivalry over who gets to tell the country’s story

The 250th anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence has become yet another flashpoint in a politically divided America. There are even two different government organisations overseeing the celebrations.

The United States Semiquincentennial Commission was set up by the US Congress in 2016 as a bipartisan body to oversee the semiquincentennial celebration and signed into law by Barack Obama. They branded the celebration as America250 and set to work to plan the national jamboree.

Freedom 250, meanwhile, was set up by the Trump administration under the supervision of the White House Task Force on Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday. Federal funds were diverted from the congressional commission towards the events planned by the Trump-aligned celebration.

But more important than the squabbles over who owns the celebrations, the boycotts of the Great American State Fair or the controversies surrounding celebratory monuments such as the 250-foot triumphal arch, dubbed by its critics the “Arc de Trump”, are the battles being fought over whose interpretation of history will be presented as the nation looks back over its first 250 years.

The commemorative celebrations are being run through the National Park Service, part of the Department of the Interior. One of its most important monuments, the President’s House memorial in Philadelphia – where the first two presidents, George Washington and John Adams, lived and worked when the city served as America’s capital in the 1790s – has been at the centre of a controversy over competing interpretations of history.

This goes back to the early weeks of Trump’s second term. In March 2025 he issued executive order 14253: Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History. The order requires the Department of the Interior to ensure that the educational materials in its jurisdiction – including the national parks – do not “inappropriately disparage Americans past or living (including persons living in colonial times), and instead focus on the greatness of the achievements and progress of the American people”.

It also ordered the restoration of sites removed or changed since 2020, when Confederate monuments had been removed in response to the Black Lives Matter movement. Finally, it charged vice president J.D. Vance with implementing the same policies at the Smithsonian Museum.

In November 2025 an administration official, Jeffrey Anderson, published an essay alleging that “woke orthodoxy” had hijacked America’s story. This was circulated to members of the Trump administration. The President’s House, he wrote, focused too much on the evils of slavery. There was not enough information about the achievements of the men who lived and worked there.

Working under the Secretary of State for the Interior’s order implementing the president’s executive order, the national park service began the removal of historical panels in places of national significance early in 2026. This included the President’s House memorial in Philadelphia.

Washington had infamously brought his slaves with him to the house and had moved them every six months to avoid Pennsylvania’s emancipation laws. The President’s House exhibit had told this story, something that Anderson’s essay had particularly objected to. This and other explanations of US history deemed to “inappropriately disparage Americans past” were removed.

Legal battle

The City of Philadelphia, which had been instrumental in the development of the President’s House site, took the administration to court over the decision. The administration’s lawyers argued that: “Ultimately, the government gets to choose the message it wants to convey.”

Stock photograph with a replica of the Declaration of Independence with a quill and a candle.

What the fuss is about: America is celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Dan Thornberg/Shutterstock

Presiding judge, Cynthia M. Rufe, disagreed. In a decision comparing the administration’s actions to the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s novel 1984, Rufe held that the US government does not have the power to “dissemble and disassemble historical truths when it has some domain over historical facts”. She ordered the removals stopped and anything removed under the order to be replaced.

On June 18, her decision was unanimously overturned by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. In a decision written by prominent conservative judge, Thomas M. Hardiman, the court held that the city had no “statutory, property, or contractual rights that empower it to curate the exhibits in the President’s House”. His judgment praised the historical context provided by the replacement panels.

Activists and government officials disagree with Judge Hardiman, and so do Philadelphia’s tour guides. At the open-air site, volunteers share copies and read aloud from the removed intepretative panels.

The legal battle to oppose Trump’s executive order is not over. A coalition of interest groups sued the Department of the Interior, challenging the lawfulness of the removal of hundreds of exhibits and markers across the US, including the President’s House.

Less than a week before Philadelphia lost on appeal, federal judge Angel Kelley found that the government was seeking “to rewrite the Nation’s history with a white-out pen”. She ordered the government to stop removing the signs, exhibits and artefacts and return those that had already had been removed by July 3. In her view, the government had rushed to remove the items in time for July 4 and “it is equally important that our shared history be honestly told and fully restored by the 250th Anniversary”.

That order has now been paused by the First Circuit Court of Appeals until the full case can be heard. But the First Circuit is not bound by the decision in the Philadelphia case and is dominated by Democratic appointees. Split decisions by the federal circuit courts can lead the US Supreme Court to take up a case on appeal. Ultimately it might fall to America’s top court to decide whether the order to remove and replace exhibits is lawful.

The executive order states that museums “should be places where individuals go to learn – not to be subjected to ideological indoctrination or divisive narratives that distort our shared history”. Many critics believe that is exactly what the executive order does.

Now – as with so many of the contested decisions taken during the second Trump administration – it will be down to the courts. At stake, as the US prepares to commemorate and celebrate its 250th anniversary, is the nature of America’s story about itself.

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