A few minutes after the sun retreated behind the Olympic Mountains, we spotted our first satellite. It moved across the sky with an eerie persistence, like a car on cruise control.
“That’s low Earth orbit. That’s pretty standard speed,” Meredith Rawls, an astronomer at the University of Washington and my stargazing guide for the night, tells me.
The primal human experience of gazing into a dark, unblemished night sky — something we’ve been doing for at least 32,000 years, since our ancestors carved Orion onto a mammoth tusk — is vanishing. That nocturnal vista is becoming a dense, industrial field of orbiting debris.
“I tell people, go to a dark site and see the sky now, while it’s like this,” Rawls says, gesturing to the constellations above us. She lets out a laugh. “It’s like, oh my God, what are we doing?”
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The scale is hard to overstate. At the turn of the century, there were just over 700 active satellites in space. Now, with plans for hundreds of thousands more satellites — going from 15,000 today to half a million by 2040 — the new space race is not just a visual nuisance, it’s a toxic threat to our existence.
When you look up at the night sky and wonder why the stars are moving, it’s not because you’re seeing a UFO. You’re likely looking at a satellite, and two out of every three belong to Elon Musk’s Starlink.
Starlink is capable of beaming an internet connection to a dish the size of a pizza box, virtually anywhere in the world. The company’s on track for the largest initial public offering in history, largely on the back of all those satellites cruising through the skies.
When Starlink launched its first satellite in 2019, it kicked off a gold rush in space. Amazon plans to send up 60,000 of its own satellites, Chinese companies nearly 60,000 more. Everyone across the globe, it seems, wants a piece of the sky. Rwanda alone applied for 337,320 satellites. In January, Starlink filed for a million orbital AI data centers.
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Spacefaring countries are technically bound by the United Nations’ Outer Space Treaty of 1967, but commercial enterprises are another story. And with space increasingly seen as a new theater of war, many nation-states are racing to launch their own mega-constellations.
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The ripple effects are as far-reaching as they are uncertain.
Satellites are expected to disrupt the migratory patterns of birds, dung beetles and seals, which use the stars to navigate.
Many tons of aluminum and lithium aerosols are added to the atmosphere when satellites reach the end of their lives and burn up, eating away at the ozone layer and potentially accelerating climate change.
And, ironically, they’re also threatening to halt space exploration in its tracks, as thousands of satellites zooming at 17,000 miles per hour push us toward a chain reaction known as the Kessler syndrome, an apocalyptic feedback loop in which one collision could create thousands of pieces of debris that would then lead to more collisions.
“You cannot remove all these billions of small fragments from orbit. This will basically limit our access to space forever,” says Hanno Rein, an astrophysicist at the University of Toronto. “This is not going to go away. These small fragments will not necessarily deorbit quickly. They will stay there and make space inaccessible for future generations.”
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As I part ways with Rawls, she seems cautiously pleased with how few satellites we saw.
“A real takeaway from our observing session is that there are not yet an overwhelming number of bright satellites,” she says. “I hope you enjoyed your relatively pristine night sky experience.”
I get the feeling that I’m being told to enjoy it while it lasts.
15,000 satellites: How we got here
The Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, the world’s first satellite in 1957. It would take another 53 years before we passed 1,000 active satellites. Just 16 years after that, we passed 15,000.
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Almost all of that growth is due to one company. When SpaceX launched its first batch of Starlink satellites in May 2019, there were only around 2,000 active satellites. It currently has more than 10,000 in orbit; the next closest operator is OneWeb, with 650. An average of 11 satellites have been launched every day in 2026, and with each one, the risk of collisions that generate dangerous space debris increases.
The causes for the prodigious satellite rise are complicated, but if I had to point to a single moment, I’d choose Dec. 22, 2015, the day that SpaceX landed its reusable Falcon 9 rocket for the first time.
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Before the Falcon 9, space was mostly the domain of governments, which launched bus-sized satellites for GPS and weather forecasting. Satellite internet had been around since 2003, but those earlier versions lived in geostationary orbit, around 22,000 miles above the Earth’s surface. That high altitude allowed a single satellite to cover a broader area on the ground, but slow speeds and high latency made it a last resort for most people.
Launching satellites into space is expensive. At the time the Falcon 9 first landed, Musk said it cost around $600 million to build, and another $200,000 in fuel costs to launch. Unlike all previous rocket boosters, the Falcon 9’s can be reused more than 10 times, and it doesn’t require much maintenance in between flights. That brought the launch costs down to $2,500 per kilogram, compared to $12,600 for SpaceX’s first rocket. Seemingly overnight, the economics of satellite launches became a lot more lucrative.
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But there was a reason satellite operators had been sticking to the geostationary orbit.
“The closer you come to the Earth, the more satellites you need,” says Barry Evans, a professor of satellite communications at the University of Surrey.
Because SpaceX could reuse the Falcon 9, it was able to make use of low Earth orbit at roughly 342 miles above the ground.
Data has to travel about 60 times farther to reach GEO satellites. Starlink’s lower elevation allows it to deliver a faster connection with lower latency, but it also requires hundreds or thousands of satellites to achieve global coverage. GEO satellites can do it with just a few, though Starlink still doesn’t meet the Federal Communications Commission’s standard for minimum broadband speeds.
Starlink didn’t actually become anyone’s internet provider until 2021. By then, dozens of other companies and countries had joined the race to LEO. Amazon Leo (formerly Project Kuiper) got FCC approval for 3,236 satellites in 2020, China’s Guowang started in 2022 with a planned 13,000 satellites and OneWeb launched the first of its now complete 650-satellite constellation in 2023. So far, Amazon Leo has sent up 241 satellites and expects to start offering service in mid-2026; Guowang has 168 operational satellites in orbit.
“There’s a humongous amount of money going into these satellites,” says Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist who tracks satellite launches.
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One analysis published in Science found that, between 2017 and 2022, countries collectively filed for over 1 million satellites across more than 300 separate systems.
Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft plan to spend $630 billion on Earth-bound data centers and AI chips in 2026 alone. But most people don’t want them — or their enormous water and electricity appetites — in their towns. One study found that electricity rates could rise 8% on average in the US through 2030 due to increased demand from data centers, along with cryptocurrency generation.
Moving them to space would solve the “not in my backyard” problem, and it would theoretically negate their massive water and energy consumption on Earth. As Musk put it recently, “Space has the advantage that it’s always sunny.”
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SpaceX hasn’t received the green light yet for its million data centers, but FCC Chair Brendan Carr publicly voiced his approval. There’s currently no timeline for the plan, and SpaceX did not respond to my request for comment, but Musk said on a podcast in January that “in 36 months, probably closer to 30 months, the most economically compelling place to put AI will be space.”
I was met with a lot of raised eyebrows when I asked satellite experts about SpaceX’s plan for 1 million data centers.
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“I don’t really think they’re going to do a million anyway. I think it’s going to be more at the 100,000 level. But I’m still very worried about 100,000 and whether that’s sustainable,” says McDowell. “Yes, technically, we can put them up there. But do we really want to?”
These data center satellites will be much larger than the Starlink satellites that beam internet connections back and forth from Earth. Recent comments from Musk indicate they’ll be around 560 feet long — more than five times the size of the most common Starlink satellites in the sky currently.
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“We have a couple trends happening at the same time that are concerning. Satellites are starting to get big again, and we’re getting more of them,” says Darren McKnight, senior technical fellow at LeoLabs, a company that tracks objects in orbit.
Tim Farrar, a satellite industry consultant, described the million data centers proposal as the latest in a long line of use cases SpaceX has floated for its Starship rocket, which is still in its prototype phase, from delivering military cargo to international travel via rocket. The Starship is roughly four times bigger than the Falcon 9 and capable of carrying as much as 150 tons to low Earth orbit, but in testing it has exploded on launch roughly half the time.
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“To justify making thousands of Starships when they’re reusable, you need to launch them very, very frequently,” says Farrar. “He’s now found this very fortunate confluence of AI demand and issues associated with permitting on the ground.”
‘The new theater of defense’
In mid-2025, Musk called Starlink “the backbone of the Ukrainian army.”
Musk was urging an end to the war with Russia, and he wasn’t wrong that Starlink had been instrumental in Ukraine’s military operations. By that point, the Ukrainian army had been using Starlink for more than three years to fly drones, course-correct artillery fire and help troops communicate.
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It was an early indicator that Starlink had grown beyond its mission of providing internet connections to rural areas. It was now one of the most coveted tools in a modern military’s arsenal.
Starlink’s involvement in wars on Earth is just the beginning. It’s going to become a military target in space, as will satellites used for GPS, reconnaissance and missile warnings.
“Space has become a new theater of defense,” says Joanna Darlington, chief communications officer at Eutelsat, the company that owns OneWeb. “You start getting terrestrial infrastructure destroyed, or submarine cables cut, or satellites jammed by your enemies. The only quick fix for that is satellite today.”
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Musk’s involvement was unusually hands-on for an executive at a private company. In mid-2022, the SpaceX CEO denied Ukraine’s request to activate Starlink in Russian-occupied Crimea, citing concerns about escalation. Russia has also reportedly used smuggled Starlink terminals to extend the range of its drone strikes. Musk said in a Jan. 31 post that SpaceX had stopped the use of unauthorized Starlink by Russia.
Soon after, Russia reportedly began working on a missile system capable of hitting Starlink satellites in orbit and creating orbital clouds of debris that would disable multiple satellites at once.
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“They become legitimate targets because of the geopolitical influence they have,” says Hugh Lewis, a professor of astronautics at the University of Birmingham. “It’s no longer just about providing someone in their apartment fast internet.”
It already tested one such weapon in 2021, when it intentionally destroyed one of its own defunct satellites. That event alone created more than 1,500 pieces of debris larger than a softball and likely hundreds of thousands of smaller pieces, forcing astronauts in the nearby International Space Station to shelter in capsules.
And Chinese anti-satellite technology has advanced so far that it can now threaten any US satellite in low Earth orbit, and likely also those in medium Earth orbit and geostationary orbit, one report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies determined.
What scientists are concerned about
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The causes fueling the satellite space race are many and diverse, and so are the effects. Scientists have voiced concerns about a number of unintended consequences that could spring from sending so much metal into orbit.
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“We have concerns about the atmosphere, we have concerns about space traffic management. We have concerns about astronomy and concerns about radio interference,” McDowell says. “All of these things become significantly worse at 100,000 and really, seriously problematic.”
Some of them we’re already seeing, and some can only be calculated in a lab and projected into the future.
Earth’s atmosphere as a space dump
Space debris is nothing new, and Russia isn’t the only country that’s been turning low Earth orbit into a garbage dump.
The US destroyed a failing reconnaissance satellite of its own in 2008, and India followed suit in 2019, but those tests produced far fewer — and long-lasting — pieces of debris than Russia’s 2021 test that put ISS astronauts in jeopardy.
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But when I talk to astronomers who spend a lot of time thinking about space debris, it’s clear that one event haunts them more than the others.
In 2007, China blew up a weather satellite, creating the largest debris cloud in history. Overnight, 3,533 pieces of softball-or-larger pieces of metal were added to low Earth orbit, and an estimated 150,000 smaller objects. Before the test, there were fewer than 8,000 tracked objects in LEO altogether.
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“That one single test increased orbital debris by one third. And that’s still up there,” says Sven Bilen, an engineering professor at Penn State University.
The Secure World Foundation estimates that 2,351 pieces of debris from that single day in 2007 are still in orbit. The Chinese satellite was in orbit 537 miles (865 kilometers) above Earth when it was blown up, compared to the roughly 310 miles (500 kilometers) at which most Starlink satellites operate. That higher altitude means the debris would take longer to be pulled into the Earth’s atmosphere, where it would burn up.
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“It’s an exponentially varying atmosphere. By the time you get to 750 kilometers, it’s up there for decades to centuries,” says McKnight. “At 450, 500 kilometers, you’re talking weeks to months.”
It’s worth acknowledging here that space is huge, and 25,000 softball-sized objects zooming hundreds or thousands of miles above our heads doesn’t seem like such a big deal. The problem comes when those objects start occupying the same space as the 15,000 active satellites in orbit.
With space debris moving about 10 times faster than a bullet, even a softball-sized object hitting a satellite would be devastating. That impact would create many more softballs, which could take out even more satellites. This apocalyptic feedback loop is called the Kessler Syndrome, and the scientists I spoke to agree that it’s just a matter of when, not if, it happens.
“We don’t know where we are on that curve, but at some point, every piece of hardware that you put up there is going to be more likely than not to generate additional debris,” Bilen says. “It becomes a runaway phenomenon.”
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“If we keep doing what we are doing right now, which is almost nothing, it’s very likely,” Bilen adds. “I don’t know when, but it’s very likely.”
Almost every astrophysicist I spoke with mentioned the 2013 movie Gravity, which famously dramatized a Kessler syndrome-like scenario, depicting astronauts forced to abandon their space shuttle as a debris cloud swarms them. They emphasized that it won’t manifest as a single catastrophic moment like that, but will instead take place over years, as space slowly becomes deadly for astronauts and satellites alike.
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“We’re boiling the frog. It’s increasing slowly, and all of a sudden we’ll get to a point and go, ‘Wow, that’s really bad,’” says McKnight. “There are indicators that we’re getting closer, indicators that the timeline is shrinking.”
Satellites maneuver to avoid collisions
Despite some close calls, satellites have so far been exceptionally nimble at avoiding space debris.
When Starlink first launched in 2019, it made a “collision avoidance” maneuver if the probability of impact was greater than 1 in 100,000 — the same number that NASA uses for human spaceflight. Starlink has since moved that number to a more conservative 3 in 10 million.
But even with that more conservative threshold, its satellites still made about 300,000 maneuvers last year alone — an increase from around 200,000 in 2024. Depending on who you ask, that number is evidence of Starlink’s spotless safety record or an unsustainably high number of moving satellites.
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If Starlink achieved its goal of 1 million orbital data centers, that would add up to 272 million maneuvers a year, or nine every second, according to Hugh Lewis, the astronautics professor.
“The very fact that you have to maneuver degrades your ability to detect whether you need to maneuver,” says Lewis. “Anybody else who wants to operate in that environment is going to be looking at this fuzzy ball of stuff that’s always moving.”
There’s also a risk of solar storms disrupting satellites’ ability to maneuver. These blasts from the sun occur when twisted magnetic fields reach their breaking point, sending bursts of energy throughout the entire solar system.
“We can predict these events sometimes, but certainly not always,” says Sascha Meinrath, professor of telecommunications at Penn State University. “They can rapidly — and by rapidly, I mean, within minutes to hours — dramatically increase the scale of atmospheric drag.”
In response, Starlink’s satellites autonomously adjust their altitude. Neighboring satellites make their own adjustments, and it can take three to four days before they’re stabilized at their original altitudes.
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A paper published in December described this as an “orbital house of cards.” The authors estimated that it would take 5.5 days for a “catastrophic collision” to occur if maneuvers stopped or severe situational awareness loss occurred due to an event like a solar storm. In 2018, the year before Starlink launched its first satellites, that number was 164 days. In the four months since the paper was first submitted, the clock has dropped to just three days. (The paper has not been peer-reviewed.)
Three days is already an alarmingly short period of time to avoid “catastrophic outcomes.” What happens if we go from 15,000 satellites to millions?
Space junk doesn’t always stay in space
The Earth’s stratosphere acts as a great filtering system for those of us on the ground. But just as some meteors survive the trip, space debris doesn’t always stay in space. As more rockets are launched and more satellites are deorbited, the likelihood of a piece of them reaching Earth increases.
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A January 2025 paper published in Scientific Reports determined that there’s a 26% chance each year that a piece of spacecraft will pass through some of the world’s busiest airspace. When they factored in planned megaconstellations from companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin, the probability of a fatal aircraft collision with reentry debris increased to 7 in 10,000 per year by 2035.
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“You hit what’s known as the law of truly large numbers,” says Lewis. “Even if it’s a really, really low likelihood, enough opportunities means it’s going to happen.”
And it has already happened, with alarming frequency. According to NASA, an average of one cataloged piece of debris fell back to Earth every day during the last 50 years. Most of this lands harmlessly in oceans or remote areas — NASA says that “no serious injury or significant property damage” has been confirmed — but a January study published in Science noted that the risks are growing with an increasingly crowded orbit.
A 2022 study published in Nature Astronomy put the danger in starker terms, noting that there’s a 10% chance that someone is killed by space debris over a decade. It also cautioned that this is a conservative estimate given the acceleration of rocket launches.
“It’s fairly difficult to always have a controlled re-entry. As I like to say, we want to have a splash, not a thud,” says McKnight.
In other words, operators should aim to deorbit satellites “over the open ocean, away from populated islands and heavily trafficked airline and maritime routes.” Debris from rocket launches is necessarily closer to civilization. NASA guidelines for debris re-entry say the risk of a human casualty should be less than 1 in 10,000.
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“As you get more and more satellites up there, more and more rockets, more and bigger payloads, if this trend is going to hold true, that’s going to be more and more difficult to adhere to,” says McKnight. “If you have enough events, somebody’s going to get hurt.”
CNET/Tharon Green
Taking out the orbital trash
One way to clean up space debris is to steer satellites toward the atmosphere, where they burn up. With constant propellant needed to overcome atmospheric drag, most satellites in low Earth orbit only last around five to eight years. SpaceX deorbits its Starlink satellites after roughly five years in the sky.
“Deorbiting” is a benign word for a violent process. When a Starlink satellite hits the end of its life, SpaceX operators activate a “drag sail,” which is essentially a kite that slowly pulls the satellite closer to Earth. When it reaches the dense upper atmosphere after a few months, the satellite is incinerated. It’s a spectacular sight from the ground — a fireworks grand finale on a cosmic scale.
Starlink’s satellites weigh roughly as much as a Honda Civic, and an average of almost two were deorbited every day last year.
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And scientists fear those burnups could be doing irreparable damage to our atmosphere. As old satellites are ignited on reentry, the plastics and carbon-fiber composites in them release particles of black carbon — the same sooty material produced by a campfire — as well as metals like aluminum and lithium.
“You’re putting a gray blanket in the stratosphere, which is absorbing and heating up aluminum,” says Rajan Chakrabarty, a chemical engineering professor at Washington University in St. Louis who researches the effects of aerosols on the atmosphere. “This extra heat is just going to cause imbalance.”
We’ve only recently started seeing them reach the end of their lives in significant numbers, but scientists are already observing the effects.
One study funded by NASA and published in Geophysical Research Letters in mid-2024 found that a 550-pound satellite releases about 66 pounds of aluminum oxide nanoparticles when it’s deorbited. These nanoparticles grew eightfold from 2016 to 2022, before the satellite space race kicked off in earnest. The most common Starlink satellites weigh 2,750 pounds each; the next generation will weigh 4,409 pounds.
“We projected a yearly excess of more than 640% over the natural level. Based on that projection, we are very worried,” Joseph Wang, one of the authors of the Geophysical Research Letters study, told me in an interview last year, referring to the presence of aluminum particles.
Samples taken in 2023 by scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — before satellites started getting deorbited en masse — found aluminum and exotic metals embedded in about 10% of the stratosphere. They estimated that this could grow to 50% “based on the number of satellites being launched into low Earth orbit.”
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The ripple effects of all this are still unclear. Huge amounts of black carbon could absorb incoming sunlight or scatter it; it could even change how heat moves around the climate system. The many tons of metallic aerosols added to the atmosphere could actually help cool the planet. (Some geoengineering scientists have even proposed this as a solution to climate change.) Another study determined that the warming effect of black carbon could raise stratospheric temperatures by as much as 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Perhaps the most worrying unknown is how this will affect the Earth’s ozone layer, a section of the stratosphere that absorbs radiation from the sun. According to the EPA, ozone depletion leads to health issues like skin cancer, cataracts and weakened immune systems, as well as reduced crop yield and disruptions in the marine food chain.
“We are shooting in the dark. We really don’t know what’s going to happen,” says Chakrabarty. “These things change slowly, and most of the changes are irreversible. It might not be tangible to our eyes, but by the time we feel the effects of a changing climate, it’s going to be too late.”
Wild West: Who is governing the satellite ecosystem?
For as long as humans have been launching objects into orbit, there’s been an effort to set up international guardrails. A year after the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, the United Nations established the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space.
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The committee’s early meetings were filled with a sense of guarded optimism about the possibilities for international cooperation that satellite communication could open up. Their grasp of the challenges ahead was equally prescient. At its third meeting in 1962, USSR ambassador Platon D. Morozov accurately charted the dilemma we’re facing today.
“As more and more satellites and other scientific instruments are being launched every year, and since the number of countries conducting such experiments is bound to increase, it becomes important to establish juridical provisions,” Morozov said. In other words, space activities need rules.
Four years later, the Outer Space Treaty was signed by the US, the USSR and the UK, with a core principle stating that “states shall avoid harmful contamination of space.”
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That spirit of international cooperation has since waned. In theory, the Outer Space Treaty sets the rules, and individual governments are responsible for enforcing them. But that obligation has often taken a backseat in the US.
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“In practice, it’s not quite a rubber stamp, but I wouldn’t describe the FCC’s reviews as especially adversarial,” McDowell says. “Although they do talk about preserving the environment, it doesn’t seem to me to be as high a priority as making money.”
Satellite operations are coordinated globally through the UN’s International Telecommunication Union, which regulates things like spectrum allocation, frequency assignments and orbital positions. What it doesn’t do is coordinate space traffic or instill environmental guidelines.
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“There’s no common understanding in terms of what’s right of way in space,” says Victoria Samson, chief director of space security and stability for the Secure World Foundation. “If they can both maneuver, who moves?”
When Starlink was essentially alone in low Earth orbit, this wasn’t much of an issue. They were largely self-policing, but they were widely considered to be responsible operators. But as more and more countries plan their own mega-constellations, frictions have risen to the surface.
In June last year, the European Union proposed a new Space Act, which would require satellite operators to address issues like space debris and collision avoidance. It’s not expected to be adopted until late 2028.
The US State Department responded by saying it has “deep concern” about the “unacceptable regulatory burdens” the legislation would impose on satellite operators. FCC Chair Brendan Carr went as far as to say the US would retaliate if the act is passed. Representatives from the FCC didn’t respond to my requests for comment.
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“We just want to make sure that every satellite operator gets a fair shake in Europe,” Carr said at a telecom conference in March. “If Europe wants to go in a different direction, there are European satellite operators that do business in America, and we’ll mirror the regulatory approach that Europe wants to take.”
The tit-for-tat highlights the challenges of regulating an industry whose infrastructure lives a thousand miles above our heads. Nations can decide which companies are allowed to sell satellite services within their borders; it’s another thing to mandate that they behave a certain way in space.
“There are few industries where there’s a global regulatory body,” says Joanna Darlington, the Eutelsat communications officer. “This is the challenge of space, because it doesn’t belong to anyone.”
Why satellites are here to stay
Like it or not, satellites are here to stay, and we’re increasingly reliant on them for disaster relief, emergency response, environmental monitoring, agriculture production and everyday navigation. There’s also Starlink’s 10 million customers around the world, many of whom had never had a modern internet connection before SpaceX launched all those satellites into orbit.
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But as wildly successful as the low Earth orbit satellite era has been, it could be creating the conditions for its own demise as space debris keeps accumulating.
“Orbital debris mitigation and cleanup is a massive, massive challenge,” says Bilen. “We can’t even clean up the great garbage patch of the Pacific Ocean, which is right here on the surface of the Earth. Now imagine trying to do that in space.”
Meredith Rawls, the University of Washington astronomer, reminded me that there is one precedent for the global community coming together to tackle a seemingly insurmountable problem: the 1987 Montreal Protocol. The landmark agreement phased out chlorofluorocarbons from household products that had opened a hole in the ozone layer, leading toward a full recovery expected by 2066. Nearly 40 years later, it’s still the only UN treaty ratified by every country on Earth.
Ironically, that recovery is now in danger of being reversed by the satellite space race.
“I actually like the ozone layer as a success story of international cooperation,” Rawls says. “We fixed a thing! Countries worked together to notice something was broken.
Sometimes, as hackers and makers, we can end up with messy lashed-together gear that is neither reliable nor tidy. Rackmounting your stuff can be a great way to improve the robustness and liveability of your setup. If you find this appealing, you might like CageMaker by [WebMaka].
This parametric OpenSCAD script can generate mounts for all kinds of stuff. Maybe you have a little network switch that’s just a tangle of wires on your desk, or a few pieces of audio gear that are loosely stacked on top of each other and looking rather unkempt. It would be trivial with this tool to create some 3D printed adapters to get all that stuff laced up nice and neat in a rack instead.
Noise cancelling headphones are a great way to insulate yourself from the bustle of the city, but due to their power requirements, continuous use means frequent recharging. [Alessandro Sgarzi] has an elegant and unique solution — powering the noise cancelling electronics by harvesting energy from the ambient noise of the city via a sheet of piezoelectric film.
This impressive feat is achieved using a LTC3588-1 power harvesting IC and a pair of supercapacitors, while an STM32L011K4T6 microcontroller processes the input from a MEMS microphone and feeds a low-power class D amplifier. This circuit consumes an astounding 1.7 nW, a power that a noisy city is amply able to supply. Audio meanwhile comes via a traditional 3.5 mm connector, which we are told is the cool kids’ choice nowadays anyway.
We like this project, and since it’s part of our 2026 Green Powered Challenge, it’s very much in the spirit of the thing. You’ve just got time to get your own entry in, so get a move on!
Looking for the most recent Wordle answer? Click here for today’s Wordle hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles.
On the latest episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Kirsten Korosec, Sean O’Kane, and I did our best to round up all the latest OpenAI news. While the company’s latest acquisitions seem to be classic acqui-hires, Sean suggested they also address “two big existential problems that OpenAI is trying to solve right now.”
First, with the team behind personal finance startup Hiro, the company may be hoping to come up with a product that has “more hooks than just a chatbot, and maybe something worth paying more for.” And with new media startup TBPN, OpenAI could be looking to “better shape its image in the public eye, which lately has not been great.”
Read a preview of our conversation, edited for length and clarity below.
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Anthony: [We have] two deals that are worth mentioning, one is that OpenAI acquired this personal finance startup called Hiro. And that comes after another deal that was literally announced when we were recording our last episode of Equity, so we didn’t get to talk about it: OpenAI had also acquired TBPN — a business talk show, like a new media company.
And I think both of these deals are pretty small compared to the scale of OpenAI. These are not things that people expect to really change the course of their business or anything like that, but they’re interesting because it suggests that there’s still this [attitude of,] “Let’s try out different things.”
Especially [with] the TBPN deal […] particularly at this time when it feels like OpenAI, from all the reporting we’re reading, is also trying to really refocus on making ChatGPT and its GPT models really competitive in an enterprise context with programmers.
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Is running a tech talk show, should that really be on the to-do list?
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Kirsten: No, this should not be on the to-do list. That’s it.
I do want to mention Hiro because to me, that’s an interesting one, because Julie Bort, our venture editor, super talented, she wrote about this and was I think the first to write about it. She dug in a little bit and basically this looks like an acqui-hire. The company is folding. They basically said, “By this date, you won’t be able to access this anymore.”
This is a personal finance startup. And they only launched two years ago. So this absolutely is about getting talent on board. So I’m very curious to see if OpenAI is going to be just absorbing them into the ether at OpenAI, or if they’re actually interested in some sort of personal finance product that they want to work on. To me, it’s not really clear.
Sean: I think you look at both of these as acqui-hires to a certain extent. I mean, the TBPN acquisition, allegedly they are going to retain their editorial independence on the show that they make every day. And all respect to those guys who’ve put that out there and gotten it off the ground so quickly and grown it into what it has become.
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I think any person who follows the media should have a healthy dose of skepticism that when you acquire something like that and you put the people who make the show under the org of the public policy people and comms or marketing adjacent people higher up at the company making the acquisition, that you could have good questions about whether or not saying “editorial independence” is enough. It’s not an incantation that just works.
But you know, what’s interesting to me about these two, while they are similar in their acqui-hire-ness, I think they both represent two major problems that OpenAI is facing.
One is Hiro. OpenAI has a very successful product in ChatGPT. As far as whether or not that will actually ever make them enough money to become a sustainable business that’s not raising the largest private rounds in the world, ever, to keep things going, is a big question. And they also seem to be struggling to keep up on the enterprise side of things where the real money seems to be, so bringing in a team like this seems like taking a shot at, “What else can we do?”
The guy who founded Hiro seems to have a serial entrepreneur streak of creating consumer apps, and so this seems to me like a bet on them being able to come up with something else that may have more hooks than just a chatbot, and maybe something worth paying more for.
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And then TBPN is an acquisition made to help better represent what the company does and better shape its image in the public eye, which lately has not been great and certainly is under more questions now than just a few weeks ago, because Ronan Farrow just led a report at The New Yorker that dropped suspiciously right around the time that this and a couple other announcements from OpenAI came out last week.
I think those are two big existential problems that OpenAI is trying to solve right now.
Kirsten: So the thing that you didn’t say is, there’s Anthropic kind of looming in — not in the shadows, I mean, they’re very much taking up a lot of space here — but they’re having a lot of success on the enterprise side of things.
It feels like these guys are competitors and they also feel like very different companies in a lot of ways. Anthony, I’m wondering if you see them as direct competition to OpenAI? Or [are they] just finding their stride in enterprise and in a way, these two companies are clearly going to coexist and they’re really not directly competing with each other — maybe on talent, but not necessarily as we initially thought of them?
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Anthony: I think they’re directly competing with each other. There’s definitely a scenario where if AI as an industry, as a technology, is as successful as its proponents hope for, they could both be very successful companies, they could just be the one and two. And the success of one does not necessarily mean that the other will just fade into obscurity.
And again, none of this is official, but there’s just been a lot of reporting around how it seems like OpenAI, more than anyone, is obsessed with and upset about Anthropic’s rise.
Our reporter Lucas [Ropek], he did a great piece over the weekend about the HumanX conference, where he was talking to everyone there and they’re sort of like, “Yeah, ChatGPT is fine, too,” but like they were all about Claude Code. And I think that is exactly what OpenAI is worried about.
Because again, in theory, there could be many other opportunities for generative AI, but it feels like the big growth area, the area where the most money is and where they could at least see a path to having a sustainable business in the future, is in these enterprise and coding tools.
Very few of us actually like doing the laundry. Nevertheless, it has to be done. It doesn’t help that there’s now a big debate about front-load efficiency vs. top-load machines. If you’re on the side of the front-loaders and are in the market for a new one, Consumer Reports has a model you might want to consider. Its testing ranks the LG Signature WM9900HSA as the best option money can buy. The machine pairs a 5.8-cubic-foot mega capacity with advanced automation features to help make everybody’s least-favorite chore a little less time-consuming.
Its AI Wash 2.0 system uses built-in sensors to automatically select the best wash settings based on fabric texture and load size. The washer’s TurboWash 360° technology uses five high-pressure jets to handle large loads in less than half an hour, as well. Beyond marketing hype, Consumer Reports has real first-hand experience to back it up. Their testing methodology looks at washer performance using stained fabric swatches and repeated cycle analysis. And in Consumer Reports’ experiments on the WM9900HSA, the LG front-load washer consistently outperformed other top washing machine brands.
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Why not everybody loves the LG Signature front-load machine
Beyond its speed and intelligence, the LG Signature front-load washer model WM9900HSA also uses an “ezDispense” automatic detergent system. All you have to do is fill up the reservoirs, and you can enjoy up to 20 to 36 cycles before you need to refill again. The machine is smart enough to know the correct amount of detergent and softener to dispense for each load. It’ll even send you an alert to your phone when you’re running low. Like plenty of other LG smart appliances, you also get an LCD touchscreen.
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But looking beyond what Consumer Reports says, real-world customer feedback isn’t exactly overwhelming in its praise. It’s currently at a 3.8 out of 5 on LG’s website based on 57 reviews, many of which are incentivized. Users do have nice things to say about the washer’s large capacity and reliable cleaning, but others say the “ezDispense” feature is a headache. Clearly, even though LG ranks as the best front-load washer brand based on Consumer Reports’ survey data, individual customer experiences are going to vary.
Get caught up on the latest technology and startup news from the past week. Here are the most popular stories on GeekWire for the week of April 12, 2026.
Amazon paid about $1.8 billion last year to Blue Origin, the aerospace company owned by its founder and board chair Jeff Bezos — nearly triple the amount the year before — as shareholders weigh a proposal citing his business interests outside Amazon as potential conflicts of interest. … Read More
The students in a computer science class at the Global Idea School, an independent, non-profit elementary school in Redmond, Wash., learned vibe coding through GitHub Spark and built a Braille 3D Generator, a tool that turns text into printable, tactile 3D Braille models in seconds. Read More… Read More
OpenAI’s chief revenue officer touted the AWS alliance as a key enterprise growth driver, saying that the Microsoft relationship has constrained the company’s reach into big business. … Read More
Amazon’s deal for satellite operator Globalstar doesn’t just bulk up Amazon Leo — it brings Apple along for the ride, with a long-term agreement to power iPhone and Apple Watch satellite features. … Read More
Anoop Gupta is stepping down as CEO of SeekOut, the Bellevue-based recruiting startup he co-founded in 2017, handing the reins to enterprise software veteran Sean Thompson. … Read More
Seattle customer engagement startup Ambassador has acquired the operating assets of Tacoma-based programmatic ad platform Humming, part of a roll-up strategy that anticipates a larger shakeout among startups as major AI platforms expand their capabilities. … Read More
Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson raised the possibility of a moratorium on new data centers in the city, following a report that four companies have approached Seattle City Light about building five large-scale facilities. … Read More
As someone who has worked from home for the last 15 years, there aren’t many things more frustrating than my internet connection going down in the middle of a workday. Sure, my kids act like it’s the end of the world when it happens after school, when they’re trying to unlock some forbidden fruit on Roblox or whatever, but that’s nothing compared to the internal rage I feel when I see my camera feed stuttering on a video call.
My current Internet Service Provider (ISP) has gotten more reliable, but there was a period of time when I’d complained about them so much on Twitter that I had four technicians and their boss randomly show up at my house, asking if they could run a brand new service line in a bid to fix my issues.
Those improvements aside, it’s not perfect. My connection still drops from time to time.
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I’ve tinkered with backup internet solutions over the years, and even considered signing up for Starlink as a secondary provider at one point.
But most of the backup internet solutions offered by firewalls or Wi-Fi systems aren’t seamless, requiring you to connect your router to your phone’s hotspot, which then broadcasts mobile data throughout your home’s network.
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That’s not an ideal solution when I’m on a video call, for example. My home office is nowhere near my router, so I’d have extended downtime while I move closer, connect my router to the hotspot, and by then, the call was either over or my regular connection had returned.
Then I found Eero Signal
I currently use one of Eero’s mesh Wi-Fi systems, so when Eero announced its latest product, the $99 Eero Signal, my interest was piqued.
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The small device that looks like a wireless charging stand for your phone connects to a compatible Eero router. When your main internet connection drops, your Eero system automatically switches to the LTE connection that Signal provides. (There’s a 5G model coming later this year that I’d instantly upgrade to.)
I’ve had Signal set up and running in my house for several weeks now, and I have to admit — I’m smitten. It’s perfectly picked up where my service provider has let me down.
Setup was easy, and it has deep controls
(Image credit: Future/Jason Cipriani)
After unboxing the Signal and a 45W power adapter, I immediately connected it to my Eero system and the included power supply. The rest of the process required a few taps on my phone, adding the device to my home system, ensuring I was on an Eero Plus plan for the cellar portion, and I was up and running.
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Eero offers two plans. You can pay $99.99 a year for 10 GB of data per month, while $199.99 gets you 100 GB of data per month through Signal’s connection.
To test Signal, all I had to do was temporarily disconnect the wired internet connection going to my Eero system, and it switched over to Signal almost immediately.
Seamless backup internet achieved.
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The last step to complete setup was to go through the list of devices in the Eero app, approving or forbidding access to data when Signal is active. It’s a quick and easy way to ensure that your work laptop or home alarm system and cameras stay connected to the internet during an outage, but stopping your streaming devices from eating into your data allotment.
Recent maintenance put Eero Signal to the test
(Image credit: Future/Jason Cipriani)
My home network setup is complex, and beyond the previously mentioned video calls for work being a priority, so too is all of the self-hosted websites and services I have running, including personal and business websites from my basement. When my sites go down, I get sad. I don’t like being sad.
But since installing Eero Signal, my sites have had virtually zero downtime due to a lack of internet.
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The reliability and speed of Signal was put to the test a couple of weeks ago when my internet service provider announced routine maintenance in my area that’d take my connection offline all day.
Bring it on, I said to myself as I read the email.
The morning of the scheduled downtime, while I was out of town and away from the house, I received an alert that my connection had dropped and my network switched over to Signal and then… nothing. I didn’t get an alert that any of my sites were down, and I could pull up a live stream of my Ring security cameras.
Several hours later, I received another alert that the work was done for the day, but they were unable to finish everything, and expected a prolonged outage the next day.
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The second day came and went much like the first — Signal kicked in and took over, providing data to my home’s network and self-hosted services, all the while I was able to call into a Teams meeting. The Signal’s LTE connection is averaging 50 Mbps down and 10 Mbps up for me, which isn’t super fast compared to my standard connection, but it’s enough for short periods..
(Image credit: Future/Jason Cipriani)
Internet outages are a thing of the past
(Image credit: Future/Jason Cipriani)
I’d become so accustomed to dealing with sporadic internet outages that I didn’t realize how much time I spent worrying about it. Then again, being connected to the internet during the day is how I do my job, and without it, I’m not very productive, so it makes sense.
It also makes sense that after setting up Signal and realizing it delivers on its promise, I’ve felt relieved. A couple of months ago, those messages alerting me of upcoming maintenance would have stressed me out for days.
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Instead, all I did was get excited because it was going to be a stress test for Signal — and it passed, easily.
That relief alone is worth the cost. Now I can spend that energy on something productive.
Despite the months-long feud between Anthropic and the Pentagon, the National Security Agency is using the AI company’s new Mythos Preview, according to Axios, which spoke to two sources with knowledge of the matter. Anthropic announced Mythos Preview at the beginning of April, describing it as a general-purpose language model that is “strikingly capable at computer security tasks.” But back in February, Trump ordered all government agencies to stop using Anthropic’s services after the company refused to budge on certain safeguards for military uses during contract talks.
The news comes days after Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei met with White House chief of staff Susie Wiles and other officials, reportedly to discuss Mythos. The White House later said the meeting on Friday was “productive and constructive,” though President Trump said he had “no idea” about it when asked by reporters, Reuters reports. According to Axios’ sources, the NSA is one of the roughly 40 organizations Anthropic gave access to Mythos Preview, and one said it’s “being used more widely within the department” too.
Looking for the most recent Strands answer? Click here for our daily Strands hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
Today’s NYT Strands puzzle offers an interesting mix of words, and they all begin with the same two letters. Some of the answers are difficult to unscramble, so if you need hints and answers, read on.
If that doesn’t help you, here’s a clue: Shimmery.
Clue words to unlock in-game hints
Your goal is to find hidden words that fit the puzzle’s theme. If you’re stuck, find any words you can. Every time you find three words of four letters or more, Strands will reveal one of the theme words. These are the words I used to get those hints but any words of four or more letters that you find will work:
These are the answers that tie into the theme. The goal of the puzzle is to find them all, including the spangram, a theme word that reaches from one side of the puzzle to the other. When you have all of them (I originally thought there were always eight but learned that the number can vary), every letter on the board will be used. Here are the nonspangram answers:
GLOW, GLEAM, GLINT, GLITTER, GLISTEN, GLIMMER
Today’s Strands spangram
The completed NYT Strands puzzle for April 20, 2026.
NYT/Screenshot by CNET
Today’s Strands spangram is CATCHTHELIGHT. To find it, start with the C that’s three letters to the right on the bottom row, and wind up.
A growing wave of online voices warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence—often dubbed “AI doom influencers” – is reshaping how the public and policymakers view the technology. According to a report by The Washington Post, these influencers, including researchers, tech leaders, and content creators, are increasingly highlighting worst-case scenarios, from mass job loss to existential risks posed by advanced AI systems.
While critics argue that some of this messaging borders on alarmism, the conversation is no longer confined to speculation. Real-world developments in AI are beginning to mirror some of the concerns being raised, blurring the line between hype and legitimate risk.
When Warnings Meet Reality
The rise of AI-focused fear narratives comes at a time when companies are rapidly advancing the capabilities of large language models and autonomous systems. These tools are already reshaping industries, automating tasks, and influencing decision-making at scale.
Adding to the urgency is the emergence of highly advanced systems like Anthropic’s experimental model, often referred to as “Mythos.” According to industry discussions, Anthropic has reportedly deemed the system too powerful for a full public release. Instead, access is being restricted to a small group of trusted partners, including defence and financial institutions, and even then, only with prior government approval.
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This cautious rollout reflects growing concern within the industry itself. In the UK, reports suggest that government bodies have held internal meetings to assess the implications of such advanced AI systems. Canada has also issued statements acknowledging the potential risks associated with increasingly capable AI technologies.
In India, companies like Paytm’s parent entity and Razorpay have echoed similar concerns, describing the current moment as a potential turning point for how AI is governed and deployed.
Why The Debate Matters
The conversation around AI safety is no longer theoretical. For years, researchers have warned about risks such as bias, misinformation, loss of human control, and unintended consequences from highly autonomous systems.
What’s changing now is the scale and immediacy of these concerns. As AI systems become more powerful, the gap between research warnings and real-world applications is shrinking. This has given more weight to voices calling for caution, even if some messaging appears exaggerated.
At the same time, the rise of “doom influencers” highlights a broader issue: how to communicate risk responsibly without causing unnecessary panic.
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What It Means For Users And Industry
For everyday users, the growing focus on AI risks may lead to more transparency, stricter regulations, and safer products in the long run. However, it could also slow down innovation or create confusion around what AI can and cannot do.
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For companies and governments, the challenge lies in balancing progress with precaution. The restricted rollout of systems like Mythos suggests that even leading AI developers are grappling with this balance.
What Comes Next
As AI continues to evolve, discussions around safety, regulation, and ethics are expected to intensify. Governments may introduce stricter oversight, while companies could adopt more controlled deployment strategies for advanced systems.
The rise of AI doom narratives may be partly driven by fear, but it is also being shaped by real technological breakthroughs. The question now is not whether AI poses risks, but how those risks are understood – and managed – before the technology moves even further ahead.
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