The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is warning that hackers are actively exploiting a critical vulnerability identified as CVE-2026-33017, which affects the Langflow framework for building AI agents.
The security issue received a critical score of 9.3 out of 10 and can be leveraged for remote code execution, allowing threat actors to build public flows without authentication.
The agency added the issue to the list of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities, describing it as a code injection vulnerability.
Researchers at application security company Endor Labs claim that hackers started exploiting CVE-2026-33017 on March 19, about 20 hours after the vulnerability advisory became public.
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No public proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit code existed at the time, and Endor Labs believes that attackers built exploits directly from the information included in the advisory.
Automated scanning activity began in 20 hours, followed by exploitation using Python scripts in 21 hours, and data (.env and .db files) harvesting in 24 hours.
Langflow is a popular open-source visual framework for building AI workflows with 145,000 stars on GitHub. It provides a drag-and-drop interface for connecting nodes into executable pipelines, along with a REST API for running them programmatically.
The tool has widespread adoption across the AI development ecosystem, making it an attractive target for hackers.
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In May 2025, CISA issued another warning about active exploitation in Langflow, targeting CVE-2025-3248, a critical API endpoint flaw that allows unauthenticated RCE and potentially leads to full server control.
The most recent flaw, CVE-2026-33017, lets attackers execute arbitrary Python code impacts versions 1.8.1 and earlier of Langflow, and could be exploited via a single crafted HTTP request due to unsandboxed flow execution.
CISA did not mark the flaw as exploited by ransomware actors, but gave federal agencies until April 8 to apply the security updates or mitigations, or stop using the product.
System administrators are recommended to upgrade to Langflow version 1.9.0 or later, which addresses the security problem, or disable/restrict the vulnerable endpoint.
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Endor Labs also advised not to expose Langflow directly to the internet, to monitor outbound traffic, and to rotate API keys, database credentials, and cloud secrets when suspicious activity is detected.
CISA’s deadline formally applies to organizations covered by Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01, but private sector companies, state and local governments, and other non-FCEB entities are also advised to treat it as a benchmark and respond accordingly.
Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.
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High-speed rail, or train systems that are capable of speeds of at least 186 mph, simply doesn’t exist in the United States. High-speed rail had its start in Japan in 1964 with the bullet train, and only one year later, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the High-Speed Ground Transportation Act into law, seeking a similar system in the United States. Sixty-one years later, multiple countries have robust high-speed rail systems, including China and much of Europe. We’ve landed a man on the moon and completely mapped the human genome, but high-speed rail has yet to take off in the U.S. In California, however, change is on the horizon.
Described as “a bold vision to transform the state’s future by delivering fast, reliable, zero-emission train service,” a high-speed rail system is being planned in two phases across Northern California, Central Valley, and Southern California. The project, delivered by the California High-Speed Rail Authority, faces skepticism from the public and critics alike, with Forbes describing the project as a “disgraceful boondoggle,” in 2025.
However, the project recently hit a major milestone that literally paves the way for future success. Less than a year after construction started, work has been completed on a railhead facility located on 150 acres in Kern County. This facility will serve as a logistics hub, receiving, storing, and finally distributing material before it moves to active construction zones where workers can begin laying rail. Let’s see what is next in this ambitious project.
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The high-speed rail project is planning to soon lay tracks
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The first phase of the high-speed rail project encompasses 494 miles and is designed to connect San Francisco and Los Angeles. Because the new trains will reach speeds much higher than even Amtrak’s Acela, the route will take less than three hours, with stops in San José, Fresno, Bakersfield, Burbank, and more. The second phase extends the route to Sacramento and San Diego, with stops in Stockton, Modesto, San Bernardino, and Riverside.
The new hub just south of Wasco, California is equipped with six rail connections for receiving and sending out equipment and supplies, with 10 miles of temporary rail lines that connect it to the national freight network. The facility also has a workshop and maintenance yard, along with the warehouse that stores everything needed for a new high-speed line, including rail, concrete ties, fiber optics, and crushed rock.
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Now that the hub is open, crews will start staging material to lay tracks. The High-Speed Rail Authority eventually plans to open another railhead further north to support the project when it moves on to the second phase. Ultimately, the opening of the railhead marks a distinct shift in the project, from preparation to actual construction, something many critics thought they’d never see.
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Other states have ambitions for high-speed train projects too
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There are still lawmakers that support a national high-speed rail system, including Representative Seth Moulton of Massachusetts. In 2020, Moulton pitched a $205 billion national rail system that would be funded by the federal government. He re-introduced the bill with some support from fellow lawmakers in 2024, but it appears to have stalled.
Meanwhile, there are a few other high-speed rail projects scattered across the country. In Nevada, an affiliate of the company behind the Orlando-Miami train line is planning a 218-mile high-speed train line linking Las Vegas to Rancho Cucamonga, California. It will be constructed on land between the north- and southbound lanes of I-15, simplifying the project by avoiding negotiations with private landowners. Service is expected to begin in late 2028.
There’s also a plan being partially funded by Microsoft for a high-speed line connecting Portland, Oregon with Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada, but it’s still in the planning stages with some critics arguing that it makes more sense to improve service on the Amtrak lines that already exist in the region. In Texas, a line connecting Houston and Dallas was proposed way back in the 1990s. In 2023, Amtrak assumed control of the project, receiving a $64 million federal grant. It’s now on the hunt for private partners for the 240-mile route.
Apple has confirmed to Engadget that the Mac Pro, the desktop tower-shaped computer that was last updated in 2023, has been discontinued. As 9to5Mac notes, the computer no longer appears in the lineup of Macs on Apple’s website or in its storefront. That means at least for now, the Mac Studio is the Apple’s top-of-the-line professional computer.
The current version of the Mac Pro was introduced in 2019, with a distinct cheese-grater design, Intel chips and a bevy of easily-accessible expansion slots. Apple released the computer as a make-good for several years of inadequately meeting the performance needs of professional Mac users, but its uncontested time at the top of the company’s lineup was short-lived. A year later in 2020, Apple began transitioning to its custom M-series Arm chips, proving Macs could be more powerful and power-efficient by abandoning Intel entirely.
Apple eventually updated the Mac Pro to the M2 Ultra without updating the computer’s design, but by then the writing was on the wall. The far smaller Mac Studio, introduced in 2022, also supported the new chip, and it’s been updated since then while the Mac Pro has languished. Bloomberg reported Apple was planning to retire the Mac Pro in November 2025, so it’s not all that surprising the company quietly pulled the plug only a few months later.
Apple’s effort to cater to professionals, creatives and anyone with a chunk of change to drop on a fast computer lives on through the Mac Studio, and the recently announced Studio Display XDR, itself a replacement for the Pro Display XDR Apple announced for the 2019 Mac Pro. Now all the company needs to do is update the Mac Studio with an M5 Max chip to make it the most “pro” computer Apple offers.
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Update, March 26, 6:25PM ET: Added confirmation from Apple that the Mac Pro has been discontinued.
The LAiV Crescendo VERSE lands at a moment when hi-fi is quietly being redefined. LAiV’s new component combines an R2R ladder DAC, discrete headphone amplifier, and active preamp into a single compact chassis priced under $1,000; exactly the kind of “one box” solution more listeners are gravitating toward as systems shift away from racks of separates and toward streamlined setups built around headphones, powered speakers, or compact amplifiers.
The idea that serious high-end sound can’t exist below four figures is starting to look outdated, and products like this are a big reason why.
What’s Inside the LAiV Crescendo VERSE: R2R, FPGA, and Full Digital Control
At the core of the Crescendo VERSE is LAiV’s proprietary balanced R2R ladder DAC architecture, built from tightly matched resistors (0.05% tolerance) to prioritize tonal accuracy, stable imaging, and long-term listenability. This is not a chip-based DAC. It’s a discrete ladder design aimed at delivering a more natural, less processed presentation; the kind of approach usually reserved for significantly more expensive hardware.
Supporting that DAC stage is an FPGA-based digital processing platform, which handles signal management and gives the VERSE its flexibility in playback modes and resampling.
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The VERSE is designed to give users control over how their digital signal is handled rather than forcing a single approach.
The Crescendo VERSE supports native 1-bit DSD playback, keeping DSD signals in their original format without converting them to PCM, while also handling high-resolution PCM up to 768kHz and DSD up to at least DSD256 via its digital inputs. An integrated sampling rate converter (SRC) adds further flexibility, enabling PCM upsampling from 1x to 16x and DSD resampling up to DSD512 for those who want more control over how their digital content is processed.
There are also selectable playback modes (including NOS and SRC behavior), which means users can prioritize either signal purity or smoother multi-format playback depending on their system and library.
LAiV does include a small but important caveat: switching between PCM and DSD tracks in a mixed playlist can produce audible clicks or pops when using native mode. If your library jumps between formats, the multi-bit DSD mode converts everything to PCM for uninterrupted playback.
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Digital Only Connectivity?
LAiV made a deliberate call with the Crescendo VERSE: this is a digital first component. It offers USB, optical, coaxial, and I2S inputs, with the latter configurable and clock aware for more advanced setups. All inputs support high resolution playback, with USB and I2S handling up to 768kHz PCM and high rate DSD. What you will not find here are any analog inputs. That omission is not an oversight, it is a statement. The VERSE is designed to be a dedicated digital front end, not a catch all hub trying to do everything at once, which may not be ideal for those who may wish to add an analog source.
Active Preamplifier
The Crescendo VERSE includes a discrete, output buffered preamplifier stage rather than a simple variable DAC output. It uses analog domain volume control to preserve signal integrity and maintains low output impedance for proper matching with downstream gear. Both balanced XLR and single ended RCA outputs are available and can be used simultaneously, which makes integration straightforward whether you are running active speakers, a power amplifier, or a hybrid system. This is where the one box concept starts to make practical sense in a real system.
Enough for Your Planars in Balanced Mode
The headphone stage is fully discrete and built with flexibility in mind, offering selectable gain settings to accommodate everything from sensitive in-ear monitors to more demanding full size headphones. Output is available via 4.4mm balanced and 6.35mm single ended connections. Power output reaches up to 1100 mW per channel in balanced mode and roughly 230 to 290mW single ended, which is enough for the majority of headphones people are actually using, although high impedance dynamic headphones are definitely a stretch and there is way to drive electrostatic headphones.
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Physical Design & Usability
The Crescendo VERSE is built around a compact, desktop friendly chassis measuring approximately 230 mm wide (9.1 inches), 220 mm deep (8.7 inches), and just under 50 mm tall (about 2 inches), with a weight of about 0.9 kg (just under 2 pounds).
The enclosure uses a precision machined aluminum housing with a thick front panel and tight panel tolerances that give it a more serious, component grade feel than most devices in this price range. Finish options include a silver chassis with gold accents or a darker variant, both of which lean into a more distinctive, design forward aesthetic rather than disappearing into the background.
On the front, a dot matrix LED display provides clear readouts for input selection, volume level, sample rate, and playback status, while a central rotary encoder handles volume, input switching, and menu navigation with direct, tactile control. A full function remote is also included, allowing access to key settings such as gain, input selection, and playback modes without needing to interact directly with the unit.
The Bottom Line
What LAiV has created with the Crescendo VERSE is not a lifestyle product and not a stripped down DAC. It is a focused digital control center built around an R2R DAC for tonal character, a proper preamp stage for system integration, and a capable headphone amplifier for personal listening. There is no streaming platform, no analog input stage, and no attempt to be everything to everyone. That focus is the point.
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At $849, it is a direct challenge to the idea that meaningful high end performance has to be expensive or complicated. The Crescendo VERSE is trying to be enough: a compact, high performance hub that can anchor a serious desktop or small room system without the cost and complexity that used to define the category. If it delivers on the promise of R2R performance at this level, the definition of affordable high end audio may need a reset.
We will know soon enough. James Fiorucci’s full review drops later this week, and if this category is on your radar, it is one you will want to read.
Fosi Audio has built its reputation the hard way by delivering affordable gear that actually works as promised, earning a loyal following in the entry-level category where expectations are low and competition is relentless. Now it is stepping into a far more crowded and scrutinized arena with the S3, a $259 balanced HiFi music streamer, DAC, and preamp designed to anchor a modern two channel system.
That puts it directly in the crosshairs of established players like WiiM and Bluesound, both of which have already set a high bar for usability, ecosystem integration, and streaming performance at relatively accessible price points.
The S3’s pitch is straightforward. Combine network streaming, high resolution DAC capability, and preamp functionality into one compact and affordable component. Execution is where this category gets brutal. Fosi Audio has proven it can win on value. The question now is whether it can compete on polish, software, and long term usability where the real battles are fought.
Fosi Audio S3 balanced HiFi streamer under ZA3 balanced stereo amplifier with SP601 speaker.
Streaming Platform, Architecture, and Real World System Flexibility
The Fosi Audio S3 Balanced HiFi Music Streamer is built around the Amlogic A113X streaming platform, paired with an AKM 4493SEQ DAC and OPA1612 op amps in a fully balanced circuit design. That combination forms the foundation of its digital and analog performance, aiming for a low noise signal path and consistent channel separation at a price point where that is not always guaranteed. It is a familiar architecture on paper, but one that has proven effective when properly implemented.
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On the streaming side, the S3 supports dual band Wi-Fi across 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz, along with a 10/100 Ethernet port for more stable wired operation. Bluetooth 5.3 is included with SBC and AAC codec support, which covers basic wireless playback but does not target higher quality Bluetooth use cases. Streaming protocol support is broad and practical, including Spotify Connect, TIDAL Connect, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, DLNA, and Roon Ready (still awaiting certification), allowing the S3 to integrate into multiple ecosystems without forcing users into a single platform or app.
Playback capability varies depending on the input path. HDMI and optical inputs support up to 24-bit/192kHz PCM, while Wi-Fi streaming is also capped at 24-bit 192kHz. Google Cast reaches 24-bit/96kHz, AirPlay 2 is limited to 16-bit/48kHz, and Bluetooth tops out at 24-bit/48kHz. For users within the Roon ecosystem, the S3 supports up to 32-bit384kHz PCM, which represents its highest resolution playback scenario.
As a component, the S3 is designed to function as more than just a streamer. It can operate as a digital transport, standalone DAC, or preamp, making it suitable as the central source in a compact two channel or 2.1 system. Connectivity reflects that goal, with HDMI eARC, RCA and XLR outputs, optical input, and a dedicated subwoofer output, allowing it to integrate into both traditional HiFi systems and TV based setups without additional hardware.
Control and system management are handled through the Fosi Audio app, which manages setup, input selection, and playback, along with a built in 5-band EQ for basic tuning. A Bluetooth remote with a range of over 15 meters is also included for direct control.
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Power is supplied via a 12V 1.5A external adapter, and the compact chassis measures 17.3 by 17.3 by 4.7 cm, or 6.81 by 6.81 by 1.85 inches, making it easy to integrate into space conscious desktop or rack based systems.
Fosi Audio S3 rear angle with remote control
The Bottom Line
The S3 is Fosi Audio taking a serious swing at becoming the center of an affordable modern system. At $259, what makes it stand out is the combination of balanced XLR output, HDMI eARC, subwoofer integration, and broad streaming protocol support in a single compact box. That is not common at this price, and it positions the S3 as more than just a basic streamer. It is a true digital front end for someone building a clean, minimal two channel or 2.1 setup without stacking multiple components.
What it does not offer is just as important. There is no room correction, no advanced DSP beyond a basic 5-band EQ, and Bluetooth is limited to SBC and AAC with no LDAC, aptX HD, or aptX Lossless support. Qobuz Connect is also not supported at launch. Roon Ready certification is also not available yet, which matters in this category, even if AirPlay 2 and Google Cast provide a workaround. Long term usability will also depend heavily on the stability and refinement of the Fosi control app, where competitors already have a clear edge.
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This is aimed squarely at users who want a simple, affordable, and flexible streaming hub with modern connectivity, especially those building their first real Hi-Fi system or upgrading from a basic Bluetooth or single box solution. It is less compelling for experienced users who prioritize mature software ecosystems, advanced room correction, or higher end wireless codec support.
The competition is not forgiving. The S3 goes directly up against WiiM with the Pro and Pro Plus, and Bluesound with the NODE, both of which offer more established software platforms and, in some cases, features like room correction or broader ecosystem support. Fosi is betting that its hardware value and connectivity will be enough to pull buyers in. Whether that is enough will come down to execution, because in this category, good hardware is only half the story.
Watch the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix live streams to find out whether Ferrari, which looked better in China than in Australia, can push even closer to challenging Mercedes’ dominance. Speaking of which, Antonelli, after picking up his first-ever F1 win in Shanghai, is now a serious title contender alongside George Russell.
We will also likely see an end to Max Verstappen’s dominance at Suzuka. He has won the last four races here, but with Red Bull now firmly in the midfield, he’s unfortunately far off from challenging the top teams.
Speaking of top teams, McLaren had a shocker in China, recording a double DNS, both related to power unit systems. It’s worth noting that they run the Mercedes power unit, but so far haven’t been able to extract performance the way Mercedes has. Oscar Piastri, in fact, has not started either of the two races this season, so he’ll be keen to get off the line cleanly in Japan.
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Of course, the new energy management system will be the talk of the paddock throughout the weekend. While Suzuka is a fast track, it also features several significant braking zones, creating opportunities for energy harvesting. That could lead to more overtaking at a circuit not traditionally known for it.
Here’s how to watch the Japanese Grand Prix 2026 online from anywhere and potentially for FREE.
Japanese Grand Prix 2026 Schedule
Practice 1: Friday, March 27 | 2:30am GMT / 10:30pm ET (Thu.) Practice 2: Friday, March 27 | 6am GMT / 2am ET Practice 3: Saturday, March 28 | 2:30am GMT / 10:30pm ET (Fri.) Qualifying: Saturday, March 28 | 6am GMT / 2am ET Japanese Grand Prix: Sunday, March 29 | 6am BST / 1am ET
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How to watch the Japanese Grand Prix 2026 for FREE
The 2026 Japanese Grand Prix isn’t available for free in every country. However, in these select destinations lucky F1 fans can catch the practice sessions, qualifying, and the entire race/highlights for FREE.
Traveling abroad during the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix? You can use a VPN to watch all the action free of charge as if you were right at home.
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How to watch the Japanese Grand Prix 2026 from anywhere
🌎 ABROAD? The Japanese Grand Prix 2026 is broadcast in many countries around the world but if you’re traveling outside your country you should consider using one of the best VPNs to unlock your domestic streaming service provided it does not infringe any terms and conditions.
How to watch the Japanese Grand Prix 2026 in the US
How to watch the Japanese GP 2026 in the UK
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Test tasting soda mead. (Credit: Golden Hive Mead, YouTube)
You can certainly just chug down that bottle of soda you purchased, but if you accept the premise that the preparation of food and drink is just a subset of chemistry, and that chemistry is fun, then it naturally follows that using soda as the basis for brewing up some mead makes perfect sense. Thus the [Golden Hive Mead] blokes over on YouTube decided to create some Coca Cola flavored mead.
Mead is essentially just water mixed with honey that is left to ferment after adding yeast, resulting in what is also called ‘honey wine’, with an ethanol content of usually between 3.5% and 20%. Since soda is mostly water and comes with its own supply of sugar for yeast to feast on, this isn’t such a crazy choice in that respect. Just make sure to remove the carbonation, as the CO2 makes the soda too acidic for the yeast to be happy.
Instead of straight honey, caramelized honey was used for extra flavor after which the brew was left to ferment for a while. For extra flavor notes aged oak, vanilla and cinnamon were added as well, to ensure that the fermentation didn’t erase those core notes of the coke. The result was apparently rather flavorful, with about a 10.5% ethanol content, receiving the full approval of both tame test tasters.
IEEE 802.11bn introduces the ultra-high reliability amendment that will serve as the basis for Wi-Fi 8. Unlike previous Wi-Fi generations that focused primarily on increasing peak throughput, IEEE 802.11bn targets measurable improvements in real-world performance: a 25% throughput increase under rate-versus-range conditions, a 25% reduction in 95th-percentile latency, and a 25% decrease in packet loss probability during basic service set transitions. The amendment retains the core physical layer parameters of Wi-Fi 7 — up to 320 MHz channel bandwidth, 4096-level quadrature amplitude modulation, and eight spatial streams — while adding new physical layer capabilities such as distributed resource units and enhanced long range protocol data units, alongside advanced medium access control features including multi-access point coordination and seamless roaming within a mobility domain.
David Sacks has used up his days as Donald Trump’s AI and crypto czar.
Speaking with Bloomberg on Thursday, the longtime entrepreneur, investor, and podcaster, confirmed that his non-consecutive 130-day stint as a special government employee is over and that he’s moving on to co-chair the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) alongside senior White House technology adviser Michael Kratsios.
“I think moving forward as co-chair of PCAST, I can now make recommendations on not just AI but an expanded range of technology topics,” he told Bloomberg via a video interview. “So yes, this is how I’ll be involved moving forward.”
What that means in practice is Sacks will be much further from power center in Washington than since the outset of this second Trump administration. As AI czar, Sacks had a direct line to Trump and a hand in shaping policy. PCAST is a federal advisory body, so while it studies issues, produces reports, and sends recommendations up the chain, it doesn’t make policy.
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The council has existed in some form since FDR, though Sacks made a point to Bloomberg of noting that this particular iteration has “the most star power of any group like this” ever assembled, and it’s hard to argue he’s wrong. The initial 15 members include Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Marc Andreessen, AMD’s Lisa Su, and Michael Dell, among others. (That’s a lot of billionaires.)
Sacks told Bloomberg the council will take up AI, advanced semiconductors, quantum computing, and nuclear power, and that near-term attention will go toward pushing Trump’s national AI framework, released just last week. The framework is aimed at replacing what Sacks described to Bloomberg as a mess of conflicting state-level rules. “You’ve got 50 different states regulating this in 50 different ways,” he said, “and it’s creating a patchwork of regulation that’s difficult for our innovators to comply with.”
What Sacks didn’t address head-on was why the transition is happening now and whether his recent comments were a factor. Earlier this month, on the popular “All In” podcast that he co-hosts, Sacks publicly urged the administration to find an exit from the U.S.-backed war with Iran, walking through a set of worsening scenarios — attacks on oil infrastructure in neighboring countries, the destruction of desalination plants, the possibility of nuclear use by Israel — and calling for a polite way out. Trump responded by telling reporters that Sacks hadn’t spoken to him about the war. (The U.S.-Israel war on Iran has now been going on for approximately 27 days.)
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Asked about the podcast episode on Thursday by Bloomberg, Sacks figuratively threw his hands in the air: “I’m not on the foreign policy team or the national security team,” he said, adding that his podcast comments represented his personal view, not an official one.
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For all the marquee names Sacks is bringing to PCAST, it’s worth reflecting on what the council has historically been, which is an advisory body with some influence in some administrations and almost none in others.
President Obama’s version was seemingly the most productive on record, churning out 36 reports over eight years — two of which led to concrete policy changes, including an FDA rule that opened the market for over-the-counter hearing aids.
President Trump’s first-term council, by contrast, took nearly three years just to name its first members, produced a handful of reports, and made no particular mark, while President Biden’s council skewed heavily academic — Nobel laureates, MacArthur fellows, National Academy members — and issued a modest number of reports before the administration ended.
The current PCAST is a completely different animal, built almost entirely from the executive suites of the companies shaping the technology it will advise on.
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Now, Sacks is again one of those unencumbered executives, free to resume his life as an investor and entrepreneur. A spokesperson for Craft Ventures, the firm Sacks co-founded and where he remains a partner, has not yet responded to related questions about next steps; TechCrunch reported last year on the ethics waivers Sacks obtained to maintain financial stakes in AI and crypto companies while shaping federal policy in both areas — an arrangement that drew sharp criticism from ethics experts and lawmakers.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: Apple provided the FBI with the real iCloud email address hidden behind Apple’s ‘Hide My Email’ feature, which lets paying iCloud+ users generate anonymous email addresses, according to a recently filed court record. The move isn’t surprising but still provides uncommon insight into what data is available to authorities regarding the Apple feature. The data was turned over during an investigation into a man who allegedly sent a threatening email to Alexis Wilkins, the girlfriend of FBI director Kash Patel.
“On or about February 28, 2026, Person 1 received an email from the email address peaty_terms_1o@icloud.com,” the affidavit reads. Earlier on, the document explicitly says that Person 1 is Alexis Wilkins. […] The affidavit says Apple then provided records that indicated the peaty_terms_1o@icloud.com email address was associated with an Apple account in the name of Alden Ruml. The records showed that account generated 134 anonymized email addresses, according to the affidavit.
Law enforcement agents later interviewed Ruml and he confirmed he had sent the email, the affidavit says. Ruml said he sent the email after reading a February 28 article about how the FBI was using its own resources to provide security to Wilkins. The specific article is not named or linked in the affidavit, but a New York Times article published that same day described how Patel ordered a team to ferry his girlfriend on errands and to events.
Set to debut on April 14 in more than 200 countries and regions, Apple Business brings together the company’s existing enterprise programs – Apple Business Connect, Apple Business Essentials, and Apple Business Manager. The new service represents Apple’s most comprehensive effort yet to provide small and mid-sized companies with integrated… Read Entire Article Source link
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