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Newsmax Didn’t Like Its NewsGuard Rating, So The FTC Attacked NewsGuard, And Now NewsGuard Is Suing

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from the found-the-censorship-industrial-complex dept

We’ve written a few times now about how the GOP’s “free speech warriors” have been waging an absolutely absurd campaign against NewsGuard, a company whose entire business model is… expressing opinions about the reliability of news sources. You know, speech. The kind of thing that’s supposed to be protected by that First Amendment thing the GOP pretends to care so much about.

As we noted back in 2024, the entire complaint about NewsGuard boils down to: some conservative news sites got poor ratings, and that made people who relied on those ratings less likely to advertise on those sites. It’s funny how MAGA seems to get so upset about the “marketplace of ideas” when their own ideas get rejected. NewsGuard says “we think this source is unreliable,” advertisers say “okay, we’d rather not be associated with unreliable sources,” and the rated sites get mad about it.

But now the Trump administration’s FTC, led by Chairman Andrew Ferguson, has decided to transform that complaint into an actual government censorship campaign. And NewsGuard, represented by FIRE’s lawyers, is suing to stop it, as first reported in the Washington Post.

The complaint lays out a fairly astonishing abuse of government power. Let’s start with the Civil Investigative Demand (fancy term for a subpoena) the FTC sent to NewsGuard last May. It’s basically a demand for every document the company has ever created or received since its founding in 2018:

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The CID requires production of “all documents relating to NewsGuard’s News Reliability Ratings and any other rating[s];” identification of all NewsGuard customers; and essentially all communications from or to NewsGuard.

And it gets worse:

The Specifications go further, demanding all materials about NewsGuard’s work product and methodology, including data sets; all documents about websites and news sources rated; all ratings and reviews issued; all communications regarding ratings; any and all analyses of the effects of NewsGuard’s ratings on advertisers and publishers; and any studies relating to social media or digital advertising

Among its all-inclusive document demands, the CID also requires production of information, materials, and communications relating to NewsGuard’s journalism and reporting, including reporters’ notes and sources.

The FTC is demanding reporters’ notes. From a journalism organization. Because it doesn’t like the opinions that organization expresses. That should be a First Amendment five-alarm fire. I mean, imagine the years of screaming we’d all be subjected to if the Biden admin had demanded reporters’ notes from Fox News.

Oh, and what was the stated basis for this investigation? According to NewsGuard’s complaint, the FTC wouldn’t even tell them, despite it being required by law.

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Under the FTC Act, the agency was required to state the specific conduct constituting an alleged violation that is the subject of investigation and the provision of law applicable to such violation. 15 U.S.C. § 57b-1(c)(2). The FTC did not do that in the NewsGuard CID, leaving the company to guess about what the agency alleged was at issue or how it could have anything to do with legitimate enforcement of antitrust or competition laws.

In other words: “we’re investigating you, but we won’t tell you why or what law you allegedly violated.”

Right about here I’ll remind you that when FTC chair Andrew Ferguson applied for the job he promised to “protect freedom of speech” and “end… politically motivated investigations.” Of course, the full quote was “end Lina Khan’s politically motivated investigations”—leaving his own politically motivated investigations as fair game.

NewsGuard tried to work with the FTC for seven months, participating in ten meet-and-confer discussions and producing over 40,000 pages of documents. And what did the FTC do? Kept demanding more, including those customer lists and communications, while refusing to explain what any of this had to do with antitrust law.

Remember, NewsGuard’s share of the “brand safety” market is, according to the complaint, less than 0.1%. The idea that this tiny company is somehow engaged in anticompetitive behavior that requires the FTC to demand every document it’s ever created is absurd on its face.

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Then, while NewsGuard was trying to cooperate with the investigation, the FTC was also using its merger review authority to create what amounts to a government blacklist of NewsGuard.

When advertising giants Omnicom and IPG wanted to merge, the FTC conditioned approval on the companies agreeing not to use any service that “reflects viewpoints as to the veracity of news reporting and adherence to journalistic standards or ethics.”

That’s not particularly subtle. That’s a condition specifically designed to prevent Omnicom from doing business with NewsGuard. The complaint notes that the original draft order didn’t quite capture NewsGuard, so Newsmax—yes, the same Newsmax that’s been mad about its poor NewsGuard rating—filed comments urging the FTC to expand the language. And the FTC did exactly that.

Newsmax was not subtle about its aim. Its fourteen-page letter mentioned NewsGuard more than a dozen times. Newsmax echoed Chairman Ferguson’s repeated statements that NewsGuard’s reviews and ratings of news sources based on journalistic standards were “biased” because some conservativeleaning websites and publications scored poorly.

Not content to rely on the official FTC comment process, Newsmax took to the internet to lobby Chairman Ferguson, members of Congress, and the President. In posts on X directed to Chairman Ferguson, Newsmax asserted the FTC’s proposed order was inadequate because it “makes no mention of ‘censorship’ or ‘targeting conservatives’ and ‘[f]ully allows Omnicom to use left-wing NewsGuard.” Newsmax admitted its comments and advocacy to the FTC were specifically targeted at NewsGuard.

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[….]

The FTC subsequently issued a revised order removing terms about using third-party services with “political or ideological bias.” Instead, the FTC revised the Consent Order to prohibit the merged Omnicom entity or its ad agencies from using third-party services that evaluate “viewpoints as to the veracity of news reporting” and “adherence to journalistic standards or ethics.”

In its press release announcing the final Consent Order, the FTC stated that it revised the order “in response to public comments.” But the only public comments advocating such censure came from Newsmax and groups it funds…

The complaint notes, somewhat dryly, that First Amendment scholars and free speech organizations had also submitted comments pointing out how the proposed order was unconstitutional. But somehow, Ferguson and the FTC ignored those. The only change they made seemed to be the one Newsmax and friends demanded: the punishment of NewsGuard for its First Amendment-protected speech.

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So let’s be clear about what happened here: A news organization that gives ratings to other news organizations gave a bad rating to Newsmax based on its own criteria. (Shocking, I know, given Newsmax’s sterling commitment to journalistic standards.) Newsmax complained to the government. The government then used its regulatory power to (1) launch a burdensome fishing expedition designed to bleed NewsGuard financially, and (2) literally prohibit a major potential customer from doing business with NewsGuard.

This is textbook First Amendment retaliation. The government is using its regulatory power to punish a private company for expressing opinions it disagrees with.

And Chairman Ferguson hasn’t exactly been coy about his intentions. Even before becoming FTC chair, he was publicly stating that the FTC should use its “tremendous array of investigative tools” and “coercive power” to get companies to “Do what we say.” As the complaint notes:

In an April 2025 interview, Chairman Ferguson explained how the FTC could use its “tremendous array of investigative tools” and “coercive power—formal and informal” to demand compliance to its views about supposed online “censorship.” Ferguson laid out a roadmap of the tactics his FTC would ultimately use against NewsGuard: “The regulators can show up, they can audit, they can investigate, they can cost you a lot of money, and the path of least resistance is: ‘Do what we say’.”

And:

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Ferguson’s comments are similar to not-so-veiled threats by FCC Chairman Carr about Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night comedy monologue mentioning Charlie Kirk, which the administration found objectionable. Carr stated that ABC and its affiliates had to “find ways to change conduct and take action … on Kimmel or there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead,” and “we can do this the easy way or the hard way.”

This is the “free speech” party. This is what they mean by free speech: the freedom to agree with them, or face the consequences, brought to you mob-style.

The legal case here seems pretty straightforward. The DC Circuit already ruled last year, in the somewhat similar Media Matters case, that the FTC’s similar investigation of that organization was “a government campaign of retaliation” that was “infringing exercise of their First Amendment rights.” The district court in DC has already granted a preliminary injunction halting the FTC’s investigation of Media Matters.

NewsGuard’s case involves basically the same playbook. Government officials publicly expressed hostility to NewsGuard’s speech. Then they launched an investigation with demands far beyond any legitimate regulatory purpose. Then they used their merger review authority to directly prohibit companies from doing business with NewsGuard.

The Supreme Court was unanimous in the Vullo case in 2024 that government officials can’t “coerce a private party to punish or suppress disfavored speech on her behalf.” Using merger conditions to blacklist a company because you don’t like its journalism is exactly that.

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It’s genuinely good to see NewsGuard fight back here. I’ve been somewhat critical of NewsGuard’s methodology in the past, but their right to express their opinions about news sources is protected speech, full stop. The government doesn’t get to punish them because some of those opinions hurt the feelings of conservative media outlets. (Also, as I always point out, NewsGuard was founded by the former publisher of the Wall Street Journal, the idea that he’s some “woke leftist” trying to suppress “conservative” news orgs is silly on its face).

And, honestly, this case reveals just how absurd the whole “censorship industrial complex” narrative has always been. The actual censorship happening here isn’t NewsGuard expressing opinions about news quality. It’s the government using its regulatory power to punish NewsGuard for expressing those opinions.

As the complaint aptly notes:

By accusing NewsGuard of providing “biased” evaluations of news sites, Chairman Ferguson has inverted the relationship between the government and the First Amendment. NewsGuard is a private business that offers assessments of the quality of news sites based on disclosed journalistic criteria. As a matter of law, NewsGuard cannot be a censor. But by asserting FTC control over the market for NewsGuard’s services, Chairman Ferguson has embraced the censor’s role

That’s exactly right. The government using its power to punish private companies for expressing opinions is censorship. Private companies expressing opinions is not.

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Filed Under: 1st amendment, andrew ferguson, antitrust, censorship, ftc, investigation, news ratings, opinions

Companies: newsguard, newsmax, omnicom

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McCoy Tyner Quartet’s 1991 “New York Reunion” Album Reemerges on 2LP Pink One Step Pressed 180-gram Vinyl: Review

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A 180-gram “one step” vinyl reissue of a 1991 release from noted audiophile label Chesky Records featuring jazz legends McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Ron Carter and Al Foster is a good reason to celebrate music and life. It is a reminder of why great recordings and great players still matter.

The performances within New York Reunion are lush, relaxed and overall exemplary, capturing iconic seasoned musicians in an intimate studio setting with then state of the art recording technology. On the album cover, it states that the album was “recorded using a specially modified microphone with all tube Manley Reference electronics by David Manley from Vacuum Tube Logic Of America”  It goes on to say that it was “recorded with minimalist techniques and without overdubbing or artificial enhancement to ensure the purest and most natural sound possible.”

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Crafted using the increasingly popular “one step” process, which reduces the number of plating stages required to press a record and can improve overall fidelity, this reissue comes with a strong technical pedigree. The opaque pink vinyl pressing is generally quiet, well centered, and free of obvious surface issues.

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This is a fine sounding all-digital recording of outstanding musicians playing together effortlessly. Perhaps too effortlessly at times. Feel wise, I’m reminded at points of those later period Oscar Peterson CDs on Telarc which at times sounded somehow too pristine and spotless for my tastes (and I say this as a pretty deep Peterson fan). Yet there are no doubt many lovely performances throughout New York Reunion such as Mr. Henderson’s extended solo sax intro (and outro) on Side 3’s “Ask Me Now” before Mr. Tyner comes in for an extended duet essentially.

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Generally, I’ve enjoyed New York Reunion. My only question (not a complaint) is whether this pressing might have benefitted from some more empathetic mastering for vinyl? Don’t get me wrong, it sounds good: clean, crisp, and natural. I just wish it leaned a touch warmer. That said, considering the explicit commitment to avoiding “artificial enhancement” which would include equalization, this feels like one of those “it is what it is” scenarios.

Based on available online information, this new 2LP limited edition of 2,000 copies appears to mark the first time the complete New York Reunion album—all eight tracks originally issued on a single CD in 1992—has been released on vinyl. Earlier vinyl editions from 1992 and 2016 do exist, but those appear to have been single LP versions rather than the full 2LP presentation.

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At the time of this review The McCoy Tyner Quartet’s New York Reunion can be found easily on Amazon. I have not seen any indication of whether a standard (and perhaps less pricey) black vinyl edition will be available in the future.

Where to buy: $69.98 at Amazon

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Mark Smotroff is a deep music enthusiast / collector who has also worked in entertainment oriented marketing communications for decades supporting the likes of DTS, Sega and many others. He reviews vinyl for Analog Planet and has written for Audiophile Review, Sound+Vision, Mix, EQ, etc.  You can learn more about him at LinkedIn.)

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If you want a transparent iPhone Air with a SIM slot, it'll cost you

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A transparent iPhone Air with a working SIM slot looked like a hardware hack for the ages, but it also showed exactly what got sacrificed when factory design margins disappeared.

Close-up transparent smartphone back showing internal components, including a large camera lens, flash module, circuit boards, screws, and metallic parts arranged symmetrically against a dark backgroundiPhone Air

In a new video, YouTuber Linzin took viewers on a 22-minute journey through Huaqiangbei, China’s famous electronics market. There, technicians worked their magic by laser-stripping the rear glass of an iPhone Air for a see-through effect.
They didn’t stop there and milled space for a SIM slot directly into the frame. They also handled delicate board-level microsoldering to make the eSIM-only iPhone Air work with a physical SIM card.
The modified phone powered on, connected to a carrier, and worked just fine. It did run hotter under load and lost its water resistance.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums

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HiBy W4 is Portable Bluetooth DAC Amp for only $99

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HiBy might not have household recognition in the U.S., but the company isn’t exactly new to this game. With 15 years of experience building digital audio players and portable electronics, and a HiByMusic app ecosystem that spans 100 countries with more than 3 million users on iOS and Android, the brand has quietly built serious infrastructure behind the scenes. Now it’s aiming a little more directly at the portable DAC and headphone amplifier crowd with the release of the HiBy W4.

The W4 is a Bluetooth enabled portable DAC and headphone amplifier designed to handle both wired and wireless hi resolution playback in one compact chassis. That matters because the appetite for Bluetooth capable DAC and headphone amps that can properly decode hi res formats and deliver enough output for modern IEMs and reasonably efficient headphones continues to grow. We saw that firsthand with the iFi GO Blu Air, which impressed us with its balance of sound quality, usable power, and everyday practicality.

hiby-w4-portable-bluetooth-amp-iems

HiBy’s pitch with the W4 is similar in concept: fashionable industrial design, dual mode operation, and enough decoding and amplification muscle to make streaming from a smartphone feel less like a compromise and more like a system choice. Whether it can stand out in an increasingly competitive under $250 portable hi-fi segment is the real question.

The HiBy W4 features a flexible physical design that supports both clip on use and magnetic attachment for on the go listening. Its integrated magnetic system allows it to attach directly to compatible smartphones or MagSafe style phone cases, functioning much like a MagSafe accessory for a cleaner, cable managed setup.

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Uncharge Mode switch

The W4’s Uncharge Mode shifts the power source to USB operation, isolating the unit from the connected smartphone so it does not draw from the phone’s battery. In addition to preserving battery life, this separation can also help reduce electrical interference from the handset.

The W4 includes a built in 1500 mAh battery to support extended playback sessions, and Uncharge Mode is engaged using a dedicated button located on the left side of the chassis.

On the inside, the HiBy W4 has dual Cirrus Logic CS43198  DAC chips, paired with dual headphone amplifiers. The DACs support PCM up to 768kHz/32-bit and native DSD512. 

The HiBy W4 employs dual low phase noise active crystal oscillators operating at 45.1584 MHz and 49.152 MHz to support more accurate clocking and stable audio playback across common sampling rates.

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Connectivity includes both 3.5 mm single ended and 4.4 mm balanced stereo outputs. In balanced mode, the W4 delivers up to 475 mW of output power, driven by dual SGM8262 amplifier chips. That is a substantial figure for a device in this category and nearly double the balanced 4.4 mm output we measured from the iFi GO Blu Air. It provides enough headroom for a wide range of in ear monitors and many relatively efficient over ear headphones, giving the W4 more flexibility than ultra sensitive IEM duty alone.

For wireless performance, the HiBy W4 incorporates a Qualcomm QCC5181 chipset, supporting Bluetooth 5.4, with codec support for Snapdragon Sound, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, aptX HD, LDAC, AAC, and SBC.

The HiBy W4 is positioned as a stylish everyday carry accessory, pairing a black front display with a contrasting, brightly colored rear module that makes it stand out at a glance.

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A 2-inch touch screen provides full device control and can display album artwork when operating in Bluetooth mode. Users can manage pairing, playback, and system settings directly from the W4 itself, reducing the need to constantly reach for a smartphone and creating a more self contained, user friendly experience.

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HiBy W4 Specifications

HiBy Model  W4
Product Type Portable HiFi Bluetooth Headphone Amplifier
Price $99
Body Materials  Aluminum Alloy + ABS
Bluetooth Chip QCC5181
DAC Dual CS43198
Supported Audio Specifications DSD512, PCM 768kHz
Bluetooth Version 5.4
Bluetooth Codec Support aptX Adaptive,aptX lossless, aptX-HD, aptX, LDAC, AAC, SBC
Bluetooth Range 10 Meters
USB Input Yes
Control Methods Touch Screen, Physical Buttons, Voice Prompt
Headphone Jacks 3.5mm (CTIA Standard)

4.4mm Balanced Jack

Microphone  Supported via 3.5mm Headphone Jack
cVc Noise Reduction Supported via 3.5mm Headphone Jack
Remote Control Supported via 3.5mm Headphone Jack
NFC (Near Field Communication) Yes
Power Follow Mode Yes
Battery Capacity 1500 mAh
Battery Life 3.5mm: 6.3 hours

4.4mm: 5 hours

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Continuous AAC Playback

Dimensions (excluding clip) 66.15 x 65.1 x 21.5 mm

2.06 x 2.56 x 0.85 inches

Weight  93.3 Grams / 3 ounces
Color Options White, Orange, Cyan, Black, Yellow, Green

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The Bottom Line 

There is no shortage of portable Bluetooth-enabled DAC/AMPs, and the category now stretches from basic sub-$100 dongles to feature-heavy models approaching $1,000. At $99, the HiBy W4 lands at the aggressive low end of that spectrum but brings a feature set that is not typical at this price.

Support for aptX Lossless and LDAC gives it legitimate hi-res wireless credibility, while dual oscillators, balanced 4.4mm output rated at up to 475mW, and a built-in 1500mAh battery push it beyond entry-level expectations. The integrated 2-inch touch screen also sets it apart from competitors like the iFi GO Blu Air, which relies entirely on a smartphone for visual feedback and navigation. Some listeners may prefer controlling everything from their phone anyway, especially when switching between streaming platforms, but the W4 at least gives users the option of direct, on-device control without guesswork.

Add in the magnetic MagSafe-style attachment, clip-on portability, and a Car-Optimized Mode accessible through the HiByBlue app, and the W4 starts to look less like a budget experiment and more like a calculated move into the mainstream portable hi-fi space.

Who is this for? Smartphone listeners who want true hi-res Bluetooth support, enough power for serious IEMs and efficient headphones, and a self-contained interface without spending several hundred dollars. At $99, it is positioned squarely for commuters, students, travelers, and anyone building a compact everyday-carry audio setup without sacrificing codec support or balanced output. That is a hard combination to ignore at this price.

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Price & Availability

The HiBy W4 is available for $99 USD via HiBy’s official online store and Linsoul.

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Inexpensive MacBook is the perfect way to get users deeper into the Apple ecosystem

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Apple’s low-cost MacBook will fill a long-standing gap in its lineup — and bring a new wave of users into the ecosystem.

Seven colorful Apple laptops arranged in a circular fan, each partially open, showing different pastel colors including blue, green, yellow, pink, purple, and gold on a white background
An AppleInsider rendition of what a multi-colored MacBook ad spot could look like

March 4 marks Apple’s next big announcement day, which it plans to celebrate with three invite-only “experiences” in London, Shanghai, and New York City. If you follow the rumors and speculation, you’ll know that Apple’s allegedly getting ready to add a new, lower-priced MacBook back into its lineup.
I, personally, think this is a brilliant move. Apple could really expand its Mac audience, and here’s why.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums

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Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Feb. 22

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Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? For me, 4-Down was a puzzler, but the other answers filled it in. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.

If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

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Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword

Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.

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The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for Feb. 22, 2026.

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NYT/Screenshot by CNET

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Soybeans or rice
Answer: CROP

5A clue: Bit of gossip
Answer: RUMOR

7A clue: South American flatbread made of ground maize
Answer: AREPA

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8A clue: ___ 8 Ball
Answer: MAGIC

9A clue: Something a pirate might make you walk
Answer: PLANK

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Sudden muscle tightness
Answer: CRAMP

2D clue: Like the areas beyond suburbia
Answer: RURAL

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3D clue: Luxury Swiss watch brand
Answer: OMEGA

4D clue: Stop by unannounced
Answer: POPIN

6D clue: Billiards triangle
Answer: RACK

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Meta inks deal to use millions of Nvidia chips for data centres

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Meta plans to spend up to $135bn this year to support its Meta Superintelligence Labs efforts as well as its core business.

Meta will reportedly spend billions of dollars on a multi-year partnership with Nvidia to use “millions” of its chips to support Meta’s data centre build-out, the two companies announced yesterday (17 February).

Commenting on the deal, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang said that no other company deploys AI at Meta’s scale.

The announcement comes as the social media giant gears up to spend as much as $135bn this year to support its Meta Superintelligence Labs efforts as well as its core business, while competing chipmakers attempt to challenge Nvidia’s global dominance in AI.

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Even Nvidia’s Big Tech customers, including Meta and OpenAI, are building their own in-house hardware.

As per the mega deal, Meta will deploy millions of Nvidia Blackwell and new Rubin GPUs to build “hyperscale” data centres optimised for both AI training and inference.

The company will also integrate Nvidia’s recently-announced Spectrum-X ethernet switches for Meta’s Facebook open switching system platform, and expand its usage of Nvidia’s confidential computing services beyond WhatsApp and into other offerings.

The companies said they will continue their partnership to deploy Arm-based Nvidia Grace CPUs for Meta’s data centre production applications, representing the first large-scale Nvidia Grace-only deployment.

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They are also collaborating to deploy Nvidia’s Vera CPUs, with the potential for large-scale deployment next year. Meta is also tapping Nvidia’s GB300-based systems to continue developing its data centres.

It was reported yesterday that Nvidia sold off the last of its stake in Arm – a company it once tried to acquire. Last September, Huang announced a “giant” $100bn deal with OpenAI that has apparently not yet transpired.

“No one deploys AI at Meta’s scale – integrating frontier research with industrial-scale infrastructure to power the world’s largest personalisation and recommendation systems for billions of users,” said Huang.

“Through deep co-design across CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, we are bringing the full Nvidia platform to Meta’s researchers and engineers as they build the foundation for the next AI frontier.”

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Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg added: “We’re excited to expand our partnership with Nvidia to build leading-edge clusters using their Vera Rubin platform to deliver personal superintelligence to everyone in the world.”

Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.

Jensen Huang, World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, 2026. Image: World Economic Forum/Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

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NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, February 22 (game #721)

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Looking for a different day?

A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Saturday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Saturday, February 21 (game #719).

Strands is the NYT’s latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it’s great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.

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Sam Altman would like remind you that humans use a lot of energy, too

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman addressed concerns about AI’s environmental impact this week while speaking at an event hosted by The Indian Express.

For one thing, Altman — who was in India for a major AI summit — said concerns about AI’s water usage are “totally fake,” though he acknowledged it was a real issue when “we used to do evaporative cooling in data centers.”

“Now that we don’t do that, you see these things on the internet where, ‘Don’t use ChatGPT, it’s 17 gallons of water for each query’ or whatever,” Altman said. “This is completely untrue, totally insane, no connection to reality.”

He added that it’s “fair” to be concerned about “the energy consumption — not per query, but in total, because the world is now using so much AI.” In his view, this means the world needs to “move towards nuclear or wind and solar very quickly.”

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There’s no legal requirement for tech companies to disclose how much energy and water they use, so scientists have been trying to study it independently. Data centers have also been connected to rising electricity prices.

Citing a previous conversation with Bill Gates, the interviewer asked whether it’s accurate to say a single ChatGPT query currently uses the equivalent of 1.5 iPhone battery charges, to which Altman replied, “There’s no way it’s anything close to that much.”

Altman also complained that many discussions about ChatGPT’s energy usage are “unfair,” especially when they focus on “how much energy it takes to train an AI model, relative to how much it costs a human to do one inference query.”

Techcrunch event

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Boston, MA
|
June 9, 2026

“But it also takes a lot of energy to train a human,” Altman said. “It takes like 20 years of life and all of the food you eat during that time before you get smart. And not only that, it took the very widespread evolution of the 100 billion people that have ever lived and learned not to get eaten by predators and learned how to figure out science and whatever, to produce you.”

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So in his view, the fair comparison is, “If you ask ChatGPT a question, how much energy does it take once its model is trained to answer that question versus a human? And probably, AI has already caught up on an energy efficiency basis, measured that way.”

You can watch the full interview below. The conversation about water and energy usage begins at around 26:35.

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Quieting Noisy Resistors | Hackaday

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[Hans Rosenberg] has a new video talking about a nasty side effect of using resistors: noise. If you watch the video below, you’ll learn that there are two sources of resistor noise: Johnson noise, which doesn’t depend on the construction of the resistor, and 1/f noise, which does vary depending on the material and construction of the resistor.

In simple terms, some resistors use materials that cause electron flow to take different paths through the resistor. That means that different parts of the signal experience slightly different resistance values. In simple applications, it won’t matter much, but in places where noise is an important factor, the 1/f or excess noise contributes more  to errors than the Johnson noise at low frequencies.

[Hans] doesn’t just talk the math. He also built a simple test rig that lets him measure the 1/f noise with some limitations. While you might pretend that all resistors are the same, the test shows that thick film resistors produce much more noise than other types.

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The video shows some rule-of-thumb lists indicating which resistors have better noise figures than others. Of course, resistors are only one source of noise in circuits. But they are so common that it is easy to forget they aren’t as perfect as we pretend in our schematics.

Want to learn more about noise? We can help. On the other hand, noise isn’t always a bad thing.

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Intel reportedly eyeing Nova Lake-S Ultra processors for next year

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Intel’s long-term desktop roadmap may be moving faster than expected. New leaks suggest the company is already preparing its Nova Lake-S Core Ultra Series 4 processors, with a possible launch window shifting closer than earlier rumors indicated. According to reliable leaksters HXL and Golden Pig Upgrade, Intel’s next major desktop CPU family could arrive around CES 2027, potentially landing sooner than previous roadmaps suggested. That would position Nova Lake as Intel’s next big step after the current Arrow Lake and Panther Lake generations.

Nova Lake is expected to represent a significant architectural jump. The chips are rumored to use Intel’s next-generation CPU cores alongside new integrated graphics and stronger AI acceleration. The architecture is expected to combine Coyote Cove performance cores and Arctic Wolf efficiency cores, continuing Intel’s hybrid CPU design approach.

Additionally, the upcoming platform may also introduce a major hardware shift for desktop builders. Leaks point to a brand-new LGA 1954 socket and 900-series chipsets, meaning future CPUs will likely require new motherboards. This kind of platform reset usually signals a bigger generational change rather than a simple refresh.

A major platform shift could be coming

If these rumors prove accurate, Nova Lake could bring more than just faster CPUs. Reports suggest the platform may offer up to 48 PCIe lanes, improved cache design, and stronger integrated graphics powered by Intel’s next-gen Xe architecture. There are also expectations of a new NPU designed to push AI performance further, reflecting the industry’s growing focus on AI-accelerated workloads. This timeline also fits into the broader CPU race, as AMD is reportedly preparing its own next-generation desktop chips around the same period.

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For PC enthusiasts, the takeaway is fairly simple. A major platform shift could be on the horizon, and the next wave of desktop CPUs may bring bigger changes than usual. If a long-term PC build is on the cards, keeping an eye on Intel’s roadmap over the next year might be a smart move. After all, component prices don’t look ready to calm down anytime soon, so waiting could mean better performance and more time to save up for it.

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