Security teams log 54% of successful attacks and alert on just 14%. The rest move through your environment unseen.
The Picus whitepaper shows how breach and attack simulation tests your SIEM and EDR rules so threats stop slipping by detection.

The list of potential buyers for the Seattle Seahawks is starting to look like an NFL Pro Bowl roster of billionaires, venture capitalists and global business leaders.
Billionaire financier Todd Boehly is the latest high-profile name linked to the franchise, according to a report from Semafor, joining a field of prospective bidders that reportedly includes venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, steel executive Aditya Mittal and former Boston Celtics majority owner Wyc Grousbeck.
Boehly, the chairman and CEO of Eldridge Industries, is best known in sports circles for ownership stakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Lakers, Chelsea FC and the Los Angeles Sparks. Before launching Eldridge, he helped build the credit-investing business at Guggenheim Partners.
The Seahawks could fetch as much as $9 billion, a price tag that would eclipse the $6 billion sale of the Washington Commanders in 2023 and set a new record for an NFL franchise.
The Seahawks are being sold by the estate of late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, following instructions in his estate plan directing that his sports holdings ultimately be sold and the proceeds used for philanthropic purposes. In February, Allen’s estate formally listed the Seahawks for sale, shortly after the franchise captured its second Super Bowl title.
Among the other reported bidders is Khosla, the Sun Microsystems co-founder, founder of Khosla Ventures and an early backer of OpenAI, DoorDash and Stripe. Khosla — who also owns a small slice of the San Francisco 49ers — reportedly submitted a letter of intent as part of the bidding process.
Khosla spoke in Seattle last year, saying at the time: “I have found that the person who learns faster is way better at building businesses than the person who is a deep expert.” His firm has backed Seattle-area startups including Loti, Mudstack, Viome and Lexion, which was acquired by Docusign in 2024. It is also an investor in Seattle’s AI2 Incubator.
The Seahawks sale is shaping up as one of the largest ownership transfers in professional sports history, attracting investors from Wall Street, Silicon Valley, international industry and private equity.
For Seattle’s technology community, the process marks the beginning of a new era.
Since purchasing the team in 1997, Allen helped transform the Seahawks into one of the NFL’s premier franchises.
Formal bids are expected in the coming weeks, according to Semafor.
“Anthropic said on Friday it will ‘abruptly disable’ its most advanced AI models for all users,”
reports Reuters, “after the U.S. government ordered it to suspend access to the models for foreign nationals, citing national security concerns. The company received the export control directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all foreign nationals, without being given specific details of its national security concern, Anthropic said in a statement.”
Anthropic’s blog post writes that the directive applies to foreign nationals “whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance.”
“Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected.”
We received the directive from the government today at 5:21pm (ET)… Our understanding is that the government believes it has become aware of a method of bypassing, or “jailbreaking” Fable 5… We have not even received a disclosure of a concerning non-universal potential jailbreak that led to a harmful result. The potential jailbreaks that have been disclosed to us are either entirely benign responses or are minor findings that provide no Mythos-specific uplift.
To date, the government has only given us verbal evidence of a potential narrow, non-universal jailbreak, which essentially consists of asking the model to read a specific codebase and fix any software flaws. Our understanding is that one potential jailbreak was shared with the government. We have reviewed a report that we believe is the basis of the government’s directive and validated that the level of capability displayed there is widely available from other models (including OpenAI’s GPT-5.5), and is used every day by the defenders who keep systems safe… We are complying with the government’s legal directive and are removing access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all users. However, we disagree that the finding of a narrow potential jailbreak should be cause for recalling a commercial model deployed to hundreds of millions of people. If this standard was applied across the industry, we believe it would essentially halt all new model deployments for all frontier model providers.
As we have stated publicly, we believe the government should have the ability to block unsafe deployments, as part of a statutory process that is transparent, fair, clear, and grounded in technical facts. This action does not adhere to those principles. We apologize for this disruption to our customers. We believe this is a misunderstanding and are working to restore access as soon as possible.
Reuters notes that Amazon’s cloud unit AWS “said late on Friday that Anthropic has asked it to revoke access to the models for ‘all users in all regions.’”
Dean Ball, a former White House official who contributed to the AI Action Plan the administration issued in the summer of 2025, said in a post on X that the order suggests all “non-Americans” would be restricted from using Anthropic’s latest models, including those based in the U.S. “This means you should expect to have to prove your citizenship to use Anthropic models,” Ball said.
Several key Anthropic personnel, including co-founder Chris Olah, AI researcher Andrej Karpathy and philosopher Amanda Askell, were born outside the United States.
When does a 65-inch 4K QLED television with Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and a full smart TV platform built in stop being a compromise purchase and start being one of the more straightforward deals of the summer?
The Insignia 65-inch QLED Fire TV is down from $499.99 to $299.99, a saving of $200 on a panel that brings Quantum Dot color technology to a screen size that would have cost significantly more to fill at this picture quality just a few years ago.
You can now pick up an Insignia 65‑inch QLED Fire TV for less than $300, making it a standout bargain for the soccer world cup
At just $299.99, the Insignia 65-inch QLED is a television that punches well above its weight in streaming, sport, and movies.

Quantum Dot sits behind every image here, pushing brightness and color saturation beyond what standard LED panels deliver at this price, and Dolby Vision support means HDR content arrives with the kind of contrast and fine detail that the format was designed to show off.
That picture quality carries naturally into sport, where the 4K resolution and direct LED backlight keep fast-moving sequences clean and evenly lit across the full width of the frame, which matters on a 65-inch panel where uneven brightness becomes more visible the larger the screen gets.
Fire TV is the operating system running underneath all of it, giving instant access to Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+, Hulu, Apple TV+, Sling TV, and YouTube alongside live sports and over 500,000 streaming titles without needing an external device plugged into the back.


Alexa is built into the remote, so searching across all of those services, checking scores during half-time, or switching inputs happens by voice rather than by navigating menus, which proves genuinely useful when the Insignia 65-inch QLED Fire TV is the centre of a room that more than one person is watching.
Apple AirPlay support adds flexibility for anyone outside the Amazon ecosystem, and up to six individual user profiles mean different members of the household can keep their own watchlists and recommendations without crossing over into each other’s viewing history.
With a 60Hz refresh rate rather than 120Hz, fast-paced gaming at high frame rates is the one area where the Insignia 65-inch QLED Fire TV asks for a little patience, but for movies, sport, and streaming it comfortably punches above what $299.99 usually buys.
If the question at the start of the summer is how to get the most screen for the least money before the World Cup kicks off, is there a more compelling answer than this right now?
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If you have ever typed two letters into the Windows 11 search box, paused, and watched nothing useful happen until you added more characters, you already know exactly why this Windows 11 update matters.
Microsoft’s June 2026 Patch Tuesday update, part of a release Windows Latest calls the biggest of the year (via Windows Latest), quietly fixes that. Windows Search can now find and prioritize files with as few as two characters, down from the old three-character minimum.

Before this update, typing two letters from the file name didn’t do anything useful. You had to add a third or more characters before Windows even started looking. Even then, your file could get buried under web results and app suggestions.
Now, typing two characters is enough to trigger a meaningful search. The update also improves how results are ranked, so your actual file shows up near the top instead of getting lost beneath links and Copilot suggestions.

Most of us name files with short, practical labels. Personally, dealing with a couple dozen files on a daily basis, I often name them with a couple of characters like Q3 or V2, exactly the kind of names that used to be functionally invisible to search.
One fewer required character sounds small at first, but it removes a tiny, constant friction that builds up every single time you search for something on your PC. It is the kind of fix that feels obvious only once you have it, one that should have shipped years ago.
This change ships in KB5094126 for Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2.
The Helios Horizon has completed what its developers call the first crewed, fixed-wing flight powered by solid-state batteries. New Atlas reports: On June 5, test pilot Miguel Iturmendi lifted off from Zephyrhills Municipal Airport in Florida at the controls of the Helios Horizon — the first crewed, fixed-wing aircraft ever to fly on solid-state batteries. The flight was neither spectacular in distance nor in duration — it was a series of short tests to validate the aircraft’s weight and balance after the new batteries had been installed — but it didn’t need to be to make history. […] The Helios Horizon’s previous lithium-ion pack delivered 260 Wh/kg (watt-hours per kilogram, a measure of how much energy a battery holds relative to its weight). The new solid-state cells hit 410 Wh/kg, a 60% jump. Chief test pilot and company founder Miguel Iturmendi expects that figure to grow another 40% within two years.
Though the battery pack can be topped up over any AC outlet, no special infrastructure needed, fast-charging is also supported for up to 80% capacity in under 15 minutes. The aircraft also recovers energy in flight through wing-mounted solar panels and a regenerative system that spins the propeller as a wind turbine during glides and descents. “Regenerative flight can significantly extend the aircraft’s range,” Iturmendi said after the test flights.
The Helios Horizon itself started life as a Pipistrel Taurus motorized glider. Iturmendi’s team added proprietary battery management, a custom propulsion stack, thermodynamic controls, and solar panel wing extensions. The aircraft already holds the world altitude record for electric planes in its weight class, having reached 24,000 ft (7,315 m). The next goal is 40,000 ft (12,192 m), commercial cruising altitude, in stratospheric flights planned for later this year.
Anthropic has suspended access to its two most capable AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, for all users worldwide after the US government issued an export control directive ordering the company to block access by any foreign national.
The directive, which Anthropic says it received at 5:21pm ET on June 12, cites “national security” authorities and bars access to both models by foreign nationals inside or outside the United States, including Anthropic’s own foreign-national employees.
The order’s net effect, the company says, is that it must disable both models for all customers to comply. All other Anthropic models, including Claude Opus 4.8, are unaffected.
The timing is awkward. Anthropic began rolling out Fable 5 on June 9, free to all Pro, Max, and Enterprise customers through June 22. The model handed to millions for free three days ago is now offline for everyone.

Fable 5 is the safeguarded sibling of Mythos 5. Both share the same underlying model, but Fable adds the safeguards.
Fable blocks or diverts sensitive cybersecurity, biology, and chemistry queries, while the unrestricted Mythos 5 goes only to vetted government cyberdefenders and life sciences partners.
In a developer notice, Anthropic said new sessions would fall back to a user’s default model or Opus 4.8, existing Fable 5 sessions would end with an error, and Platform requests to Fable 5 would also fail. It told integrators to migrate to other models.
UK’s Minister for AI and Online Safety, Kanishka Narayan MP, said the pause affected customers in both the US and UK, framing it as a case for technological sovereignty and pointing to the government’s £1.1bn AI chip investment.

Anthropic’s read is that the order stems from a reported way to jailbreak Fable 5. It says it reviewed a demo and found only minor, already-known bugs, the kind other publicly-available models are able to discover without any bypass.
“To date, the government has only given us verbal evidence of a potential narrow, non-universal jailbreak, which essentially consists of asking the model to read a specific codebase and fix any software flaws,” states Anthropic.
“Our understanding is that one potential jailbreak was shared with the government.”
“We are complying with the government’s legal directive and are removing access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all users. However, we disagree that the finding of a narrow potential jailbreak should be cause for recalling a commercial model deployed to hundreds of millions of people.”
“If this standard was applied across the industry, we believe it would essentially halt all new model deployments for all frontier model providers.”
The company says the capability is widely available elsewhere, pointing to OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, and is used by defenders every day.
Anthropic maintains the order is a misunderstanding and says it is working to restore access, while promising more details within 24 hours.
Security teams log 54% of successful attacks and alert on just 14%. The rest move through your environment unseen.
The Picus whitepaper shows how breach and attack simulation tests your SIEM and EDR rules so threats stop slipping by detection.
Every year, Apple unveils the latest version of iOS with the kind of polish and fanfare you’d expect from one of the biggest tech companies on the planet.
And this year is no different, with WWDC 2026 playing host not only to the reveal of iOS 27 but also to the much-anticipated Siri AI, finally bringing GenAI smarts to iPhone that can compete with the Android competition.
It’s undoubtedly a big update for Apple, but for all the attention it’s paying to flashy new AI-powered features, some of the most frustrating parts of the iPhone experience still feel stubbornly untouched – elements that, in places, I’ve been complaining about for nearly a decade.
So yes, iOS 27 might be a huge upgrade – but as ever, I’m still waiting for Apple to fix the obvious stuff.
I’m going to say it; I absolutely detest app badges on iPhone.
Those big, bright buttons with numbers on them cause nothing but added stress, insinuating there’s something I need to do or see, especially when badges on multiple apps slowly take over my home screen and folders. The FOMO instantly kicks in, as annoying as it is.


It’s also very distracting when I unlock my phone to do something specifically. If I see a little ‘1’ on the WhatsApp app, I’m going to open it, see who has sent me a message, and likely get sidetracked. It’s a basic psychological trick – one that I want to opt out of.
The problem? You can only disable badges on an app-by-app basis, and with hundreds of apps on my iPhone, that’d take hours. Why isn’t there an option to globally disable badges? It has been available on most Android skins for years now, after all.
In fact, I want Apple to go even further and basically just copy how Android handles notifications and badges because, well, it just makes a lot of sense. On Android, notifications in the notification shade are directly tied to app badges, so if you decide a notification is unworthy of your time and attention and clear it from the shade, the associated app badge also disappears.


On iPhone, clearing a notification won’t remove the badge – the only way to clear it is to open the app and read the message or notification that was delivered.
In an age when we’re all becoming more conscious of mindlessly scrolling through apps, visual distractions like this need to get in the sea.
But hey, at least Siri can write texts for you now, right?
Just under a decade ago, I managed to get my hands on Snapchat’s then-brand-new Spectacles – a pair of sunglasses with a built-in camera and mic to capture POV-style snaps and videos exclusively for Snapchat. Yes, Snap really was ahead of its time in that regard; it walked so Meta could run.
Anyway, after excitedly snapping photos and videos on an outing in Central London, I opened my iPhone 7 Plus to import and share them on my story. The problem? Apple didn’t support Wi-Fi Direct, which would let the phone and the glasses pair directly via Wi-Fi and provide much faster data transfer speeds.
Instead, I had to connect via Bluetooth and deal with slow speeds, or manually connect to the glasses’ Wi-Fi network in my iPhone’s Settings app.
As a result, it was much better as an Android accessory than an iPhone one, with Wi-Fi Direct support allowing for rapid transfer – and it’d also happen in the background without me triggering it myself.


What’s crazy about this is that, 10 years later, Apple still doesn’t support Wi-Fi Direct – and considering how many camera-equipped devices we use these days, from drones to action cameras and gimbal cameras to the aforementioned camera-enabled smart specs, that’s pretty unbelievable.
Instead, iOS users continue to rely on the much slower Bluetooth transfer speeds for moving videos between devices wirelessly – and I can’t help but wonder, why?
But hey, at least Siri can tell you what you’re looking at in iOS 27, right?
You know what, it’s not just the lack of Wi-Fi Direct support that irks me on the iPhone – it’s the Wi-Fi experience in general.
Apple spent a good few minutes patting itself on the back at WWDC, claiming that it’d fixed one of the biggest headaches of cellular and Wi-Fi connectivity – the time it takes to jump between the two. I mean, that’s great and all, but I wouldn’t have put that very high on my list of complaints.
What I would’ve loved Apple to fix instead was the iPhone’s handling of mesh Wi-Fi networks, because right now it’s pretty bad. I’ve had a couple of mesh Wi-Fi systems in my home over the past few years, and none of them have played well with any model of iPhone I’ve used – including the most recent iPhone 17 Pro.


When I move from one area of the home to another that requires a hop from one Wi-Fi node to another, there’s a period of time – sometimes close to a minute – when my iPhone swears it’s connected to full-signal Wi-Fi but doesn’t actually work.
It’s an absolute headache compared to using an Android where mesh Wi-Fi networks work as expected, hopping between nodes without a loss in connectivity. It’s easily one of the main reasons why I keep flitting between iPhone and Android for daily use – a small problem, yes, but one that gets very annoying, very quickly.
But hey, at least you can get Siri to make Shortcuts for you in iOS 27, right?
Apple handles background app usage in a completely different way than Android – while background apps can run on Android, those on iPhone are essentially frozen when not in active use to conserve battery.
It’s likely the reason why some people think that closing background iPhone apps will save battery life – when in reality, it’s the opposite, using more CPU power to totally re-open an app than would be used in its frozen state. But I digress.
While I do like Apple’s approach to background app use, as it doesn’t require the same manual management as on Android, it does make using accessories (particularly those not made by Apple) a bit of a headache.


Take my Fitbit Air for example; on Android, it’ll automatically sync with the Google Health app in the background and send me alerts and insights throughout the day, regardless of whether I’ve opened it or not. On iPhone? I have to open the app and manually sync the wearable before I can see what’s going on with my health and fitness.
It also applies to smart glasses, as I hinted at earlier; as well as using Wi-Fi Direct, camera-connected apps can also automatically import images and videos on Android – something you simply can’t do on iOS.
If Apple added a little button or a toggle to the multitasking menu to enable always-on background use, that’d be great – but that’s not on the roster for the big software update.
But hey, at least you can get Siri to let you know when websites change in iOS 27, right?
As you can probably tell, these aren’t complaints that have suddenly emerged with iOS 26; they’re long-standing flaws in iOS that chip away at the overall experience on offer, no matter how polished the rest of the software might look.
It’s great that Apple is finally doing a better job of matching the Android competition in the ever-competitive GenAI market, but really, it needs to put just as much effort into fixing these lingering usability issues and refining the core experience.
But hey, at least Siri looks better in iOS 27, right?
The company, founded in 2018, builds software infrastructure that aims to empower developers to use quantum computing to solve computational problems.
Irish-founded computing company Horizon Quantum has chosen Dublin as the site for establishing a testbed for its planned second quantum computer.
The company said locating the ‘IonQ’ 256-qubit system at its European headquarters would benefit the company and the country, noting “Ireland’s growing quantum ecosystem, strong university network and robust talent pool for deep-tech development, both within the country and across the EU”, and predicting that the installation of the “frontier system” would be a “significant technology milestone for the nation, positioning Ireland to play an increasingly prominent role in frontier quantum computing”.
Horizon Quantum, founded in 2018, builds software infrastructure that aims to empower developers to use quantum computing to solve computational problems. It said that IonQ’s sixth-generation, chip-based 256-qubit trapped-ion system could be among the most sophisticated quantum computers in the world.
“Expanding our hardware testbed to Ireland with the addition of a frontier system is a significant step forward for both our company in our mission to unlock broad quantum advantage and for the country in strengthening its quantum ecosystem,” said Horizon Quantum CEO and founder Dr Joe Fitzsimons.
“We are excited to extend our testbed capabilities to include a trapped-ion system by deploying this state-of-the-art quantum computer in Dublin.”
To oversee the establishment and management of its second quantum system, Horizon Quantum, which is based in Singapore, said it plans to expand its Irish-based science and engineering teams, and deepen engagement with Ireland’s quantum ecosystem through increased involvement with industry, academia and the local supply chain.
Minister for Enterprise, Tourism and Employment Peter Burke, TD said: “The establishment of one of the most advanced commercial quantum systems here is an important milestone that will support innovation, collaboration and economic growth, while further enhancing Ireland’s ambition to be a global hub for cutting-edge technologies.
“This also aligns with our strategic focus in Silicon Island – Ireland’s national semiconductor strategy – on harnessing opportunities in rapidly evolving fields, including quantum technologies.”
The company assembled and integrated the first quantum system in its hardware testbed, a multi-vendor superconducting system, at its Singapore headquarters in 2025.
It said that the expansion of its testbed facilities to its European headquarters with a “second, technologically distinct system” will help further its goal of delivering the “most capable hardware-agnostic tools for quantum software development”.
Michael Lohan, CEO of IDA Ireland, said: “Quantum development is an important strategic priority for IDA Ireland, and this announcement is a strong endorsement of Ireland’s growing technology ecosystem, our research capabilities and the talent available here.
“Horizon Quantum’s decision to invest in Ireland further strengthens our position in frontier technologies and will help support continued innovation and collaboration across the quantum sector.”
The company began trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange in March.
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As we near the halfway point in the second Trump presidential term, there’s something that is worth remembering: Donald Trump, like most nasty viruses, is a temporary condition. Trumpism may not be, though I have my doubts as to how long a cult of personality can survive without that specific personality leading the cult. But Donald Trump as president will come to an end in the not too distant future.
The millions and millions of people who have been negatively impacted by him and by those who have decided to bow at his cultish altar, are not temporary. They are not going to go away. And they will remember the actions of many during this time.
And I imagine the American Diabetes Association, and specifically those currently leading it, will be in the memories of its members and many others for a long, long time. It’s been nearly a week since the ADA had five diabetes scientists, including its own former president, involuntarily removed from outside the ADA’s annual conference by police. Their crime? Distributing a copy of an editorial from the April edition of the ADA’s own journal.
The scientists were distributing the editorial outside the conference’s opening speech, which was originally scheduled to be given by Jay Bhattacharya, head of the National Institutes of Health under Trump. Bhattacharya canceled at the last minute, and senior NIH official Rick Woychik took his place.
Within minutes of beginning to hand out the editorial, police reportedly escorted the scientists out of the conference, which was held in New Orleans. The police reportedly shoved at least one scientist, took all of their conference badges, and threatened to arrest them if they tried to return. Louisiana State Police later told media that they acted at the request of the ADA. The ADA subsequently barred the five scientists from the rest of the conference.
The editorial just so happened to be very critical of the Trump administration and RFK Jr.’s funding at NIH and other health agencies and groups. It’s quite obvious that the ADA feared repercussions from the Trump administration if it wouldn’t allow these scientists to hand the article out while members of the administration were speaking and tried to use the police to silence them. And then, when this whole thing went viral, the ADA offered up justifications for its actions. Justifications that kept changing, as it turns out.
In an email to ADA members Saturday, the association said the scientists were removed because they didn’t have prior approval to distribute material at the conference and that it was “not because of the viewpoints expressed in those materials,” according to reporting from Science.
In a statement Sunday, the organization, which is a nonprofit, said it removed the scientists because it was complying with federal regulations for 501(c)(3) nonprofits, which requires “maintaining a strictly nonpartisan environment at all organizational events and functions while engaging across party affiliations to advance our mission.” However, the federal regulations do not restrict leaders of organizations from sharing political views in a personal capacity or from speaking on important public policy issues.
And from there, the Streisand Effect took over. The editorial, which you can find right here, went somewhat viral itself, getting a ton more attention than it had to date. But the real backlash came from the public and from within the medical community itself. There have been resignations in protest of the ADA’s actions. An open letter to the ADA signed by 40 members was written to torch leadership’s actions and treatment of the scientists at the conference. Another open letter was also written, likewise demanding an apology.
And, finally, the ADA did in fact apologize days later.
In the video Wednesday, ADA CEO Charles Henderson personally apologized to the five scientists, including Aaron Kelly, pediatrics professor at the University of Minnesota; Justin Ryder of Northwestern University; and Irl Hirsch, also of the University of Washington, in addition to Kahn and Schatz.
“What transpired is not reflective of who I am, the values I hold, or the way I was raised,” Henderson said. “I will work hard to bring our community back together to build on the progress we have collectively made for those affected by diabetes.”
In addition to apologizing to the five ejected scientists, Henderson apologized to the community as a whole, saying that the ADA would commission a “thorough independent review of the events that occurred as well as the policies, procedures, and decision-making process that guided our actions.”
Yeah, no, not good enough. The fish stinks from the head down, as the saying goes, and there have been days worth of attempts to make this stupidity anyone’s fault but leadership at the ADA. This was a clear attempt to lick the Trump administration’s boots, at the very moment when clear leadership from medical groups is so sorely needed, and that’s a bell that cannot be un-rung.
Henderson needs to go. And I have little doubt that he will before too long. Trump and RFK Jr. will eventually be gone, as well.
But we won’t forget how groups like the ADA, and the people leading them, acted during this time.
Filed Under: free speech, jay bhattacharya, nih, protests, streisand effect
Companies: american diabetes association
There’s still the possibility of that Trump pardon.
A federal appeals court has upheld the fraud conviction of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, according to Reuters. Bankman-Fried was convicted of running one of the largest financial frauds in history, involving his crypto-exchange FTX. He was also convicted of money laundering and is currently in prison.
Judge Barrington Parker wrote in the appeals ruling that “the government’s evidence against him was, conservatively stated, robust.” Bankman-Fried and his team still have the option to bring the appeal to higher courts, including the Supreme Court.
All told, he faced seven charges and was found guilty of each and every one. The disgraced crypto mogul was sentenced to 25 years in prison back in 2024. Since that time, he’s been fighting to overturn the ruling in a variety of ways.
There’s the aforementioned appeal, which was just denied. Bankman-Fried is also seeking a re-trial on the grounds that new witness testimony could alter the case made against him by prosecutors. He seeks to represent himself in this re-trial, though it’s highly unlikely to happen.
He is also trying to play the card of every rich grifter forced to face the music: application for an official pardon from President Trump. The president suggested earlier this year that he wouldn’t pardon Bankman-Fried, but he also had to be reminded who he was. The status of his request is currently listed as “pending,” per the Department of Justice’s website.
The White House has been pretty free with pardons in the crypto space. Apropos of nothing, the Trump family has a crypto business of its own, which has netted the family over $2 billion since he took office in 2025. There’s no real way to see who has invested in Trump’s crypto memecoin.
President Trump has also been found liable for fraud in a New York court. Additionally, he has been indicted in federal court for conspiracy to defraud the United States and the Trump organization was convicted for a years-long scheme involving criminal tax fraud, defrauding investors and falsifying business records. Maybe Bankman-Fried will get that pardon under the little-known “game recognize game” provision.
From connected factory floors to automation and digital twins, ‘Industry 4.0’ refers to the future of manufacturing.
Ireland’s diverse manufacturing industry makes it the choice European location for a growing number of industrial and technology companies, according to IDA Ireland.
It does especially well in some sectors – medtech, automotives, aerospace and chemicals being a few examples – with its capacity only enhanced by a steady supply of skilled talent emerging from third-level institutions.
Meanwhile, a strong talent pipeline supported by grants and commercialisation support for research and innovation also allows Ireland to maintain its appeal as a global manufacturer.
From connected factory floors and industrial IoT to AI-powered automation and digital twins, ‘Industry 4.0’ is a phrase used to refer to the future of manufacturing. Here are seven Irish start-ups innovating on the factory floor.
This Galway start-up is a part of the prestigious Y Combinator accelerator programme behind the likes of Airbnb, Stripe and Uber.
Founded by CEO Eoin Cobbe and CTO Robert Cormican, Forge Robotics wants to tackle the rising threat of skilled welder shortages in manufacturing using intelligent automation.
The company makes an AI-powered intelligence layer that improves the welding capabilities of industrial robots. Its system allows robots to scan a part, interpret its geometry and execute welds even when the set-up is imperfect.
Headquartered in Dublin’s Dogpatch Labs, this Enterprise Ireland (EI) ‘High Potential Start-Up’ builds 3D visualisation and sustainability software for textile manufacturers and designers.
Gemell Technology aims for its technology to significantly reduce unnecessary fabric samples from ending up in landfills.
The company can generate photo-like digital models of yarns and fabrics, which manufacturers can tweak instead of ordering physical fabric samples. These 3D renders are generated with fabric textures originating from individual fibres.
Gemell claims that manufacturers that use its technology reduce unnecessary fabric samples and waste by 70pc, while getting products to market 11 weeks faster.
The company has offices in Dublin and London, and came in as the first runner-up at last year’s All-Island Circular Venture Awards – a competition that recognises late-stage start-ups across the island showcasing circular value propositions.
Last year, this Dublin-based space-tech secured its second contract to advance Earth’s planetary defence with the European Space Agency (ESA)’s Ramses mission.
The Rapid Apophis Mission for Space Safety – or Ramses – will rendezvous with asteroid 99942 Apophis, accompanying it during its extremely close but safe flyby of Earth in 2029.
InnaLabs’ gyroscope navigation system will be helping the ESA, the Italian aerospace engineering company OHB and the Spanish tech company GMV in the space mission scheduled for launch in April 2028.
The company’s technology solves complex navigation, stabilisation and guidance challenges within space, aerospace, land and marine markets.
Oscil provides data analytics support for the pharmaceutical and dairy sector. The company’s founder Dr Patrick Cronin won the EI Big Ideas award last year after contesting in a pitching battle against other pre-spin-out ventures emerging from EI’s Commercialisation Fund.
Speaking to SiliconRepublic.com, Cronin said that the “current rise in weight loss drugs [and] GLP-1s are driving huge investment in the protein market”, and that “Oscil can unlock a lot of capacity and quality in spray driers through edge sensing and machine learning to provide real-time process control”.
The company said it is seeking early adopters in the spray drying industry to improve production capacity and product quality.
This 2016-founded start-up captures, analyses and visualises performance indicators from the manufacturing, logistics and utility sectors using Industry 4.0 technology.
The company’s SaaS solutions, built on technology from hardware partners Siemens and Banner, help cut down on manufacturing downtime by identifying hidden losses in the production process.
It is based out of Nexus Innovation Centre at the University of Limerick.
This Dublin-based space-tech is a frequent collaborator with NASA and the ESA. Last month, it announced a partnership with Texas’s Novi Space to deliver real-time intelligence from the Earth’s orbit.
The collaboration enables Earth observation data to be processed directly on satellites instead of it needing to be transferred to Earth for analysis.
Ubotica is deploying its AI platform, which processes input data within 90 seconds, for the space mission. According to the company, in a single test observation of a Singapore port, the platform processed hundreds of vessels and detected those operating ‘dark’ in under two minutes.
The company has deployed its AI capabilities on numerous missions, including its own CogniSAT-6 satellite.
Founded in 2019 by former Dell manufacturing leaders Tim Crowe, Ken Sheehan and Jennifer Kelly, WrxFlo is a SaaS platform tailored specifically for manufacturing and logistics operations.
The company claims its platform acts as a “digital co-worker” across operations and the vertical line of command by connecting data from across the factory, warehouse and supply chain, eliminating non-value-added tasks and surfacing ‘red’ indicators before they become costly problems.
“We built WrxFlo from first-hand experience of running complex manufacturing and supply chain operations,” said Crowe, the company’s CEO.
“WrxFlo enables industrial manufacturers and logistics operators turn complex, paper or Excel-based processes into streamlined, data-driven systems that reduce cost and improve efficiency.”
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