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The trap Anthropic built for itself

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Friday afternoon, just as this interview was getting underway, a news alert flashed across my computer screen: the Trump administration was severing ties with Anthropic, the San Francisco AI company founded in 2021 by Dario Amodei. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had invoked a national security law to blacklist the company from doing business with the Pentagon after Amodei refused to allow Anthropic’s tech to be used for mass surveillance of U.S. citizens or for autonomous armed drones that could select and kill targets without human input.

It was a jaw-dropping sequence. Anthropic stands to lose a contract worth up to $200 million and will be barred from working with other defense contractors after President Trump posted on Truth Social directing every federal agency to “immediately cease all use of Anthropic technology.” (Anthropic has since said it will challenge the Pentagon in court.)

Max Tegmark has spent the better part of a decade warning that the race to build ever-more-powerful AI systems is outpacing the world’s ability to govern them. The MIT physicist founded the Future of Life Institute in 2014 and helped organize an open letter — ultimately signed by more than 33,000 people, including Elon Musk — calling for a pause in advanced AI development.

His view of the Anthropic crisis is unsparing: the company, like its rivals, has sown the seeds of its own predicament. Tegmark’s argument doesn’t begin with the Pentagon but with a decision made years earlier — a choice, shared across the industry, to resist binding regulation. Anthropic, OpenAI, Google DeepMind and others have long promised to govern themselves responsibly. Anthropic this week even dropped the central tenet of its own safety pledge — its promise not to release increasingly powerful AI systems until the company was confident they wouldn’t cause harm.

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Now, in the absence of rules, there’s not a lot to protect these players, says Tegmark. Here’s more from that interview, edited for length and clarity. You can hear the full conversation this coming week on TechCrunch’s StrictlyVC Download podcast.

When you saw this news just now about Anthropic, what was your first reaction?

The road to hell is paved with good intentions. It’s so interesting to think back a decade ago, when people were so excited about how we were going to make artificial intelligence to cure cancer, to grow the prosperity in America and make America strong. And here we are now where the U.S. government is pissed off at this company for not wanting AI to be used for domestic mass surveillance of Americans, and also not wanting to have killer robots that can autonomously — without any human input at all — decide who gets killed.

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Anthropic has staked its entire identity on being a safety-first AI company, and yet it was collaborating with defense and intelligence agencies [dating back to at least 2024]. Do you think that’s at all contradictory?

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It is contradictory. If I can give a little cynical take on this — yes, Anthropic has been very good at marketing themselves as all about safety. But if you actually look at the facts rather than the claims, what you see is that Anthropic, OpenAI, Google DeepMind and xAI have all talked a lot about how they care about safety. None of them has come out supporting binding safety regulation the way we have in other industries. And all four of these companies have now broken their own promises. First we had Google — this big slogan, ‘Don’t be evil.’ Then they dropped that. Then they dropped another longer commitment that basically said they promised not to do harm with AI. They dropped that so they could sell AI for surveillance and weapons. OpenAI just dropped the word safety from their mission statement. xAI shut down their whole safety team. And now Anthropic, earlier in the week, dropped their most important safety commitment — the promise not to release powerful AI systems until they were sure they weren’t going to cause harm.

How did companies that made such prominent safety commitments end up in this position?

All of these companies, especially OpenAI and Google DeepMind but to some extent also Anthropic, have persistently lobbied against regulation of AI, saying, ‘Just trust us, we’re going to regulate ourselves.’ And they’ve successfully lobbied. So we right now have less regulation on AI systems in America than on sandwiches. You know, if you want to open a sandwich shop and the health inspector finds 15 rats in the kitchen, he won’t let you sell any sandwiches until you fix it. But if you say, ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to sell sandwiches, I’m going to sell AI girlfriends for 11-year-olds, and they’ve been linked to suicides in the past, and then I’m going to release something called superintelligence which might overthrow the U.S. government, but I have a good feeling about mine’ — the inspector has to say, ‘Fine, go ahead, just don’t sell sandwiches.’

There’s food safety regulation and no AI regulation.

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And this, I feel, all of these companies really share the blame for. Because if they had taken all these promises that they made back in the day for how they were going to be so safe and goody-goody, and gotten together, and then gone to the government and said, ‘Please take our voluntary commitments and turn them into U.S. law that binds even our most sloppy competitors’ — this would have happened instead. We’re in a complete regulatory vacuum. And we know what happens when there’s a complete corporate amnesty: you get thalidomide, you get tobacco companies pushing cigarettes on kids, you get asbestos causing lung cancer. So it’s sort of ironic that their own resistance to having laws saying what’s okay and not okay to do with AI is now coming back and biting them.

There is no law right now against building AI to kill Americans, so the government can just suddenly ask for it. If the companies themselves had earlier come out and said, ‘We want this law,’ they wouldn’t be in this pickle. They really shot themselves in the foot.

The companies’ counter-argument is always the race with China — if American companies don’t do this, Beijing will. Does that argument hold?

Let’s analyze that. The most common talking point from the lobbyists for the AI companies — they’re now better funded and more numerous than the lobbyists from the fossil fuel industry, the pharma industry and the military-industrial complex combined — is that whenever anyone proposes any kind of regulation, they say, ‘But China.’ So let’s look at that. China is in the process of banning AI girlfriends outright. Not just age limits — they’re looking at banning all anthropomorphic AI. Why? Not because they want to please America but because they feel this is screwing up Chinese youth and making China weak. Obviously, it’s making American youth weak, too.

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And when people say we have to race to build superintelligence so we can win against China — when we don’t actually know how to control superintelligence, so that the default outcome is that humanity loses control of Earth to alien machines — guess what? The Chinese Communist Party really likes control. Who in their right mind thinks that Xi Jinping is going to tolerate some Chinese AI company building something that overthrows the Chinese government? No way. It’s clearly really bad for the American government too if it gets overthrown in a coup by the first American company to build superintelligence. This is a national security threat.

That’s compelling framing — superintelligence as a national security threat, not an asset. Do you see that view gaining traction in Washington?

I think if people in the national security community listen to Dario Amodei describe his vision — he’s given a famous speech where he says we’ll soon have a country of geniuses in a data center — they might start thinking: wait, did Dario just use the word ‘country’? Maybe I should put that country of geniuses in a data center on the same threat list I’m keeping tabs on, because that sounds threatening to the U.S. government. And I think fairly soon, enough people in the U.S. national security community are going to realize that uncontrollable superintelligence is a threat, not a tool. This is totally analogous to the Cold War. There was a race for dominance — economic and military — against the Soviet Union. We Americans won that one without ever engaging in the second race, which was to see who could put the most nuclear craters in the other superpower. People realized that was just suicide. No one wins. The same logic applies here.

What does all of this mean for the pace of AI development more broadly? How close do you think we are to the systems you’re describing?

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Six years ago, almost every expert in AI I knew predicted we were decades away from having AI that could master language and knowledge at human level — maybe 2040, maybe 2050. They were all wrong, because we already have that now. We’ve seen AI progress quite rapidly from high school level to college level to PhD level to university professor level in some areas. Last year, AI won the gold medal at the International Mathematics Olympiad, which is about as difficult as human tasks get. I wrote a paper together with Yoshua Bengio, Dan Hendrycks, and other top AI researchers just a few months ago giving a rigorous definition of AGI. According to this, GPT-4 was 27% of the way there. GPT-5 was 57% of the way there. So we’re not there yet, but going from 27% to 57% that quickly suggests it might not be that long.

When I lectured to my students yesterday at MIT, I told them that even if it takes four years, that means when they graduate, they might not be able to get any jobs anymore. It’s certainly not too soon to start preparing for it.

Anthropic is now blacklisted. I’m curious to see what happens next — will the other AI giants stand with them and say, we won’t do this either? Or does someone like xAI raise their hand and say, Anthropic didn’t want that contract, we’ll take it? [Editor’s note: Hours after the interview, OpenAI announced its own deal with the Pentagon.]

Last night, Sam Altman came out and said he stands with Anthropic and has the same red lines. I admire him for the courage of saying that. Google, as of when we started this interview, had said nothing. If they just stay quiet, I think that’s incredibly embarrassing for them as a company, and a lot of their staff will feel the same. We haven’t heard anything from xAI yet either. So it’ll be interesting to see. Basically, there’s this moment where everybody has to show their true colors.

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Is there a version of this where the outcome is actually good?

Yes, and this is why I’m actually optimistic in a strange way. There’s such an obvious alternative here. If we just start treating AI companies like any other companies — drop the corporate amnesty — they would clearly have to do something like a clinical trial before they released something this powerful, and demonstrate to independent experts that they know how to control it. Then we get a golden age with all the good stuff from AI, without the existential angst. That’s not the path we’re on right now. But it could be.

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Oracle pushes emergency fix for critical Identity Manager RCE flaw

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Oracle reportedly considers massive layoffs as AI spending strains cash flow

Oracle

Update: Added that Oracle declined to comment on whether the vulnerability has been exploited.

Oracle has released an out-of-band security update to fix a critical unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability in Identity Manager and Web Services Manager tracked as CVE-2026-21992.

Oracle Identity Manager is used for managing identities and access across an enterprise, while Oracle Web Services Manager provides security and management controls for web services.

In an advisory released yesterday, Oracle is “strongly” recommending that customers apply the patches as soon as possible.

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“This Security Alert addresses vulnerability CVE-2026-21992 in Oracle Identity Manager and Oracle Web Services Manager. This vulnerability is remotely exploitable without authentication. If successfully exploited, this vulnerability may result in remote code execution,” reads the security advisory.

“Oracle strongly recommends that customers apply the updates or mitigations provided by this Security Alert as soon as possible. Oracle always recommends that customers remain on actively-supported versions and apply all Security Alerts and Critical Patch Update security patches without delay.”

The CVE-2026-21992 vulnerability has a CVSS v3.1 severity score of 9.8 and impacts Oracle Identity Manager versions 12.2.1.4.0 and 14.1.2.1.0, as well as Oracle Web Services Manager versions 12.2.1.4.0 and 14.1.2.1.0.

Oracle says the flaw is of low complexity, remotely exploitable over HTTP, and does not require authentication or user interaction, increasing the risk of exploitation on exposed servers.

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The fix was released through its Security Alert program, which delivers out-of-schedule fixes or mitigations for critical or actively exploited vulnerabilities. However, Oracle says that patches released through these programs are only offered for versions under Premier or Extended Support, and older unsupported versions may be vulnerable.

Oracle has not disclosed whether the vulnerability has been exploited and declined to comment when BleepingComputer asked about its exploitation status.

In a separate blog post published today, Oracle once again noted the severity of CVE-2026-21992 and warned customers to review the security alert for full details and patch information.

Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.

Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.

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3D Printed Clock Just Taps It In

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The famous cuckoo clock, with its moving, chirping mechanical bird indicating various divisions of time, has been around since at least the 1600s. The most famous of them come from the Black Forest area of Germany, and are still being made worldwide even today. Other clocks with different themes take their inspiration from the standard bird-based clocks from history, and thanks to modern 3D printing and other technologies we can make clocks with almost any type of hour indicator we’d like with relative ease like [Jason]’s golf clock.

While the timekeeping mechanism is a fairly standard analog clock, the hour indicator mechanism in this build is a small figure which putts a golf ball into a hole once every hour. It uses an ESP32-C3 at its core, which controls a pair of servos. One controls the miniature golfer, and the other lifts the ball up into position on the green at the appointed time. Once the ball is in place, the figure rotates, striking the ball towards the hole. Although it looks almost like the ball is guided by a magnet of some sort at first glance, the ball naturally finds its way into the hole by the topography of the green alone.

Almost all of the parts in this build are 3D printed, including the green, the golfer, the frame, and a number of the servo components. There’s also a small sensor that detects if the ball has actually made it into the hole and back to the lifting mechanism, and to that end there’s also a number of configurations that can be made in the software to ensure that the servos controlling everything all work together to putt the ball properly.

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While not a cuckoo clock in the strict sense, we always appreciate a unique clock around here, but if you demand your clocks have ideological purity we’ll point you to this cuckoo clock built into a wristwatch.

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The White House proposes new AI policy framework that supersedes state laws

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The White House has announced a new AI policy framework that calls for Congress to craft federal regulation that overrules state AI laws. The Trump administration has made multiple attempts to overrule more restrictive state-level AI regulation, but has failed so far, most notably in the passing of the “One Big Beautiful Bill.”

The framework focuses on a variety of topics, covering everything from child privacy to the use of AI in the workforce. “Importantly, this framework can succeed only if it is applied uniformly across the United States,” The White House writes. “A patchwork of conflicting state laws would undermine American innovation and our ability to lead in the global AI race.”

In terms of child privacy protections, the framework ask for Congress to require companies to provide tools like “screen time, content exposure and account controls” while also affirming that “existing child privacy protections apply to AI systems,” including limits on how data is collected and used for AI training. The framework also says carveout states should be allowed to enforce “their own generally applicable laws protecting children, such as prohibitions on child sexual abuse material, even where such material is generated by AI.”

The energy-use and environmental impact of AI infrastructure is a going concern, but the White House’s policy proposals are primarily worried about the cost of data centers. The framework suggests federal AI regulation should make sure that higher electricity costs aren’t passed on to people living near data centers, while streamlining the process for permitting AI infrastructure construction, so companies can pursue “on-site and behind-the-meter power generation.” The framework also calls for fewer restrictions on the software-side of AI development, proposing “regulatory sandboxes for AI applications” and asking Congress to “provide resources to make federal datasets accessible to industry and academia in AI-ready formats.”

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While a recently AI bill from Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Ten.) attempts to eliminate Section 230, a piece of a larger law that says platforms can’t be held responsible for the speech they host, the framework appears to propose the opposite. “Congress should prevent the United States government from coercing technology providers, including AI providers, to ban, compel or alter content based on partisan or ideological agendas,” the White House writes. The framework is similarly hands-off when it comes to copyright and the use of intellectual property to train AI. “Although the Administration believes that training of AI models on copyrighted material does not violate copyright laws,” the White House writes, it supports the issue being settled in court rather than by legislation. Though, the White House does think Congress should “consider enabling licensing frameworks” so IP holders can bargain for compensations from AI providers.

The clincher in the White House’s proposal is the idea that federal regulation should preempt state law, specifically so that states don’t “regulate AI development,” don’t “unduly burden American’s use of AI for activity that would be lawful if performed without AI” and don’t punish AI companies “for a third party’s unlawful conduct involving their models.” The idea that AI companies aren’t liable for the illegal or harmful uses of their products is particularly problematic because it lies at the heart of multiple intersecting issues with AI right now, including it being used to generate sexually explicit images of children and allegedly playing a role in the suicide of users.

Ultimately, though, the framework might be too contradictory to be useful, Samir Jain, the Vice President of Policy for the Center for Democracy and Technology, writes in a statement to Engadget:

The White House’s high-level AI framework contains some sound statements of principles, but its usefulness to lawmakers is limited by its internal contradictions and failure to grapple with key tensions between various approaches to important topics like kids’ online safety. It rightly says that the government should not coerce AI companies to ban or alter content based on ‘partisan or ideological agendas,’ yet the Administration’s ‘woke AI’ Executive Order this summer does exactly that. On preemption, the framework asserts that states should not be permitted to regulate AI development, but at the same time rightly notes that federal law should not undermine states’ traditional powers to enforce their own laws against AI developers. States are currently leading the fight to protect Americans from harms that AI systems can create, and Congress has twice correctly decided not to pursue broad preemption.

President Donald Trump has attempted to have an active role in how AI is developed and regulated in the US with mixed results, primarily because, as Jain notes, Congress has been unwilling to give up states’ right to regulate the technology on their own terms. Without that, its hard to say how much of the framework will actually make it into federal law.

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How BYD Got EV Chargers to Work Almost as Fast as Gas Pumps

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Somehow, the whole thing got even faster. Earlier this month, Chinese automaker BYD announced that its Flash Chargers, first rolled out a year ago, can now charge some electric vehicle batteries from around 10 to 70 percent in five minutes, and from 10 to full in about nine. That’s more than 600 miles of range in the time it takes to order a cappuccino and leave a nice tip.

The new BYD chargers can add miles super quickly because they deliver up to 1,500 kilowatts (kW) per charge. Compare that to the 350 kW “hyper-fast” chargers seen more typically in the US, which can top up 80 percent of a battery in 15 to 25 minutes, and the full thing in closer to 40.

BYD’s move brings the charging experience closer to the auto industry’s holy grail: comparable to what drivers expect when they fill up their gas tanks. Survey after survey finds that potential EV buyers are worried about range and charging; speeding things up might go some way toward alleviating fears and getting more drivers seriously thinking about the plug. BYD, which doesn’t sell in the US because of high tariffs and national security concerns, has built more than 4,000 of the chargers in China so far, with plans to construct some 16,000 more by the end of the year, plus 2,000 in Europe.

There is, naturally, a catch—plus a few reasons to believe that a super fast charger won’t solve all of the world’s charging issues.

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Right now, only one car will be able to take advantage of the Flash Chargers’ hyperspeed in Europe: BYD’s Denza Z9GT, due to make its Paris debut next month. That’s because the EV comes with the newest generation of BYD’s Blade battery. Making its own cars, its own chargers, and its own batteries gives BYD a significant leg-up in charging speeds over most global competitors, as the tech works together. (Tesla has also vertically integrated the charging experience.) To charge at such high speeds, the vehicles’ software and wiring need to be built to handle that much electric current.

BYD didn’t respond to WIRED’s questions, but according to Chinese language media, the newest Blade battery uses a lithium manganese iron phosphate (LMFP) chemistry to increase energy density. (The last version used lithium-iron phosphate, or LFP, which trades some energy density for durability and fast-charging capability). BYD says it has redesigned all of its battery elements, including the electrodes that store and release energy, the electrolytes that allow for ion transfer between electrodes during charging and discharging cycles, and the separators that disconnect and then conduct ion flow.

This all ups the battery’s energy density by 5 percent compared to what it touted as the latest and greatest last year. BYD says the Denza Z9GT can hit more than 620 miles per charge. (Real-life ranges tend to be a bit lower than claims by auto companies.)

The charger itself, a slick, teal T-shaped system that evokes—you guessed it—a gas station pump, belies its complexity. Dishing out more than a megawatt from the electric grid is no small feat, both in hardware and construction involved. BYD says it will make the rollout of the new charger a little easier by incorporating them into existing BYD charging banks, so that the infrastructure isn’t starting from scratch. Beyond that, BYD says it will use storage batteries at the charging sites to supplement the electrical grid, so the grid isn’t overloaded.

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The Limits

Despite these impressive speeds, don’t expect BYD’s new system to change the game for EVs. “It’s a good, marginal improvement in technology,” says Gil Tal, who directs the EV Research Center at UC Davis’ Institute of Transportation Studies. “It’s not something that changes most people’s daily life.”

The first reason is practical. Today, most US EV owners have access to at-home charging and only use public fast-chargers on the occasional trip that stretches their 250-mile range. For those people, the difference between charging in 20 minutes and in 5 minutes might be close to negligible.

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Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for March 21 #1736

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


Today’s Wordle puzzle has mostly common letters, so you might get it right awa. If you need a new starter word, check out our list of which letters show up the most in English words. If you need hints and the answer, read on.

Read more: New Study Reveals Wordle’s Top 10 Toughest Words of 2025

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Today’s Wordle hints

Before we show you today’s Wordle answer, we’ll give you some hints. If you don’t want a spoiler, look away now.

Wordle hint No. 1: Repeats

Today’s Wordle answer has no repeated letters.

Wordle hint No. 2: Vowels

Today’s Wordle answer has one vowel.

Wordle hint No. 3: First letter

Today’s Wordle answer begins with S.

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Wordle hint No. 4: Last letter

Today’s Wordle answer ends with K.

Wordle hint No. 5: Meaning

Today’s Wordle answer can refer to something that is smooth and glossy.

TODAY’S WORDLE ANSWER

Today’s Wordle answer is SLICK.

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

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Yesterday’s Wordle answer, March 20, No. 1735, was OASIS.

Recent Wordle answers

March 16, No. 1731: DRAMA

March 17, No. 1732: CLASP

March 18, No. 1733: AMPLY

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March 19, No. 1734: REHAB

What’s the best Wordle starting word?

Don’t be afraid to use our tip sheet ranking all the letters in the alphabet by frequency of uses. In short, you want starter words that lean heavy on E, A and R, and don’t contain Z, J and Q. 

Some solid starter words to try:

ADIEU

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TRAIN

CLOSE

STARE

NOISE

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Network 4K UHD Review: Mad as Hell and Still Watching

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Some movies age gracefully. Others age into prophecy. Network did the latter and then some. When Sidney Lumet released this ferocious satire in 1976 from a venomously brilliant script by Paddy Chayefsky, audiences didn’t laugh it off as some cute exaggeration about television news. They squirmed. The film landed like a brick through the newsroom window; biting, unnerving, and uncomfortably close to the truth even then. Nearly fifty years later it feels less like satire and more like a documentary with better lighting. Cable news shouting matches. Personality driven commentary replacing journalism. A nonstop outrage cycle designed to keep viewers emotionally hooked. Chayefsky didn’t just understand television. He understood America’s appetite for spectacle long before the algorithms figured it out.

The story kicks off when aging news anchor Howard Beale, played with electrifying intensity by Peter Finch, learns he’s about to be fired because the ratings stink. Instead of fading quietly into retirement, Beale cracks on live television and promises to kill himself on the air during the next broadcast. Not exactly the sort of programming decision that wins industry awards. But something strange happens. Viewers tune in. Ratings spike. Suddenly the breakdown is good television. Enter Diana Christensen, played with ice-cold ambition by Faye Dunaway, a programming executive who sees Beale not as a problem but as a product. Soon he isn’t a journalist anymore. He’s a spectacle. A televised rage prophet urging viewers to open their windows and shout, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!” America listens. The ratings explode. The network cashes in. If this all feels familiar, it should, we’ve been living inside that feedback loop for decades.

The emotional backbone of the film belongs to William Holden as Max Schumacher, a veteran newsman clinging to the dying belief that journalism should still mean something. Poor Max. He’s the last adult in a room full of ratings addicts. One of the film’s most devastating scenes arrives when Max confesses his affair with Christensen to his wife, played by Beatrice Straight. Straight detonates with decades of frustration and heartbreak in a performance so raw it feels almost invasive to watch. The scene lasts only a few minutes but it anchors the film’s wild satire in something painfully real. Straight won an Academy Award for it, and rightly so.

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For a moment the movie stops being about television and becomes about the collateral damage people leave behind while chasing ambition; the spouses ignored, the families sacrificed, the human wreckage left behind while the ratings climb. We’ve seen the modern version enough times: star anchors imploding, cable personalities flaming out on air, influencers chasing the next outrage clip while the cameras keep rolling. Careers burn, reputations collapse, and the audience moves on before the next commercial break. Lumet and Chayefsky knew the truth the media machine still pretends not to see or care about: behind every viral moment there’s usually someone paying the bill while the network or platform counts the clicks.

Then comes the speech that still rattles around in your skull long after the credits roll. Corporate executive Arthur Jensen, played with thunderous authority by Ned Beatty, summons Beale to a dimly lit boardroom and calmly explains how the world actually works. Nations are illusions. Democracy is window dressing. The real power belongs to multinational corporations. In 1976 Jensen name-checked IBM, Exxon, and AT&T. Today you could easily swap those out for Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta and the speech would land even harder. Chayefsky understood that television news wasn’t simply reporting events anymore, it was becoming part of the corporate machine that shaped them.

faye-dunaway-network-1976

And that’s where Network starts feeling downright uncomfortable in 2026. The film predicted the outrage economy decades before anyone put a label on it. Turn on the television today and it’s emotional theater twenty four hours a day. Panels yelling. Personalities performing. Headlines engineered to keep viewers angry enough to stay glued to the screen. The business model is simple: outrage drives engagement and engagement drives revenue. Diana Christensen figured that out in about thirty seconds. Calm reporting doesn’t trend. Anger does. Journalism slowly mutated into entertainment, and entertainment eventually became politics.

Watching Network today is like opening a time capsule that contains tomorrow’s headlines. It remains wickedly funny, brutally intelligent, and powered by one of the sharpest scripts ever written about American media culture. But what really hits is how little of it feels exaggerated anymore. Chayefsky saw the trajectory clearly: once outrage becomes profitable, it becomes irresistible. The cameras keep rolling. The ratings still rule everything. And somewhere in the digital noise of modern media, Howard Beale is still shouting into the void, mad as hell, begging the rest of us to wake up before the show consumes everything.

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Criterion gives Network the kind of restoration treatment the film has long deserved. The new 4K digital restoration presents the movie in Dolby Vision HDR on a dedicated 4K UHD disc, with the film’s original uncompressed monaural soundtrack preserved intact. Lumet never intended this to be a sonic spectacle. This is a film powered by dialogue, and the restored mono track keeps Paddy Chayefsky’s machine gun script front and center where it belongs.

The restoration comes from a new 4K scan of the original 35mm camera negative and is presented in the film’s original 1.85:1 aspect ratio. Dolby Vision improves contrast and shadow detail, but the image still looks like film from the mid 1970s should look. Grain is intact. The newsroom lighting remains harsh and clinical. The endless televisions scattered around the sets finally reveal more texture and depth than older transfers ever managed.

Audio stays faithful to the original theatrical presentation. The uncompressed mono track is clean and focused, which matters because this movie lives and dies by the rhythm of Chayefsky’s dialogue. From Howard Beale’s televised sermons to Arthur Jensen’s thunderous boardroom lecture, every word lands with the bite Lumet intended. Criterion did not try to reinvent Network. They cleaned it up, respected the source, and delivered the sharpest home video presentation this film has ever had.

network-1976-criterion-collection-cover-art

Criterion also includes a strong slate of supplemental material. Director Sidney Lumet provides a feature length audio commentary that offers insight into the film’s production, the performances, and the controlled chaos of Chayefsky’s dialogue heavy script. The set also includes Paddy Chayefsky Collector of Words (2025), a feature length documentary by Matthew Miele that explores the legendary screenwriter’s life and influence. For those who want deeper historical context, The Making of Network (2006), a six part documentary by Laurent Bouzereau, takes viewers inside the writing, casting, and cultural impact of the film.

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Movie Details

  • STUDIO: United Artists
  • FORMAT: Ultra HD 4K Blu-ray (February 24, 2026)
  • THEATRICAL RELEASE YEAR: 1976
  • ASPECT RATIO: 1.85:1
  • HDR FORMATS: Dolby Vision HDR
  • AUDIO FORMAT: LPCM Mono (48kHz, 24-bit)
  • LENGTH: 121 mins.
  • MPAA RATING: R
  • DIRECTOR: Sidney Lumet
  • STARRING: William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Peter Finch, Robert Duvall, Wesley Addy, Ned Beatty, Beatrice Straight

Our Ratings

★★★★★★★★★★ Picture

★★★★★★★★★★ Sound

★★★★★★★★★★ Extras

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PicoPal Is the Transparent Game Boy Color Remake Nobody Knew They Needed

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PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
Gamers who remember sliding cartridges into their old Game Boy Color will feel right at home when they pick up the PicoPal. Its clear plastic shell displays all of the internal components while maintaining the classic shape and button layout of old. The small LEDs illuminate the directional pad and action buttons with customizable brightness, making them ideal for late-night gaming sessions when all you want to do is keep playing. And a 2.6-inch screen front and center displays lovely crisp colors on games that used to seem tiny on vintage Game Boys.



Hold the PicoPal and you’ll be surprised at how light and easy it is to slip into your pocket; it doesn’t feel like it’s going to bulge anytime soon. The buttons seem exactly right, with the firm tactile reaction that many players used to enjoy back then. The speakers are angled forward for good sound, but you can also use headphones if you prefer to be alone. A simple USB-C port on the side allows you to easily update and charge your device.

PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
At the center of it all is a Raspberry Pi Pico 2 microcontroller. Some creative developers have managed to overclock it to 300 megahertz, allowing it to run through Game Boy and Game Boy Colour titles without lag. There’s a spare ESP32 chip ready for future wireless connections to be resolved. Games load directly from a microSD card, which can hold up to two terabytes if properly formatted, and the emulation software is based on some of the open-source projects available and appears to run everything just fine with a few tweaks to ensure it all works together smoothly across a wide range of titles.

PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
It’s simple to navigate the menu and select a game, or to load up the last one right away, and you can even store your progress at any time and resume where you left off even if you turn the device off and on again. The deep sleep option preserves the last position you were in ready to go with little to no battery consumption. If you click one button when you turn it on, it can even function as a full-fledged MP3 player, streaming tunes directly from the same card with nice audio.

PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
Battery life varies, however it can last anywhere from two to seventeen hours depending on screen brightness, volume, and whether the button lights are turned on or off. Most users appear to get approximately nine hours with the settings adjusted down slightly. There’s a decent solid DAC and amplifier combo that produces clean sound with no hiss or shaky bass. There’s even an IMU kicking around that can measure motion, possibly for future games or simply to show your G-forces during a vehicle journey.

PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
Other nice touches include preserving screenshots as little files on the card and a fast-forward tool for sections that become repetitious. You may also choose from thirteen various color palettes or go with a lovely plain greyscale. With a rapid button combination, you can access the on-screen menu and change the brightness and other settings on the fly. The cartridge slot is now dormant, but there is plenty of area for future additions; you never know what they may come up with next.

PicoPal Game Boy Color Handheld Mod Console
For the truly dedicated makers, there are even more freebies, like a full open-source schematics firmware and a comprehensive bill of materials, allowing you to study the design, tweak the code, or even construct your own version. With future updates, you may expect the ESP32 to come to life for wireless connectivity and the like. Real-time clock support ensures that the time is kept accurate even after long interruptions.

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iOS 26.4 brings mood-based Music widgets to your iPhone’s home screen

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If you’ve ever unlocked your iPhone at midnight, looking for a sleep playlist while already half asleep, Apple’s iOS 26.4 can make life easier for you. 

The iOS 26.4 release candidate is here, and among several additions, it introduces something called Ambient Music widgets. These are mood-based playlists that you can play with a single tap on your home screen (on the widget). 

What moods can you choose from?

So, from now on, you don’t have to open the app, search for the required playlist, and go through the three-step journey through Apple Music’s menus. The widgets cover four broad mood categories: Chill, Productivity, Sleep, and Wellbeing. 

You also get two widget sizes to pick from: the smaller widget features just one playlist (of your choice), while the larger version gives you one-tap access to all four moods at once. Both widgets are built on the Ambient Music feature, which first appeared in the Control Center. 

However, now it rests front and center on your home screen, where it’s hard to miss. 

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Can you customize what plays?

Yes, and Apple has made the process quite seamless. Apple includes built-in playlist presets for each mood. Sleep, for instance, offers options like Sleep Sound, Bedtime Beats, Sound Bath, and Plano Sleep. 

However, if the curated options aren’t your thing, you can set your own custom playlists by long-pressing the widget and tapping “Edit Widget.” And before you even ask, the Ambient Music widget only works with Apple Music; it won’t benefit Spotify users. 

The Ambient Music widgets are just a tiny part of the new iOS 26.4 update. The release candidate also brings a Playlist Playground feature, eight new emojis, urgent reminder flagging in the Reminders app, and a Purchase Sharing update for family users. 

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Microsoft is cutting down Copilot “bloat” in Windows 11

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Microsoft is starting to rethink how much AI it really needs inside Windows 11, and that rethink includes dialing back Copilot. As part of its broader push to improve Windows quality, the company is reducing the number of Copilot entry points across the OS and its apps.

According to Microsoft, this rollback will begin with apps like Photos, Notepad, Widgets, and the Snipping Tool, where Copilot integrations had started to feel excessive. The change is part of a wider shift in Microsoft’s strategy of moving away from aggressively embedding AI everywhere and toward integrating it only where it actually makes sense.

Why is Microsoft pulling back on Copilot?

Let’s be honest, most users weren’t exactly thrilled with Copilot integrations. Over the past year, Microsoft has pushed Copilot into almost every corner of Windows, from the taskbar to system apps and even experimental features like notifications. But that approach hasn’t landed well with everyone.

Critics have pointed out that Copilot often felt forced, difficult to remove, and not always useful, especially when it showed up in places users didn’t ask for. Even internally, Microsoft seems to be acknowledging the feedback. The new statement suggests the company is now aiming to be more “intentional” about where Copilot appears, focusing on genuinely helpful experiences instead of everywhere by default.

What exactly is changing in Windows 11?

The biggest shift is simple: less AI clutter. Microsoft is reducing Copilot integrations across multiple apps and has already scrapped or scaled back some planned features, including deeper system-level integrations in areas like Settings, notifications, and File Explorer.

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This doesn’t mean Copilot is going away. Instead, the company wants it to feel more like a useful assistant rather than a constant presence. In practical terms, that could mean fewer pop-ups, fewer forced integrations, and more optional AI features. Recent updates also show Microsoft stepping back from automatically pushing Copilot into places like the Start menu or system notifications, signaling a broader course correction.

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4 Useful Apps Designed To Help Improve Your Health And Wellness

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Whether you recently got on a workout plan or you’re looking for ways to unwind after a stressful week at work, there are tons of workout apps out there that can aid you or even make your job easier. For instance, we’re all aware of the usual fitness-tracking apps that come bundled with the best smartwatches and budget fitness trackers. However, these apps are quite generic and can be overwhelming for those who are simply looking for assistance and don’t want to be shown random numbers and stats all over the screen. This is exactly why we went down the rabbit hole to find useful, interesting apps designed to help you manage your health and wellness.

These apps not only aid in improving your physical health but also prioritize your mental health. After all, both aspects are equally important. Moreover, the apps I’ve chosen make the journey fun rather than boring with attractive visuals, games, or even communities where users can interact with one another. I’ve used these apps personally for over a month to see if they had an impact on my sense of well-being. Instead of the usual bunch of apps like Strava and MyFitnessPal, I’ve included lesser-known apps with interesting and effective features. Moreover, all the apps mentioned on this list are platform-agnostic, so you can use them whether you’re on team Android or inside Apple’s walled garden.

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Impulse

When it comes to overall wellness, we often sideline our mental health. That’s exactly where an app like Impulse (available on both Android and iOS) steps in. It is a brain-training platform designed to sharpen cognitive skills such as memory, attention, problem-solving, logic, and speed. But don’t fret, it isn’t rocket science or grueling academic work. Instead, Impulse replaces tedious study with a series of short, highly entertaining puzzle games. For instance, there are games where you arrange numbers in ascending order, memory tests asking you to recall if a particular tile had a ghost image, and various time-based challenges. Who wouldn’t like improving their brain health under the guise of fun?

The clean, user-friendly interface makes it the perfect game to play while commuting on the subway or just killing time waiting in a queue. I sometimes catch myself mindlessly scrolling on my phone, either watching TikTok or Instagram Reels. I started using Impulse to break this habit, and I can confidently say I am now much more mindful of my screen time. In an era dominated by doomscrolling and brain rot, replacing even a few minutes of that mindless screen time with something that actually keeps your mind sharp feels incredibly valuable.

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While the app lets you play a few games for free, you’ll have to pay for the premium tier to get the full experience. The paid plan is where Impulse really shines. It completely removes ads, grants access to the entire library of games, and unlocks detailed progress-tracking so you can visualize your cognitive growth over time.

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Hevy

While most smartwatches are good at tracking runs and other activities like cycling and swimming, they can’t log the specific weight you lifted or the number of times you repeated a certain exercise. Hevy solves that exact problem. It’s a clean, intuitive workout tracker that lets you log sets, reps, and weights with just a few taps. It even features automatic rest timers and plate calculators to take the mental math out of lifting.

I used to catch myself zoning out between sets, sometimes mindlessly refreshing my feed and losing track of time. Having Hevy open on my phone helps me focus on my workout and stops me from taking unnecessarily long breaks because I got distracted by my phone. Hevy offers a clean graphical chart of your workout, focus areas, weight lifted, and reps that you can share with your trainer or workout buddies.

The app offers a generous free tier, letting you log unlimited workouts and create a few staple routines. Most people will be happy using this, so you don’t really have to shell out any extra bucks. Hevy also has a smartwatch version, so you can use it straight from your wrist if you have an Apple Watch or a WearOS smartwatch. Among all the apps for weightlifters, Hevy stands out for its intuitive and straightforward interface. From bench presses to push-ups, this is my go-to app for logs. It’s among the best apps for health and fitness — as proven by excellent ratings on both the Google Play Store and Apple App Store.

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Headspace

During your daily hustle, finding a quiet moment and making the most of it can be challenging. That’s where Headspace comes into the picture. It’s a beautifully designed mindfulness platform that gets rid of the intimidating, mystical elements of meditation and makes it approachable to the masses. Whether you are looking for a quick breathing exercise to improve concentration or a guided course on managing anxiety episodes, the app breaks everything down into easy-to-follow sessions.

Another issue with increasing screen time and workload is poor sleep quality. I’ve found that using Headspace’s “Sleepcasts” — which are basically soothing ambient stories — works wonders to quiet a racing mind. It acts as a much-needed buffer between staring at a screen and actually getting restful sleep.

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The biggest catch with both the Android and iOS versions of Headspace, however, is the cost. While you can try out a handful of introductory basics for free, the app locks its best content behind a paywall. Upgrading gives you the keys to their massive library of multi-week mindfulness courses, sleep aids, and curated focus music. If you struggle to switch off your brain at the end of the day, it’s a highly polished tool that delivers.

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Pausa

While long-term meditation is great, sometimes you just need immediate relief when you experience unexpected stress spikes. Pausa is built for exactly those moments. It is a no-nonsense breathwork app designed to help you regulate your nervous system with the help of conscious breathing patterns. Pausa uses science-backed respiratory patterns — like box breathing — to actively lower your heart rate when things get overwhelming.

The interface is minimalistic, and the instructions are easy to follow, which is exactly what you need when you are feeling anxious. I’ve noticed that during a chaotic day, especially when work notifications are piling up and I’ve reached the end of every social media feed, taking just 2 minutes to follow Pausa’s visual breathing guide has helped me feel a lot calmer. It even has an SOS button for sudden moments of panic.

Like the others, Pausa operates on a freemium model. The free tier on Android and iOS gives you access to basic breathing exercises that are perfectly fine for occasional use. However, to unlock the app’s full potential, you need the premium plan. The paid version opens up specialized breathing techniques, a mood tracker that recommends specific exercises based on exactly how you are feeling, and advanced statistics to monitor your daily stress levels over time.

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How we picked these apps

Our aim was to recommend apps that are unique and not widely known. Most people are aware of the usual fitness tracking apps that can track how many calories you burn in a day or how many steps you take, but the apps mentioned on this list aren’t as popular, yet they address more than basic physical issues. I’ve also included apps available on the Apple Watch and WearOS smartwatches, so that those of you who like to leave your phones behind can also take advantage of these services. Notably, all the apps have an average rating of 4.2 or higher on their respective marketplaces, with most of them having hundreds of thousands of reviews.

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