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Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Feb. 24

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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? I thought 5-Down was very tricky, and not really representative of the clue, either. 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.

completed-nyt-mini-crossword-puzzle-for-feb-24-2026.png

The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for Feb. 24, 2026.

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NYT/Screenshot by CNET

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Goosebumps-inducing
Answer: SCARY

6A clue: Buddy, informally
Answer: HOMIE

7A clue: Rub off, as pencil markings
Answer: ERASE

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8A clue: Enjoys a quiet weekend morning, perhaps
Answer: LAZES

9A clue: David Szalay novel that won the 2025 Booker Prize
Answer: FLESH

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Section of a bookcase
Answer: SHELF

2D clue: Color similar to salmon that’s also named for a sea creature
Answer: CORAL

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3D clue: Leave speechless
Answer: AMAZE

4D clue: Gets out of bed
Answer: RISES

5D clue: “Uff-da!”
Answer: YEESH

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Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for March 20

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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? I had to jump between the ACROSS and DOWN clues in order to solve them all, because some answers came to me easily and others … not so much. 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.

completed-nyt-mini-crossword-puzzle-for-march-20-2026.png

The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for March 20, 2026.

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NYT/Screenshot by CNET

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Cable channel that airs March Madness games
Answer: TBS

4A clue: Rapper with the 2026 #1 album “The Fall-Off”
Answer: JCOLE

6A clue: Review thoroughly, as taxes
Answer: AUDIT

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7A clue: “Darn it!”
Answer: CRAP

8A clue: Annoying things to realize you’ve left in the house
Answer: KEYS

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Yesterday, tomorrow
Answer: TODAY

2D clue: Radar screen dots
Answer: BLIPS

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3D clue: “On your marks … get ___ …”
Answer: SET

4D clue: Playing card historically called a knave
Answer: JACK

5D clue: Medical success
Answer: CURE

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Prediction Markets Promised Better Information. Instead They’re Creating Powerful Incentives to Corrupt Information.

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from the did-anyone-bet-i-would-write-this? dept

There’s a concept in economics known as Goodhart’s Law, often summarized as: “When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.” The idea, originally about monetary policy, has proven remarkably durable across domains. When you attach high enough stakes to a single metric, people stop trying to accurately reflect reality and start trying to game the metric. Schools teach to the test. Banks shuffle risk off their balance sheets to hit capital ratios. Hospitals reclassify patients to improve their reported outcomes.

Prediction markets were supposed to be immune to this. The whole pitch — the reason people like me found them conceptually interesting for years — was that because participants are putting real money on the line, they’d have powerful incentives to seek out and act on true information. Financial stakes, the theory went, would filter out noise and bullshit and produce a hopefully decently accurate signal about the probability of real-world events. The wisdom of crowds, sharpened by the discipline of the wallet.

What most people didn’t think through was the obvious corollary: what happens when you attach $14 million in stakes to a 150-word blog post by a war correspondent, and the gamblers decide it’s cheaper to threaten the journalist than to accept they made a bad bet?

Emanuel Fabian, a military correspondent for The Times of Israel, published an extraordinary account of what happened after he filed a routine item on March 10 about an Iranian ballistic missile striking an open area outside Jerusalem. No one was injured. It was, in the context of an ongoing war, a minor event. He reported it accurately and moved on.

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Then the Polymarket bettors found him.

It turns out that more than $14 million had been wagered on a Polymarket bet titled “Iran strikes Israel on…?” with a clause specifying that intercepted missiles wouldn’t count. Fabian’s report — confirming that a missile warhead had actually impacted the ground — was standing between a lot of gamblers and a lot of money. And so began one of the most deranged campaigns of harassment against a journalist ever (and I’ve seen some pretty crazy campaigns against journalists).

It started with polite-sounding emails. A guy named “Aviv” writing in Hebrew, suggesting Fabian’s report didn’t “reflect reality.” Then “Daniel,” a day later, with the same question and a thinly veiled threat:

“Sorry for reaching out without a prior introduction, but I assume we will get to know each other well,” he wrote, in a somewhat threatening manner.

“I have an urgent request regarding the accuracy of your report on the missile attack on March 10. I would really appreciate a response if possible. There is an inaccurate report from you about the missile attack on March 10, and it’s causing a chain of errors,” Daniel’s email continued.

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“If you could reply to me tonight… you would be helping me, many others, and, of course, the State of Israel. And along the way, you would gain a good source.”

When Fabian didn’t comply, the messages kept coming across every possible channel — email, WhatsApp, Discord, X. Someone fabricated a fake screenshot showing Fabian had agreed to change his story (which he most certainly had not), then circulated it on social media to pressure him further. Someone he knew from another news org even contacted him to say an acquaintance was asking him to convince Fabian to alter the report — and when confronted, that acquaintance admitted he was betting on Polymarket and offered to share winnings if the other journalist could get Fabian to change the story.

And then it got genuinely terrifying. After a quiet weekend, someone calling himself “Haim” started sending WhatsApp messages shortly after midnight:

“You have exactly half an hour to correct your attempt at influence,” he wrote.

“Despite the fact that you received countless inquiries — you insist on leaving it that way.”

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“If you do not correct this by 01:00 Israel time today, March 15, you are bringing upon yourself damage you have never imagined you would suffer,” he threatened, in a very lengthy message.

And “Haim” kept escalating:

“You have no idea how much you’ve put yourself at risk. Today is the most significant day of your career. You have two choices: either believe that we have the capabilities, and after you make us lose $900,000 we will invest no less than that to finish you. Or end this with money in your pocket, and also earn back the life you had until now.”

After I didn’t respond, as I was asleep, Haim sent me another series of messages: “You are choosing to go to war knowing that you will lose your life as you’ve grown accustomed to it — for nothing.”

On Sunday morning, he messaged me again: “You have exactly a few hours left to fix your attempt at influencing [the market]. It would be stupid of you to ignore this.”

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In short, people who made a bad gambling bet on a prediction market are threatening to kill a war correspondent because his accurate reporting is inconvenient for their wager. They referenced his home neighborhood, his parents, his siblings. They gave him countdown timers. Someone called him pretending to be a lawyer investigating him for “market manipulation.”

“If you decide to go with your ego and not with your head, you are leaving behind dozens of wealthy people from all over the world who will know that you performed market manipulation and stole from them. They know who you are, you don’t know who they are. It took them less than 5 minutes to find out exactly where you live … how often you see your lovely parents … and exactly who your … brothers and sisters are.”

Fabian reported it all to the police. The threats stopped almost immediately after he went public.

In an interview with Charlie Warzel at The Atlantic, Fabian described the thing that should concern us all: there was a moment, however brief, where the pressure almost worked:

Warzel: Did you ever think about changing the story?

Fabian: For a split second I did. I thought maybe I could be wrong.

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Warzel: Like, doubting your reporting? After all, you’re making those calls based on other witnesses and videos online.

Fabian: I went and checked again with the military. It was a short item, but I reviewed footage of a large explosion. I had eyewitness accounts—people in the area who saw this massive explosion. And then I thought to myself, Why am I doing this? Triple-checking this minor incident, bothering the military again over an explosion in the woods? I did the reporting, and this was the judgement call I made. I think it was accurate, and I will leave it at that. I don’t need to doubt myself about what I published, especially because this is not something that anyone normally would care about unless they had a financial stake in the outcome. As an event in this war, it is not particularly newsworthy. This missile exploded in an open area. It’s 150 words in the live blog.

Fabian held the line — but here’s a journalist who covers an active war zone, confirmed his reporting with military sources, reviewed video footage of an explosion, and still briefly questioned his own accurate reporting because a bunch of gambling addicts wouldn’t stop threatening him. And he’s self-aware enough to recognize what that means going forward:

Warzel: Do you think this fiasco will stick in the back of your mind as you continue to report on the war?

Fabian: Yes. I think it already has. Since then, whenever I report on something, I feel it in the back of my head: What if the Polymarket bettors are betting on this tweet? Or on whether I’m giving an interview about Polymarket? I’m not obsessing over it. Hopefully I won’t get threatened again. But the thought is there.

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So much for prediction markets producing more accurate information. What they produced here was a chilling effect on a journalist who was already telling the truth.

And what guarantee do we have that the next journalist faced with similar pressure will be as willing as Fabian to tell the gamblers to fuck off?

This was always going to happen. Not the specific details — nobody could have predicted that a 150-word liveblog item about a missile in a forest would become a $14 million flashpoint — but the general shape of it was entirely predictable. We’d already seen shades of this in sports betting (which is just prediction markets for sports). Athletes have been dealing with a steadily escalating campaign of harassment from bettors who feel personally wronged when a player doesn’t perform to their parlay’s specifications.

Now scale that dynamic up from “some guy lost his parlay on a golf tournament” to “$14 million riding on whether a missile was intercepted during a shooting war,” and you can see exactly where this goes. The stakes get higher, the targets get more consequential, and the threats get more serious. Going from Venmo requests to death threats against war correspondents is an escalation, sure, but it’s an escalation along a perfectly predictable trajectory.

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And while I opened this talking about Goodhart’s law, this is clearly worse: in the classic case, people game the metric by finding clever workarounds. They don’t usually try to put a gun to the metric’s head. But when the “metric” is a human being — a journalist, an athlete, anyone whose actions or reporting can move a market — the incentive to game the system becomes an incentive to coerce, threaten, bribe, or fabricate. It is not just (as in Goodhart’s formulation) about someone “making a measure into a target.” Someone showed up at the measure’s house and threatened its family.

Polymarket, for its part, issued a statement condemning the threats and saying it had “banned the accounts for all involved & will pass their info to the relevant authorities.” Bit late for that. The company also said, with apparently zero self-awareness, that “prediction markets depend on the integrity of independent reporting.”

They’re acknowledging that journalists are functionally the oracles their entire market depends on. Which means journalists are “targets” by design. The market’s resolution mechanism requires someone external who has no relationship to Polymarket to report accurately on real-world events, and the market’s financial incentives create enormous pressure to corrupt that reporting. The company has built a system that depends on a thing it simultaneously makes harder to do.

In short: the company that built a system on claims of more accurate information is creating powerful incentives for people to falsify it.

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Fabian raised another point in his interview with Warzel that goes beyond the harassment and into something potentially far more worrisome:

Fabian: I think there is a big risk of journalists using insider information to place a correct bet and win. I can tell you as a military correspondent that I’m exposed to confidential information that we can’t report. Now there are ways to exploit that. It wouldn’t surprise me if others have.

He’s right to worry. Last month, an Israeli military reservist and a civilian were indicted for using classified information to place bets ahead of Israel’s war with Iran. Prediction markets create a mechanism for anyone with privileged information — journalists, military personnel, government officials — to monetize that knowledge without ever publishing it.

And the thing is, supporters of some of these markets argue that’s the whole point. Because people with insider information will bet, they believe that the markets will provide the public better information. But it also creates ridiculously perverse incentives for extraordinarily bad behavior. And the legal system is just starting to wrap its head around these things (for example, also this week, Arizona criminally charged Polymarket’s main competitor, Kalshi, with illegal gambling).

As Fabian put it, when Warzel asked whether prediction market companies actually want to combat insider trading:

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Fabian: I don’t think they really want to combat insider trading. What I’ve heard is that those who bet on Polymarket either know the right answer or are wasting their money.

So the incentive structure of prediction markets simultaneously encourages harassment of the people whose reporting the markets depend on, creates a pipeline for insider trading by anyone with privileged information, and — as Fabian’s case demonstrates — can literally cause a journalist to momentarily doubt his own accurate reporting because the financial pressure to be wrong is so overwhelming.

I’ll admit that I was once genuinely intrigued by the concept of prediction markets. The original pitch was compelling: because people have skin in the game, real information should flow into these markets more efficiently than it flows through, say, punditry or polling. And we all know how weak punditry and polling has been of late.

In theory, this idea of “skin in the game” leading to better information makes some sense. In practice, what we’ve gotten is a bunch of speculative nonsense driven by get-rich-quick bros who, when their bets go south, feel entitled to threaten the life of a war correspondent covering missile strikes. The theory assumed that financial stakes would incentivize finding accurate information. What it failed to account for is that, for many participants, it’s easier and cheaper to try to falsify the information than to accept a loss.

Fabian’s advice for other journalists who might find themselves in this situation was to follow in his footsteps of going public:

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Warzel: Do you have advice for other journalists who may experience this type of betting-market harassment in the future?

Fabian: Go public. Don’t let the threats force you to change anything. Be honest. I think that’s the best way. It’s a bit stupid of these people to publicly intimidate somebody who can go and instantly tell 100,000 people what these gamblers are doing. That’s my advice. Because if you were to accept money or change your reporting, who knows how these people might extort you later on. If you change your reporting, it’ll be a mess forever.

That’s good advice. But he also pointed out the obvious problem: not every journalist will say no. Not every journalist will have the resources, the platform, or the institutional backing to withstand this kind of pressure. And as prediction markets grow and attach ever-larger sums to ever-more-consequential events, the pressure will only increase.

We’ve built a system where people can wager millions on the outcomes of wars, and then express shock when they treat the people reporting on those wars as obstacles to be eliminated. We’ve created financial instruments that depend entirely on the integrity of vastly underpaid independent journalism while simultaneously giving millions of strangers a direct financial incentive to destroy that integrity.

That seems bad.

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And the platforms facilitating all of this respond with a press statement and a few banned accounts, as if the problem is a handful of bad actors rather than the fundamental architecture of what they’ve built.

Prediction markets were supposed to be information-discovery mechanisms. When you let people bet millions of dollars on whether missiles hit their targets, what you actually get is a threat-discovery mechanism aimed at the people trying to tell the truth.

As Fabian told Warzel: “This is war, not a game.”

Unfortunately, someone went ahead and turned it into both. And poured a ton of money into it.

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Filed Under: gambling, information, journalism, prediction markets

Companies: kalshi, polymarket

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OpenAI is putting ChatGPT, its browser and code generator into one desktop app

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OpenAI is developing a “super app” for desktop that unifies ChatGPT, its browser and its Codex app, according to the Wall Street Journal and CNBC. A company spokesperson told the publications that OpenAI Chief of Applications Fidji Simo will lead the application revamp with assistance from OpenAI President Greg Brockman. Simo will also help the marketing team advertise the app when it comes out. OpenAI’s leadership is apparently hoping that combining several products can help it streamline user experience and dedicate its resources to one project.

The company has yet to make an official announcement about the new app, but Simo replied to the Journal piece’s author on X. “Companies go through phases of exploration and phases of refocus; both are critical,” Simo said. “But when new bets start to work, like we’re seeing now with Codex, it’s very important to double down on them and avoid distractions. Really glad we’re seizing this moment.”

The Journal saw the internal note Simo sent to employees, wherein she said that the company realized it was spreading its efforts across too many apps and that it needed to simplify its efforts. “That fragmentation has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want,” she reportedly wrote. In an all-hands meeting, CNBC said she also told employees that the company was “orienting aggressively” towards high-productivity use cases.

It’s not clear yet when the unified app will be available, but OpenAI is reportedly focusing on developing agentic AI capabilities for it. The agents will be able to make decisions and use tools to do tasks on computers, such as writing software or analyzing data, with little human oversight.

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AirPods Pro 3 fall to a record low, making Apple’s top tier earbuds surprisingly affordable

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Still using older earbuds that struggle with noise, battery life, or overall sound quality, especially during commutes or workouts where it matters most? This drop makes upgrading feel far more reasonable without jumping into overly expensive territory.

If that sounds familiar, the AirPods Pro 3 are now £184, down from their usual £219 retail price with JoyBuy, knocking £35 off and making them a much easier upgrade to justify if you have been holding onto an older pair.

AirPods ProAirPods Pro

AirPods Pro 3 fall to a record low, making Apple’s top tier earbuds surprisingly affordable

AirPods Pro 3 hit a new all‑time low, bringing Apple’s premium earbuds down to a surprisingly accessible price

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Apple continues to push audio quality forward in the 5-star Airpods Pro 3, with improved acoustic design that delivers deeper bass, clearer vocals, and a more immersive overall sound that feels noticeably richer across different genres and content.

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Active Noise Cancellation remains a standout, cutting out more background noise so you can stay focused whether you are travelling, working, or simply trying to enjoy music without distractions.

There is also a stronger emphasis on personalisation, with Adaptive EQ adjusting sound in real time based on your ear shape and fit, helping maintain consistent audio quality without manual tweaking.

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Battery life holds up well for daily use, offering up to eight hours of listening with noise cancellation enabled, with additional hours available through the charging case for longer sessions on the go.

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Apple has also expanded functionality beyond audio, with built in heart rate tracking for workouts and features like Live Translation, which reflect a broader push toward smarter, more integrated wearable experiences.

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The fit has been refined with more ear tip options, helping create a more secure and comfortable seal that improves both noise isolation and overall listening performance during longer use.

Seamless integration across Apple devices remains one of the biggest strengths, with automatic switching and easy pairing that make these feel like a natural extension of the wider ecosystem.

At this price, the AirPods Pro 3 feel far less like a luxury pick and more like a practical upgrade for anyone who wants strong noise cancelling, smart features, and consistently high quality sound in one compact package.

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We even flagged it as the best Airpods Pro 3, in our best wireless headphones buying guide.

There are many welcome upgrades here, from battery life to improved sound and more capable ANC. But, for me, the addition of a heart rate monitor and the far more comfortable fit are the big reasons to plump for the AirPods 3.

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  • Better fit thanks to subtle design tweaks

  • Improved battery life, sound and ANC

  • The HRM is such a great addition, and it’s very accurate

  • Many of the best features require an iPhone

  • Minimal customisation available if the audio isn’t to your taste

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5 Of The Safest Compact SUVs Of 2026, According To Consumer Reports

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When we’re looking to get a new vehicle, there are many factors we need to keep in mind. Any new ride should fit our budget, feel good to drive, be as fuel efficient as possible, and be reliable enough to where we’re not having to spend a bunch of money on maintenance and repairs. Another crucial element is safety: Anytime you get behind the wheel of a vehicle, there’s the possibility of danger, and finding a car that can minimize that possibility is of the utmost importance. An excellent source for determining vehicle safety has always been Consumer Reports, especially with its 2026 list of the safest small SUVs currently on the market.

The compact SUV is an incredibly popular vehicle type, and CR has helpfully looked at countless models to determine which are the safest in that particular class. It comes to this conclusion based on a number of factors. These include high scores from crash test data from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), good marks from Consumer Reports’ own testing of things like braking distance and emergency handling, and whether or not the vehicle comes standard with technological safety features like blind spot detection and rear cross traffic warnings. If a compact SUV can check off all of these boxes, CR rated it highly for safety. Although there are numerous compact SUVs that ended up on the list, we’re looking at five different models from both consumer-friendly and luxury automotive brands that have Consumer Reports gave its highest marks to for safety.

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Hyundai Tucson

The Hyundai Tucson has become one of the most popular vehicles in the United States, being the thirteenth-best seller of any model in 2025. There’s little reason to see why it would not remain as popular this year as well; it’s getting stellar feedback, with the Hyundai Tucson Hybrid being probably the best-reviewed crossover hybrid SUV on the market for that year. On top of that, both the 2026 gas-powered and hybrid models rank in the top nine of Consumer Reports’ overall ranking of compact SUVs.

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An important contributing factor to its great reviews has to do with safety. Both versions of the Tucson check all of the boxes CR requires to get a perfect safety rating. Every trim comes standard with automatic emergency braking for pedestrians and potential forward collisions while going at least 55 mph, as well as both blind spot and rear cross traffic warnings. Along with these features, they have met federal safety requirements as well as Consumer Reports’ own standards for safety. Their reliability scores may not measure up to the competition, particularly the hybrid model, but that does not mean they are not safe vehicles.

Notably absent though is the 2026 Hyundai Tucson Plug-In Hybrid. While still receiving a decent safety score from Consumer Reports, it is a step down from the other two iterations. That’s because there’s no data for the plug-in model going through front or side crash tests from the IIHS. While it performs well everywhere else, these are crucial tests to get the fullest picture of its safety; without that data, it’s simply impossible to make a full determination.

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Mazda CX-50

While this next compact SUV is not as popular as the Hyundai Tucson, that does not mean it is any less safe. In fact, the 2026 Mazda CX-50 passed all of the same safety tests, and it was able to do it with both the standard gas-powered model and the hybrid one. This Mazda SUV has all of those technological safety features standard across every trim and meets every federal and Consumer Reports safety requirement. However, unlike the Hyundai, there is no plug-in hybrid option for the Mazda CX-50, meaning every variation of this SUV gets that top safety rating. These high safety ratings helped contribute to Mazda being considered the safest overall car brand by CR.

Drivers are generally pretty happy with the Mazda CX-50, but even though it managed these high safety scores, Consumer Reports has found that the overall owner satisfaction for these models do not necessarily stack up in overall owner satisfaction when compared to other top compact SUVs on the market. The non-hybrid version of the CX-50 particularly struggles to win much praise from owners. Both models have below average reliability ratings, which certainly contribute to these lower scores. In fact, only five compact SUVs tested by CR scored lower on reliability than these two Mazda models. That being said, if safety is your biggest concern when it comes to a vehicle and the $29,900 (plus a $1,495 destination fee) starting price is attractive, the 2026 Mazda CX-50 should be able to deliver what you want.

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Subaru Forester Hybrid

The next compact SUV that Consumer Reports considers to be incredibly safe comes from an automaker that is generally regarded as one of the most reliable brands in the world: Subaru. Consumer Reports’ evaluation of the brand overall may not be as safe as something like Mazda, but it still ranks quite highly. The compact SUV we’re looking at is the 2026 Subaru Forester Hybrid. Not only does this vehicle meet every single requirement CR looks for when determining its safety rating for the vehicle, but the Forester Hybrid also has the highest overall score of any compact SUV from Consumer Reports across reliability, road testing, and owner satisfaction as well.

While the non-hybrid version of the Subaru Forester ties for second place on that overall list, it does not measure up to the hybrid model when it comes to safety; only the 2026 Forester Hybrid managed to score those top marks. The reason for this is that blind spot and rear cross traffic warnings do not come standard on the regular Forester but as options that one would need to pay extra for unless you opt for a higher-tiered trim. Meanwhile, the base Forester Hybrid has these features as standard. You most certainly can pay for these technological upgrades on a 2026 gas-powered Forester to have a vehicle that measures up in every way, but that might not be possible for everyone. As Consumer Reports judged the vehicle in its totality, that’s why there’s no safety downside for the hybrid model.

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Acura ADX

Just because a car brand aims for luxury does not mean that it needs to sacrifice safety in the pursuit of style. That is the very case with the 2026 Acura ADX, the compact SUV from the luxury arm of Japanese automaker Honda. This may be a moderately reliable SUV with one of the cheaper price tags for a luxury model, starting at $35,000 plus a $1,450 destination and handling fee, but the ADX hits every singe one of Consumer Reports’ benchmarks to get those top safety ratings. It comes standard with all of the technological safety features you could want, including blind spot, pedestrian, and rear cross traffic warnings. It also passes every safety test that both CR and the IIHS could throw at it. The 2026 Acura ADX only comes as a traditional, gas-powered vehicle, so there’s no need to wonder whether these safety ratings stretch across a hybrid powertrain.

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Unfortunately, Acura’s other compact SUV, the more expensive RDX, did not earn the same safety ratings. Much like the 2026 Hyundai Tucson Plug-In Hybrid, there is no inclination that the RDX passed IIHS front crash testing. That is the only knock against that particular SUV. Meanwhile, the 2026 Acura ADX did pass that test, along with every other. If you’re eyeing an Acura ADX as your next purchase, you’d be getting safety and luxury for a relatively bargain price, which certainly makes this vehicle a crowd pleaser.

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Lexus NX

For the final model on this list, we get what Consumer Reports considers to be the best overall luxury compact SUV: the 2026 Lexus NX. More specifically, it puts the NX Hybrid at the top, but the regular gas-powered version is right behind it at number two. Regardless of which powertrain you get, CR gives the vehicle its safety stamp of approval. All of the technological features you would need come standard, and the vehicle passed all the road and crash tests it was put through. The NX line were also among the most reliable models of their kind on the market as well, giving you plenty of confidence in how they will perform.

The 2026 Lexus NX does also come as a plug-in hybrid, but just as with the Hyundai Tucson, the plug-in hybrid model doesn’t get the highest possible safety rating score from Consumer Reports. It was not put through moderate overlap front crash tests by the IIHS, though it meets every other criteria otherwise; CR still has lists the plug-in hybrid model in the overall top five of luxury compact SUVs it tested. It becomes your own judgment whether you think it would pass those tests had it been put through them, as other 2026 Lexus NX models were able to do just that. For the ultimate certainty from Consumer Reports though, stick with the standard and hybrid NX models.

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The Used Car Market Is About To Be Flooded With Secondhand EVs

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Electric vehicles have been on a bit of a roller coaster ride in America over the last decade. The EV market began its growth in the 2010s, first with low-range compliance cars, before the doors were broken down by Tesla and other brands with longer-range, more powerful, and more feature-laden EVs that won over buyers. By the early 2020s, automakers across the board had jumped on the EV train, with aggressive plans to convert their lineups to battery power. But lately, automakers have backed off those ambitious plans as they face billions of dollars in EV losses, lower consumer demand, and a less EV-friendly regulatory environment.

Where exactly the electric vehicle industry goes from here remains to be seen, but one thing that’s certain is that hundreds of thousands of used EVs are about to hit the secondhand market, with some analysts forecasting a new era for used car bargains – at least for those who are open to a used electric vehicle. 

An explosion in used EV inventory presents an interesting scenario for car buyers, because many of the barriers that might keep someone from dropping big money on a new EV are more acceptable when talking about used EVs. Likewise, given their historically higher depreciation rates, these lightly used EVs are likely to be substantially less expensive than comparable gasoline-powered vehicles.

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Supply goes up, prices go down

Leasing has long been a popular option for EVs, namely because it allowed buyers to take advantage of now-expired tax credits and rebates, while also protecting buyers from the high rates of depreciation that come with electric vehicles, which is driven by their rapidly advancing technology and perceived obsolescence compared to newer models. 

With EV leases taking off in the first few years of the decade, we are now seeing a big jump in off-lease, low-mileage cars coming onto the market as buyers return them. In 2026 alone, more than 300,000 off-lease EVs will be returned, with even more to come in the following years. While data suggests a good portion of these original EV lessees may not be returning to electric vehicles, their old cars will be quickly turned around and readied for new owners on the used market, most of them at affordable prices.

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Given the original terms at which they were leased, most of these EVs should still be in nearly-new condition and have low mileage on them. The hope is that this large bump in used EV inventory will help stem some of the affordability crisis that’s been plaguing car buyers for several years on both the new and used markets. This is, of course, provided that car buyers are open to secondhand EVs over their internal combustion counterparts — and for EV-skeptical buyers, these lower-than-normal prices could help get them off the fence.

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Is now the perfect time for a used EV?

There are lots of reasons why electric vehicles haven’t taken off the way some automakers were hoping they would a few years ago. Two of the biggest barriers have been high purchase prices and a lack of driving range. However, as a used vehicle priced at a mere fraction of its original MSRP, an EV can suddenly become a lot more sensible, especially if it’s not the only vehicle in a given household. 

An older EV with a real-world driving range of 150 or 200 miles may not be ideal for long road trips or irregular driving scenarios, but as a dedicated suburban commuter vehicle or something only used for local driving, a cheap EV could be perfect. As far as things like performance and amenities go, these EVs could also provide great value compared to popular used gasoline vehicles with their stubbornly high prices. Throw in the current high prices of gasoline, and we might have the perfect timing for a used EV boom.

The faster-than-normal depreciation rate of electric vehicles is something that’s well known at this point, and while this has long been a disadvantage for new-EV buyers, the flip side is that used buyers can benefit from this in a big way. With an increased supply of used EVs coming to the market in the coming months and years, it seems that savings potential may only increase.

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Fingernail-Sized Atomic Clock Now World’s Smallest, Unlocks Swarms of Affordable Drones

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World's Smallest Atomic Clock Wuhan University
Photo credit: Wuhan University
Wuhan University scientists created an atomic clock that can fit into a fingernail-sized area. Measuring only 2.3 cubic centimeters, it weighs next to nothing but keeps time with enough precision to drift by only one second over 30,000 years.


World's Smallest Atomic Clock Wuhan University
The smallest atomic clocks today measure roughly 17 cubic centimeters, which is more than seven times larger. The key to slimming it down was to replace the hefty microwave cavities present in prior designs with a quantum approach known as coherent population trapping. Inside a tiny glass cell containing rubidium atoms, a miniature semiconductor laser emits two carefully calibrated light frequencies. When those frequencies coincide exactly with the atoms’ inherent energy state, they lock into a stable state, producing a timing reference far more stable than any quartz crystal could.


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Everything is stacked onto a single chip, reducing both size and power consumption to levels that previous designs could never achieve. Conventional atomic clocks, even in their most compact version, required several hundred cubic centimeters and many watts to function. This one completely bypasses such limits, making it possible to include atomic timing into devices that were previously impossible to equip with it. A university spin-off company currently oversees production, with backing from a state-owned investment group. Last year, hundreds of devices were sent, and the team is still refining its manufacturing process to keep costs on track.


According to Professor Jiehua Chen, who heads the research, the clocks are already in use in real-world applications such as micro positioning systems, underwater navigation, low orbit satellites, and drone swarms. When dozens of drones need to fire, communicate, or move at the same time, even a few nanoseconds of timing drift might disrupt a coordinated operation or break an encrypted communication.
[Source]

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The Government Uses Targeted Advertising to Track Your Location. Here’s What We Need to Do.

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from the protect-yourself dept

We’ve all had the unsettling experience of seeing an ad online that reveals just how much advertisers know about our lives. You’re right to be disturbed. Those very same online ad systems have been used by the government to warrantlessly track peoples’ locations, new reporting has confirmed.

For years, the internet advertising industry has been sucking up our data, including our location data, to serve us “more relevant ads.” At the same time, we know that federal law enforcement agencies have been buying up our location data from shady data brokers that most people have never heard of.

Now, a new report gives us direct evidence that Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has used location data taken from the internet advertising ecosystem to track phones. In a document uncovered by 404 Media, CBP admits what we’ve been saying for years: The technical systems powering creepy targeted ads also allow federal agencies to track your location.

The document acknowledges that a program by the agency to use “commercially available marketing location data” for surveillance drew from the process used to select the targeted ads shown to you on nearly every website and app you visit. In this blog post, we’ll tell you what this process is, how it can and is being used for state surveillance, and what can be done about it—by individuals, by lawmakers, and by the tech companies that enable these abuses.

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Advertising Surveillance Enables Government Surveillance

The online advertising industry has built a massive surveillance machine, and the government can co-opt it to spy on us. 

In the absence of strong privacy laws, surveillance-based advertising has become the norm online. Companies track our online and offline activity, then share it with ad tech companies and data brokers to help target ads. Law enforcement agencies take advantage of this advertising system to buy information about us that they would normally need a warrant for, like location data. They rely on the multi-billion-dollar data broker industry to buy location data harvested from people’s smartphones.

We’ve known for years that location data brokers are one part of federal law enforcement’s massive surveillance arsenal, including immigration enforcement agencies like CBP and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). ICE, CBP and the FBI have purchased location data from the data broker Venntell and used it to identify immigrants who were later arrested. Last year, ICE purchased a spy tool called Webloc that gathers the locations of millions of phones and makes it easy to search for phones within specific geographic areas over a period of time. Webloc also allows them to filter location data by the unique advertising IDs that Apple and Google assign to our phones.

But a document recently obtained by 404 Media is the first time CBP has acknowledged the location data it buys is partially sourced from the system powering nearly every ad you see online: real-time bidding (RTB). As CBP puts it, “RTB-sourced location data is recorded when an advertisement is served.” 

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Even though this document is about a 2019-2021 pilot use of this data, CBP and other federal agencies have continued to purchase and use commercially obtained location data. ICE has purchased location tracking tools since then and recently requested information on “Ad Tech” tools it could use for investigations. 

The CBP document acknowledges two sources of location data that it relies on: software development kits (SDKs) and RTB, both methods of location-tracking that EFF has written about before. Apps for weather, navigation, dating, fitness, and “family safety” often request location permissions to enable key features. But once an app has access to your location, it could share it with data brokers directly through SDKs or indirectly (and often without the app developers’ knowledge) through RTB. Data brokers can collect location data from SDKs that they pay developers to put in their apps. When relying on RTB, data brokers don’t need any direct relationship with the apps and websites they’re collecting location data from. RTB is facilitated by ad companies that are already plugged into most websites and apps. 

How Real-Time Bidding Works

RTB is the process by which most websites and apps auction off their ad space. Unfortunately, the milliseconds-long auctions that determine which ads you see also expose your information, including location data, to thousands of companies a day. At a high-level, here’s how RTB works:

  1. The moment you visit a website or app with ad space, it asks an ad tech company to determine which ads to display for you. 
  2. This ad tech company packages all the information they can gather about you into a “bid request” and broadcasts it to thousands of potential advertisers. 
  3. The bid request may contain information like your unique advertising ID, your GPS coordinates, IP address, device details, inferred interests, demographic information, and the app or website you’re visiting. The information in bid requests is called “bidstream data” and typically includes identifiers that can be linked to real people. 
  4. Advertisers use the personal information in each bid request, along with data profiles they’ve built about you over time, to decide whether to bid on the ad space. 
  5. The highest bidder gets to display an ad for you, but advertisers (or the adtech companies that represent them) can collect your bidstream data regardless of whether or not they bid on the ad space.   

A key vulnerability of real-time bidding is that while only one advertiser wins the auction, all participants receive data about the person who would see their ad. As a result, anyone posing as an ad buyer can access a stream of sensitive data about billions of individuals a dayData brokers have taken advantage of this vulnerability to harvest data at a staggering scale. For example, the FTC found that location data broker Mobilewalla collected data on over a billion people, with an estimated 60% sourced from RTB auctions. Leaked data from another location data broker, Gravy Analytics, referenced thousands of apps, including Microsoft apps, Candy Crush, Tinder, Grindr, MyFitnessPal, pregnancy trackers and religious-focused apps. When confronted, several of these apps’ developers said they had never heard of Gravy Analytics. 

As Venntel, one of the location data brokers that has sold to ICE, puts it, “Commercially available bidstream data from the advertising ecosystem has long been one of the most comprehensive sources of real-time location and device data available.” But the privacy harms of RTB are not just a matter of misuse by individual data brokers. RTB auctions broadcast the average person’s data to thousands of companies, hundreds of times per day, with no oversight of how this information is ultimately exploited. Once your information is broadcast through RTB, it’s almost impossible to know who receives it or control how it’s used. 

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What You Can Do To Protect Yourself

Revelations about the government’s exploitation of this location data shows how dangerous online tracking has become, but we’re not powerless. Here are two basic steps you can take to better protect your location data:

  1. Disable your mobile advertising ID (see instructions for iPhone/Android). Apple and Google assign unique advertising IDs to each of their phones. Location data brokers use these advertising IDs to stitch together the information they collect about you from different apps. 
  2. Review apps you’ve granted location permissions to. Apps that have access to your location could share it with other companies, so make sure you’re only granting location permission to apps that really need it in order to function. If you can’t disable location access completely for an app, limit it to only when you have the app open or only approximate location instead of precise location. 

For more tips, check out EFF’s guide to protecting yourself from mobile-device based location tracking. Keep in mind that the security plan that’s best for you will vary in different situations. For example, you may want to take stronger steps to protect your location data when traveling to a sensitive location, like a protest. 

What Tech Companies and Lawmakers Must Do

Legislators and tech companies must act so that individuals don’t bear the burden of defending their data every time they use the internet.

Ad tech companies must reckon with their role in warrantless government surveillance, among other privacy harms. The systems they built for targeted advertising are actively used to track people’s location. The best way to prevent online ads from fueling surveillance is to stop targeting ads based on detailed behavioral profiles. Ads can still be targeted contextually—based on the content people are viewing—without collecting or exposing their sensitive personal information. Short of moving to contextual advertising, tech companies can limit the use of their systems for government location tracking by:

  • Stopping the use of precise location data for targeted advertising. Ad tech companies facilitating ad auctions can and should remove precise location data from bid requests. Ads can be targeted based on people’s coarse location, like the city they’re in, without giving data brokers people’s exact GPS coordinates. Precise location data can reveal where we work, where we live, who we meet, where we protest, where we worship, and more. Broadcasting it to thousands of companies a day through RTB is dangerous.
  • Removing advertising IDs from devices, or at minimum, disabling them by default. Advertising IDs have become a linchpin of the data broker economy and are actively used by law enforcement to track people’s location. Advertising IDs were added to phones in 2012 to let companies track you, and removing them is not a far-fetched idea. When Apple forced apps to request access to people’s advertising IDs starting in 2021 (if you have an iPhone you’ve probably seen the “Ask App Not to Track” pop-ups), 96% of U.S. users opted out, essentially disabling advertising IDs on most iOS devices. One study found that iPhone users were less likely to be victims of financial fraud after Apple implemented this change. Google should follow Apple’s lead and disable advertising IDs by default.

Lawmakers also need to step up to protect their constituents’ privacy. We need strong, federal privacy laws to stop companies from spying on us and selling our personal information. EFF advocates for data privacy legislation with teeth and a ban on ad targeting based on online behavioral profiles, as it creates a financial incentive for companies to track our every move.

Legislators can and must also close the “data broker loophole” on the Fourth Amendment. Instead of obtaining a warrant signed by a judge, law enforcement agencies can just buy location data from private brokers to find out where you’ve been. Last year, Montana became the first state in the U.S. to pass a law blocking the government from buying sensitive data it would otherwise need a warrant to obtain. And in 2024, Senator Ron Wyden’s EFF-endorsed Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act passed the House before dying in the Senate. Others should follow suit to stop this end-run around constitutional protections.

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Online behavioral advertising isn’t just creepy–it’s dangerous. It’s wrong that our personal information is being silently harvested, bought by shadow-y data brokers, and sold to anyone who wants to invade our privacy. This latest revelation of warrantless government surveillance should serve as a frightening wakeup call of how dangerous online behavioral advertising  has become.

Reposted from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

Filed Under: 4th amendment, advertising, cbp, location data, mass surveillance, privacy, real time bidding, surveillance

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I’m a home appliance fiend and these 7 everyday essentials are a steal in the Afterpay Day sales

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This week started off with Amazon’s Big Smile Sale, with a swathe of discounts across its massive inventory — you can follow our live coverage here where we have 100+ offers already listed. Now a few more retailers have joined in the fun for Afterpay Day, which officially kicked off yesterday morning.

After a busy morning scouring for deals, I stumbled upon some of our best blenders, best stick vacuums, best coffee machines, best air fryers and even one from our best video doorbells. These recommendations come from our resident experts who have thoroughly tested and reviewed these appliances, so know that you’ll be getting your hands on some quality tech for less.

So, without much ado, let’s jump into the bargain hunting, shall we?

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Online Bot Traffic Will Exceed Human Traffic By 2027, Cloudflare CEO Says

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Cloudflare’s CEO predicts AI-driven bot traffic will surpass human internet traffic by 2027, as AI agents generate vastly more web requests than people. “If a human were doing a task — let’s say you were shopping for a digital camera — and you might go to five websites. Your agent or the bot that’s doing that will often go to 1,000 times the number of sites that an actual human would visit,” Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in an interview at SXSW this week. “So it might go to 5,000 sites. And that’s real traffic, and that’s real load, which everyone is having to deal with and take into account.” TechCrunch reports: Before the generative AI era, the internet was only about 20% bot traffic, with Google’s web crawler being the largest, according to Prince, whose infrastructure and security company is used by one-fifth of all websites. But beyond some other reputable crawlers, the only other bots were those used by scammers and bad actors. “With the rise of generative AI, and its just insatiable need for data, we’re seeing a rise where we suspect that, in 2027, the amount of bot traffic online will exceed the amount of human traffic that’s online,” Prince said.

The executive also noted that this change to the web would require the development of new technologies, like sandboxes for AI agents that can be spun up on the fly and then torn down when their task has finished. These could come into play when consumers ask AI agents to perform certain tasks on their behalf, like planning a vacation. “What we’re trying to think about is, how do we actually build that underlying infrastructure where you can — as easily as you open a new tab in your browser — you can actually spin up new code, which can then run and service the agents that are out there,” Prince said. He imagines there will soon be a time when millions of these “sandboxes” for agents would be created every second. “I think the thing that people don’t appreciate about AI is it’s a platform shift,” Prince said. “AI is another platform shift … the way that you’re going to consume information is completely different.”

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