Former ransomware negotiator pleads guilty to BlackCat attacks

41-year-old Angelo Martino, a former employee of cybersecurity incident response company DigitalMint, has pleaded guilty to targeting U.S. companies in...

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Former ransomware negotiator pleads guilty to BlackCat attacks

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BlackCat

41-year-old Angelo Martino, a former employee of cybersecurity incident response company DigitalMint, has pleaded guilty to targeting U.S. companies in BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware attacks in 2023.

Together with two other Sygnia and DigitalMint ransomware negotiators (33-year-old Ryan Clifford Goldberg and 28-year-old Kevin Tyler Martin), Martino was charged with conspiracy to interfere with interstate commerce by extortion, interference with interstate commerce by extortion, and intentional damage to protected computers.

Martino was initially identified only as “Co-Conspirator 1” in an October 2025 indictment, but was named in court documents unsealed in March. Martin and Goldberg also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct commerce by extortion and are facing up to 20 years in prison each.

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According to court documents, while working as a negotiator for five victims, Martino shared confidential information about the victims’ negotiation positions and insurance policy limits with BlackCat ransomware operators, helping the cybercriminals extort the maximum possible amount.

Between April 2023 and April 2025, he was also involved in BlackCat ransomware attacks alongside accomplices Kevin Tyler Martin and Ryan Goldberg.

While operating as BlackCat affiliates, the three defendants demanded ransom payments and threatened victims to leak data stolen before encrypting their systems. Prosecutors added that the three accomplices paid the BlackCat administrators a 20% share of all ransoms proceeds for access to the ransomware and extortion portal.

Their victims included at least five U.S. organizations, among them a financial services firm that paid $25,660,000 and a nonprofit that paid a $26,793,000 ransom, as well as law firms, school districts, medical facilities, and other financial services companies.

DigitalMint CEO Jonathan Solomon told BleepingComputer that the company condemned the previous malicious conduct and noted that Martin and Martino were fired after their actions were discovered.

“We strongly condemn these former employees’ criminal behavior, which violated our values, ethical standards, and the law. When we learned about the conduct, we immediately terminated both individuals,” Solomon said.

The BlackCat ransomware operation has been linked by the FBI to more than 60 breaches between November 2021 and March 2022. In a separate advisory, the bureau added that the cybercrime gang collected at least $300 million in ransom payments from over 1,000 victims through September 2023.

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Liberals and Nationals to preference One Nation in blow to Michelle Milthorpe in Farrer byelection | Farrer byelection 2026

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The Liberals and Nationals will preference One Nation ahead of Michelle Milthorpe in the Farrer byelection in a potential blow to the independent’s hopes of winning the 9 May race.

Milthorpe and One Nation’s David Farley are viewed as the frontrunners in the four cornered-contest, meaning the flow of preferences from the Liberals and Nationals could be crucial in deciding the final outcome in the southern New South Wales seat.

Despite launching a blitz of negative ads targeting One Nation, the two Coalition parties will instruct supporters to number Farley ahead of Milthorpe in their respective how-to-vote cards.

The Liberals will preference the Nationals’ Brad Robertson second, ahead of Farley in fourth position and Milthorpe in ninth, according to a mock how-to-vote card published on candidate Raissa Butkowski’s campaign website.

The Greens’ Richard Hendrie is numbered 12 and last on the Liberals’ ticket.

The Nationals will return the favour to the Liberals before encouraging supporters to number Farley ahead of Milthorpe.

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In a post to Facebook, the Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, said the party would preference One Nation ahead of the “teal-backed candidate because she is backed by people that support net zero and water buybacks”.

Milthorpe’s campaign is supported by the Climate 200 fundraising vehicle but she has sought to distance herself from the city-based teal independent movement.

The Farrer byelection was triggered by the retirement of long-serving MP Sussan Ley, who quit the parliament after losing the Liberal party leadership to Angus Taylor in February.

After an historic result at last month’s South Australian state election, the Farrer contest is the federal electoral test for Pauline Hanson since One Nation’s started rising in the polls in the middle of last year.

The Coalition has intensified the political attacks on One Nation in the past fortnight, including drawing attention to the decision to re-hire convicted rapist Sean Black as a campaign manager.

Hanson said she sacked Black following the Coalition’s renewed scrutiny of his appointment, which she described as “gutter politics”.

Milthorpe is re-contesting Farrer after cutting Ley’s margin to 6.2% at the 2025 election.

Speaking to Guardian Australia before the Liberal how-to-vote card was released, Milthorpe questioned the logic of preferencing One Nation ahead of her.

“I find it fascinating that the Liberal party would choose to preference a party that seemingly wants to take them out,” Milthorpe said. “If that’s what they think they need to do, they’ve got to think about what that means for their future.”

Support for One Nation has fallen slightly according to the latest Newspoll and Resolve poll, prompting speculation the right-wing party’s rise might have peaked.

Speaking on Sky News on Tuesday, Canavan wasn’t celebrating the results.

“I’m not popping any champagne corks about that,” he said. “This is a long road, and these are pretty minor changes, so, we’ve just got to keep at it. There’s no magic bullet here.

“We’ve got to rebuild the trust with the Australian people that we lost, when we lost our convictions, lost our way a little bit in the last few years. So I’m focused on doing that.”



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Gilgo Beach DNA lab may aid Nancy Guthrie abduction investigation

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A San Francisco forensics lab that helped crack the Long Island serial killer case is now believed to be involved in the search for answers after the suspected abduction of Nancy Guthrie in Tucson, Arizona.

Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann, who admitted to killing eight women between 1993 and 2010, pleaded guilty earlier this month after his defense failed to overcome groundbreaking DNA evidence collected from rootless hair samples.

“I am pretty confident that they will want to use the lab that they have been extremely successful with, which is Astrea,” said CeCe Moore, one of the nation’s leading genetic genealogists at Parabon Nanolabs in Virginia. “DLI has been working to refine their own rootless hair analysis, but I haven’t seen any successful cases from them yet.”

NANCY GUTHRIE SHERIFF UNDER PRESSURE AS PETITION DEMANDS ACCESS FOR UNITED CAJUN NAVY

Nancy Guthrie portrait and Pima County deputies investigating outside her Tucson home

A split image shows a group of Pima County deputies investigating outside the home of Nancy Guthrie in Tucson, Arizona, and a portrait of Guthrie. She has been missing since Feb. 1, when she is believed to have been abducted from her house. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News Digital)

She was referring to DNA Labs International, the Florida lab that the Pima County Sheriff’s Department initially sent the samples to in the days after Guthrie’s suspected abduction.

Now that the FBI has the materials, Astrea Forensics could be on the shortlist of specialized private labs that could help.

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The lab developed a DNA profile from rootless hair evidence in the Heuermann case, and Moore said she’s personally been involved in six successful cases in which Astrea did similar work.

Savannah Guthrie standing beside her mother Nancy Guthrie posing for a photo.

Savannah Guthrie and her mother Nancy Guthrie are pictured Thursday, June 15, 2023. (Nathan Congleton/NBC)

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“The FBI used them for the Gilgo case,” she told Fox News Digital. “So they have a lot of confidence in Astrea.”

An FBI official told Fox News Digital on Thursday that among the evidence collected from inside Guthrie’s home is a hair sample that had been sent to a private lab in Florida by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department in the days after her suspected kidnapping.

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“If there’s a chance they can solve Nancy’s case through this lab, I believe without question it should be sent there,” said Allison Winter, a social worker and psychotherapist who has been working with the Heuermann family.

Rex A. Heuermann standing in Suffolk County Court during guilty plea hearing

Rex A. Heuermann pleads guilty to murdering seven women and admits to an eighth killing during a hearing in Suffolk County Court in Riverhead, N.Y., on April 8, 2026. (James Carbone/Newsday via Pool)

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Now, with no answers more than 11 weeks later, the sample has been sent to the FBI for more advanced testing.

“Sending it to Astrea, where there is a proven track record, is by far the safest option,” Moore told Fox News Digital.

The FBI had wanted the sample more than two months ago, according to Ben Williamson, who is assistant director of public affairs at the FBI.

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Forensic investigators arriving at Nancy Guthrie's home with a tent over the front entrance in Tucson, Arizona

A tent has been placed over the front entrance to Nancy Guthrie’s home in Tucson, Arizona, Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026. The investigation into her disappearance is ongoing. (Kat Ramirez for Fox News Digital)

“This is not new evidence or information,” he wrote on X Monday. “FBI asked to test this DNA 2 months ago with the same technology we’ve always had — when the local sheriff instead sent it to a private lab. Any further developments we will share as soon as appropriate.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Astrea but did not immediately receive a response.

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Anyone with information on Guthrie’s disappearance is asked to call 1-800-CALL-FBI.

There is a combined reward of more than $1.2 million for information in the case.



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Labor to tighten child NDIS eligibility to curb spending as Queensland MP warns change is ‘failing kids’ | Disability

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National disability insurance scheme service providers will be required to undergo mandatory character checks and eligibility rules will be tightened further for children under 18, as Labor moves to curb growth in the $50bn program.

But the health minister, Mark Butler, faces a backlash from state counterparts as he announces major changes on Wednesday, with Queensland accusing federal Labor of walking away from responsibilities to families dependent on long-term care.

Guardian Australia can reveal the Queensland disability minister, Amanda Camm, was blocked from attending a briefing by Butler and the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, on Tuesday. Only state and territory treasurers have been briefed on cuts ahead of the public announcement – not ministers responsible for implementing changes.

Butler said he intended to work with the states to change eligibility rules, to bring the NDIS back to its original goal of care for people with permanent and significant disabilities.

The NDIS will be the biggest source of savings in the 12 May federal budget. The scheme’s cost grew by more than 10.3% last year and is on track to cost $63bn by 2028-29. It is projected to support more than 1 million participants by 2033 and to reach $95.8bn in 2034-35, according to the latest quarterly update.

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Labor wants to limit growth well before then to between 5% and 6% annually.

Character checks for providers would help stop waste and drive out dodgy operators behind “systemic” fraud. Organised crime groups have infiltrated the scheme, using coercion and cash kickbacks to participants and families to launder money.

State governments are preparing for more children under 18 to be transitioned away from NDIS services, changes that would go further than the new foundational supports program announced by Butler in August last year. Known as Thriving Kids, it is designed to support children with autism and developmental delays.

Queensland is yet to sign an operating deal for the new program, due to begin in October.

Camm said Labor must not abandon the most vulnerable to improve the budget bottom line.

“The federal government’s plan to walk away from their responsibilities to children and families is failing kids, not thriving kids,” she said.

“Serious concerns remain about the long-term care of these children, let alone those who are next in the crosshairs of their NDIS failure to plan.”

Butler will describe the changes as implementing the recommendations of a landmark review of the NDIS, released last year, with new technical advisory groups established to guide the changes.

Children aged 18 and under made up 52% of the scheme’s 717,000 participants as of March last year. However, the group only received 19%, or $8.37bn, of all payments made by the NDIS.

The shadow NDIS minister, Melissa McIntosh, said Labor had not consulted Australians with disabilities and their families.

“At over $50bn a year and supporting nearly twice the expected number of participants – currently more than 760,000 – the scheme is under strain, and without serious intervention risks collapsing under its own weight.”

Butler flagged in August last year adults with psychosocial disabilities would be the “second big cohort” to shift from the NDIS on to outside services.

The NDIS’s most expensive plans are typically reserved for participants with the highest level of needs.

Recent figures show about 41,000 participants use supported independent living or disability accommodation.

That same data shows a participant’s plan with special accommodation averages about $241,000 a year, while a participant without it averages about $31,000 in support payments.

Participants with special accommodation arrangements require help with showering, assistance with daily tasks and customised housing.

From July, it will be mandatory for service providers offering those accommodation packages to undergo regular reporting, independent audits and worker screening checks.

The finance minister, Katy Gallagher, said Labor was aware the disability community would be concerned about change, but current spending was unsustainable.

“The states have an interest because they are on the tab for continued increasing costs. It has an impact not only on our budget, but on theirs too.”



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Fruit and vegetable diet linked to lung cancer in young non-smokers

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Eating a diet high in fruits and vegetables was found to have a surprising link to lung cancer among younger non-smokers, early research suggests.

The observational study, led by Jorge Nieva, MD, of the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center at Keck Medicine, was presented this month at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) annual meeting in San Diego. It has not yet been peer-reviewed. 

Researchers looked at dietary, smoking and demographic data for 187 patients who were diagnosed with lung cancer at age 50 or younger. 

PANCREATIC CANCER PATIENT SURVIVAL DOUBLED WITH HIGH DOSE OF COMMON VITAMIN, STUDY FINDS

They found that among non-smokers, there was a link between healthier-than-average diets – rich in fruits, vegetables and whole grains – and the chance of lung cancer development.

Young lung cancer patients ate more servings of dark green vegetables, legumes and whole grains compared to the average U.S. adult, the researchers found.

Woman eating healthy lunch

Eating a diet high in fruits and vegetables was found to have a surprising link to lung cancer among younger non-smokers, early research suggests. (iStock)

The researchers hypothesized that pesticides applied to conventionally grown produce could be a possible factor in the disease association.

“Commercially produced (non-organic) fruits, vegetables and whole grains are more likely to be associated with a higher residue of pesticides than dairy, meat and many processed foods,” according to Nieva. He also noted that agricultural workers exposed to pesticides tend to have higher rates of lung cancer.

HIDDEN VIRUS INSIDE GUT BACTERIA LINKED TO DOUBLED COLORECTAL CANCER RISK, STUDY FINDS

“There is a large subset of lung cancer patients whose disease is not caused by smoking,” Nieva told Fox News Digital.

The disease is becoming more common in non-smokers 50 and younger, especially women – despite the fact that smoking rates have been falling for decades, the researcher noted.

tractor spraying crops on a farm

The researchers hypothesized that pesticides applied to conventionally grown produce could be a possible factor in the disease association. (iStock)

“These patients tend to have eaten much healthier diets before their diagnosis than the average American,” he went on. “We need to support research into understanding why Americans – and women in particular – who no longer smoke very much are still having lung cancer,” he said.

DEATHS FROM ONE TYPE OF CANCER ARE SURGING AMONG YOUNGER ADULTS WITHOUT COLLEGE DEGREES

The study did have some limitations, Nieva acknowledged, primarily that it relied on survey data and was limited by the participants’ memories of their food intake.  

“Also, the survey participants were self-selected, and this could have biased the findings,” he told Fox News Digital.

“There is a large subset of lung cancer patients whose disease is not caused by smoking.”

The researchers did not test specific foods for pesticides, relying instead on average pesticide levels for certain types of food. Looking ahead, they plan to test patients’ blood and urine samples to directly measure pesticide levels, Nieva said.

Although the study shows only an association and does not prove that pesticides caused lung cancer, Nieva recommends that people wash their produce before eating and choose organic foods whenever possible.

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“This work represents a critical step toward identifying modifiable environmental factors that may contribute to lung cancer in young adults,” said Nieva. “Our hope is that these insights can guide both public health recommendations and future investigation into lung cancer prevention.”  

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“It is possible that the increased lung cancer risk could be due to pesticide exposure in whole farmed foods, but is by no means certain,” a doctor said. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News senior medical analyst, said the study is “interesting,” but that it “raises far more questions than it answers.”

“It is a small study (around 150) and observational, so no proof,” the doctor, who was not involved in the research, told Fox News Digital.

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“It is possible that the increased lung cancer risk could be due to pesticide exposure in whole farmed foods, but it is by no means certain,” Siegel went on. “How much exposure is needed? How much of it gets into food and in which areas? This requires much further study.”

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Kayla Nichols, communications director for Pesticide Action & Agroecology Network, a distributed global network, said the organization agrees with the study’s conclusion that more research should be done on the rise in lung cancer, particularly in individuals eating diets higher in produce and fiber.

Doctor holding lung x-ray and woman smoking

“There is a large subset of lung cancer patients whose disease is not caused by smoking,” the researcher told Fox News Digital. (iStock)

“There is a bounty of existing research that already links pesticide exposure to increased risk of multiple types of cancers,” Nichols, who was also not involved in the study, told Fox News Digital. She called for more research on chronic, low-level exposures to pesticides, as well as more effective policies to protect the public from pesticide residues on food.

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The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute, as well as industry partners including AstraZeneca and Genentech, among others.

Fox News Digital reached out to several pesticide companies and trade groups for comment.



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England’s school phone ban gets teeth. Nobody gets bitten • The Register

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Ministers are moving to turn England’s patchwork of school phone bans into law, after peers backed fresh changes to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill in a Monday vote.

Peers backed, by 276 to 169 – a majority of 107 – a Conservative amendment to ban smartphones during the school, effectively daring the government to stop treating the policy as optional guidance. 

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UK wants to know if banning under-16s from social media does anything useful

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That amendment would require schools to ban both the use and possession of smartphones during the school day, though most already restrict them. The government’s answer, set out in the Lords on Monday, is simple: write that approach into law.

Education minister Baroness Smith told peers that the direction of travel isn’t exactly controversial, as most schools are already there.

“Our guidance is clear that all schools should be mobile phone-free by default,” she said. “In making that clear, I acknowledge that we share the same policy intent… to make sure that schools are mobile phone-free environments.”

She added that ministers have already tried to nudge schools along with updated advice and a bit of regulatory muscle: “We have published strengthened guidance. We have asked our network of attendance and behavior hubs to provide support to schools and, from this month, Ofsted will inspect schools’ mobile phone policies.”

The phone crackdown is only one front in a broader push to rein in kids’ screen time. The same bill has already been used to try to push through a ban on social media for under-16s, although MPs voted against it as recently as last week. Instead, ministers have kicked the issue into a live consultation and a real-world trial involving 300 families testing app bans, curfews, and time limits – suggesting the government is taking the easier win in classrooms while the bigger fight over social media plays out elsewhere.

For schools, this likely changes very little in practice.  Around 90 percent of secondary schools and virtually all primary schools already restrict phone use in some form, according to a 2025 survey by the Children’s Commissioner for England, meaning many will simply see existing rules stamped with legal authority rather than rewritten from scratch.

Smith framed the move as common ground rather than a culture war. “We all want to protect children from the disruption and distraction caused by mobile phones throughout the school day and to create calm, focused school environments that support learning, behavior, and well-being. We are all in agreement on this.”

The message from Westminster is clear: the era of “please don’t use your phone in class” is being quietly retired in favor of something with a bit more bite. ®



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Clean electricity meets all new demand, curbing fossil fuels, says Ember | Energy News

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Low-emissions energy sources met all new global electricity demand for the first time last year, leaving no room for fossil fuels to grow, the energy think tank Ember has found.

Solar power led the charge, meeting three-quarters of the 849 TWh in new demand. Wind power met almost all the rest.

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All low-emissions sources, which also include biofuels – generated from decaying agricultural and food waste – hydro-electricity and nuclear power, provided a record 42.6 percent of the 31,779 TWh of electricity the world consumed in 2025, said Ember.

Fossil fuels provided the majority, but Ember believes 2025 marked a turning point after which their share will shrink.

“Clean power deployment is now at such a high level that it can structurally meet the increase in demand,” Ember’s senior energy and climate data analyst Nicolas Fulghum told Al Jazeera. “In the next few years, we expect it to meet all the growth in electricity demand and start to push for a decline in fossil generation.”

By about 2035, Ember expects fossil fuels’ share of the electricity market to have dropped by 10-20 percent, losing its market dominance to clean energy.

Not everyone is convinced.

“In an average year, if clean resources are sufficient to meet extra demand for electricity, that doesn’t establish that this is going to be a permanent state,” said Rahmat Poudineh, head of electricity research at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES).

“If you want to establish a trend, it needs to prove in extreme conditions, in cold winters, hot summers, because the system is designed to meet peak demand, not average demand,” he told Al Jazeera.

Ember said 2025 was not a year of extreme demand growth – 2.8 percent, in line with the average during the past decade.

It acknowledged, too, that it expected 2024 to be the turning point, but a summer of record heat drove enormous demand for air conditioning, allowing fossil fuels to grow as well as renewables.

Ember, however, pointed out that the world has outperformed expectations as it rises to meet an unprecedented set of energy challenges.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, for example, led to annual 5 percent increases in the rollout of renewable energy in Europe.

That meant Europe produced 71 percent of its electricity from clean sources last year.

Others seem to be following suit.

Last year’s global tipping point was reached because China and India – two of the world’s biggest emitters – scaled back fossil-generated electricity, the first time this century they have done so together.

The International Energy Agency, an intergovernmental think tank, also found on Monday that oil and gas demand slowed in 2025 compared with 2024 – not just in electricity generation but in the overall energy mix.

The current war threatening the Gulf may further lower demand for fossil fuels, if governments heed the International Monetary Fund’s advice to shield only the most vulnerable households from price rises or risk inflation.

“2022 was a turning point for Europe … We’re now seeing the same thing again but for a much larger group of countries,” said Fulghum.

The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, a think tank based in Helsinki, found that fossil electricity fell in March, the first month of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, because gas-fired electricity was replaced by renewables rather than coal, which also fell.

And Ember points out that growth in renewables is accelerating in this century. The past decade has seen 81 percent of all wind and solar generation growth since 2000, versus 27 percent of fossil fuel growth.

Some hydrocarbon analysts insist that repeated shocks in the fossil fuel market will not render it obsolete.

“Renewables can meet new demand, but they cannot yet guarantee stability without flexible capacity storage and stronger grids,” said Yannis Bassias, a hydrocarbon industry veteran and consultant at Amphore Energy.

“The Gulf crisis reveals that high prices do not eliminate the technical need for gas in power systems,” he told Al Jazeera, citing the continued use of coal and gas for baseload electricity. “The dependence remains structural in Europe, Japan and Korea, where imported LNG is essential for system stability.”

The OIES is less certain of that. “Since the 1970s, these fossil fuel shocks played a major role in changing the direction of energy policy,” said Poudineh, “and this one has a high possibility [of doing the same], but we still don’t know 100 percent.”

Is it enough?

Clean energy’s march, though impressive, is still not enough to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), the goal 196 countries set themselves at the Paris Agreement a decade ago. For that to happen, fossil-generated electricity would have to drop by 25 percent by 2030, the International Energy Agency has said, not 10-20 percent by 2035, which is Ember’s current prediction.

Still, Ember found that emissions per average kilowatt hour fell to 458g of CO2-equivalent in 2025, down from 543g/CO2e a decade ago. The IEA believes it will fall to about 400g next year.

The IEA points out that overall emissions growth of 0.4 percent is well below economic growth of 3.1 percent in 2025, and says the economy is decoupling from CO2.

Last year, the world pumped 38.4bn tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, said the IEA – but had solar and wind power not grown, said Ember, that figure would be 4 billion tonnes higher.



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MTG describes voting for Republicans and Democrats as ‘worst ROI’

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Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene asserted in a Monday post on X that regardless of which political party wields power in Washington D.C., the nation continues traveling down the same path.

“Nothing ever changes in Washington. No matter which party is in charge. You still get a bigger debt. You still get foreign wars and you pay for them. Your cost of living still increases and the value of the dollar continues to shrink,” Greene wrote.

“Voting for both Democrats and Republicans is the worst ROI for the American people,” she added.

TRUMP TRASHES MTG AFTER REPUBLICAN WINS CONTEST TO FILL HER OLD SEAT ‘DESPITE THE STENCH LEFT BY GREENE’

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene arriving at Capitol Visitor Center for House Republicans meeting

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., arrives for a meeting of House Republicans in the Capitol Visitor Center on the budget reconciliation bill on Thursday, May 15, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Her criticism comes amid the 2026 midterm election cycle, which will determine whether Republicans maintain their majorities in the House and Senate.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on Tuesday.

Greene, who in the past had been a staunch ally of President Donald Trump’s, left Congress in the middle of her term early this year after a falling out with the president last year.

TRUMP PUSHES BACK AGAINST PUNDITS, SAYS ISRAEL DID NOT TALK HIM INTO THE IRAN WAR

President Donald Trump

President Donald Trump on the South Lawn of the White House before boarding Marine One in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, April 16, 2026. (Graeme Sloan/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Greene wrote “25th AMENDMENT!!!” in part of an April 7 post on X after Trump, in a Truth Social post, threatened regarding Iran that “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”

The president ultimately announced a ceasefire and did not follow through on his threat against Iran.

Trump-backed Republican Clay Fuller won the April 7 special election runoff to fill the House seat that had been vacated by Greene.

In an April 8 Truth Social post, the president congratulated Fuller and blasted Greene as “deranged.”

EX-TRUMP ALLY MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE JOINS LEFT-WING CALLS FOR THE 25TH AMENDMENT AS IRAN DEADLINE NEARS

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President Donald Trump walks toward reporters before answering questions prior to boarding Air Force One on April 10, 2026 at Joint Base Andrews, Md. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

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“Marjorie ‘Traitor’ Brown’s (GREEN TURNS TO BROWN UNDER STRESS!) seat in Congress has been taken over by a wonderful and talented man, Clay Fuller, who won convincingly, and right from the beginning, despite many people running for that ‘TRUMP’ +37 seat, and despite the stench left by Greene. Congratulations to Clay Fuller, a very large improvement over his deranged predecessor!” the president declared in the post.



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Mythos can find the vulnerability. It can’t tell you what to do about it.

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Mythos matters. It is a significant step forward in AI-assisted vulnerability discovery. But it does not mean cybersecurity changed overnight, nor does it mean enterprises are suddenly facing fully automated exploitation at internet scale tomorrow.

It does mean the offensive side of AI is continuing to improve. The defensive side needs to catch up now.

Mythos is the latest step in a longer trend. Over the next several years, expect the same pattern to repeat: incremental progress, then a jump; incremental progress, then a jump. Models will get more capable and cheaper with each cycle, and each jump will put more pressure on security teams still operating at human speed.

Mythos demonstrated that AI can find software vulnerabilities with unprecedented depth. That is real progress and should be taken seriously. However, this was not a case where AI suddenly made enterprise compromise cheap, easy, or automatic. Even in Anthropic’s own examples, the cost of discovering a critical vulnerability was significant. One example cited roughly $20,000 in token costs to identify a significant OpenBSD issue. 

Mythos made vulnerability discovery cheaper to scale by replacing bodies with dollars. But finding a vulnerability is only one part of the operational reality.

An attacker still has to determine whether that vulnerability is exploitable in a specific enterprise, identify a viable attack path, gain the necessary access, and successfully operationalize the exploit in a real environment. None of that became easy just because a model found a software bug.

And on the defensive side, Mythos does not yet solve the much harder enterprise problem: How do I know whether this vulnerability is actually exploitable in my environment, and what is the most efficient way to remediate it without breaking the business?

The real enterprise problem is not discovery. It is prioritization and action. Security leaders do not struggle only because vulnerabilities exist. They struggle because the operational cost of deciding what matters, what is exploitable, what can wait, and what can be fixed safely is enormous.

If a large enterprise learns that a critical vulnerability has been found in widely used software, the next step is not magic. It is a painful chain of operational questions focused on where they run the software, what version it is, whether there is a realistic attack path, and many more.

Mythos leaves the defensive cost of answering those questions inside a real enterprise largely unchanged. The right lesson is preparation.

One of the mistakes the market often makes with AI is assuming every new capability is the moment everything changes. The right move is to start now with defensive AI systems that are useful today and positioned to improve over time. For most enterprises, that means looking for AI products that help improve alert investigation, threat hunting, and vulnerability management, offer full audit capabilities, connect to enterprise data and reason to provide organizational context, and evolve as the model landscape matures.

The goal is to build the operational foundation now for a future in which more of the work can be automated safely.

Today, defenders need systems that let humans remain involved while the machine helps them scale. Over time, that involvement will change. Analysts will spend less time doing repetitive work themselves and more time orchestrating, reviewing, and improving how automated work gets done.

Eventually, some workflows will need to be reviewed in bulk rather than one action at a time. When response moves at machine speed, a human may not approve every individual remediation action. Instead, they will need a control center view into patterns: what the system did today, what worked, what did not, and what should be adjusted tomorrow.

That is a very different future from the simplistic idea of “replace the analyst.”

The real future is one where humans move from doing every task manually to supervising systems, shaping policy, reviewing patterns, and controlling how increasingly capable agents operate.

Mythos is a warning. Not because it means the sky is falling. Because it shows where the offensive side is heading. Defenders should move accordingly and with urgency.

Alex Thaman is the chief technology officer at Andesite. Over a 20+ year career, Alex has been an engineering leader at Microsoft, Unity Software, and Scale AI.

Alex Thaman

Written by Alex Thaman

Alex Thaman is the chief technology officer at Andesite. Over a 20+ year career, Alex has been an engineering leader at Microsoft, Unity Software, and Scale AI.



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Trump’s Federal Reserve chair pick to face lawmakers at key confirmation hearing – US politics live | US politics

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Key events

Jerome Powell’s term as chair ends on 15 May. He said last month that he would remain as chair until a successor is named.

Powell also is serving a separate term as a member of the Fed’s governing board that lasts until January 2028.

Fed chairs typically leave the board when their terms as chairs ends, but Powell also said last month he would remain on the board, even if a new chair is approved, until the investigation is dropped.

When asked about Powell’s comments, Trump said he would fire Powell if he tried to stay at the Fed.

Yet Trump’s previous attempt to remove a Fed governor, Lisa Cook, has been tied up in courts.

During oral arguments in January, a majority of justices on the Supreme Court appeared to lean towards letting Cook keep her job.

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell leaves after the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) meeting during the World Bank/IMF spring meetings at the IMF headquarters in Washington, Friday, April 17, 2026. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP


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