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Trump postpones executive order focused on AI security 

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President Donald Trump said he would postpone the release of an executive order that would set up a 90-day testing and vetting regime for frontier AI models, hours before the White House was set to publicly announce the signing. 

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office Thursday, Trump said he opted to delay the order “because I didn’t like certain aspects of it” and expressed concerns that it could harm U.S. AI industry competition with countries like China. 

According to multiple sources, a draft version of the order circulating in the last 24 hours would have set up a voluntary testing regime between the U.S. federal government and frontier AI companies that would allow the government to study new models for 90 days before they’re publicly released. In addition to the government, the draft order would also facilitate access to the models for cybersecurity testers in critical infrastructure sectors, like finance and healthcare.

The draft order empowered the National Security Agency to conduct classified evaluations of frontier AI models, while the Department of the Treasury would have set up a new information sharing agreement between AI companies and cybersecurity defenders in critical infrastructure.

Other agencies, like the Office of the National Cyber Director, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the National Institute for Standards and Technology, would also be involved in defining which models are covered under the vetting regime.

In some sense, the order would formalize an already cooperative relationship between AI companies and governments like the U.S. and UK, where tech-focused agencies and regulators have already been provided access to previous models ahead of their release for testing and evaluation. 

A former federal official who has seen the latest draft circulated before Thursday’s announcement told CyberScoop that based on their conversations with the administration, the order was intended to facilitate more robust testing from government agencies compared to evaluations conducted for previous models. They said that is in part a reflection of the federal government’s maturing understanding of AI technology over the past five years.

“In the past there has been containerized optionality for the intelligence community and others to take a look at things, but it was really a lot of hand holding [from AI companies] and self-explanation of what they expect this thing to do,” said the official, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations with the administration. “And now the government is coming forward and saying now we feel we’re prepared enough for you to just give us your tool…and we’ll go from there.”

But it also represents a stark pivot by the Trump administration, which came into office openly dismissive of AI safety policies and arguing that they would inhibit U.S. industry. Trump’s latest comments in delaying the order echo those same attitudes. 

The former official said that while the Trump White House doesn’t view its mission as telling AI companies “don’t develop AI that can do X, which was perceived to be the previous administration’s role,” they also acknowledged the administration’s early rhetoric on AI regulation has painted them into a corner. 

“I think the biggest challenge the administration has is that their tone was ‘no institution of guardrails’ and they don’t have a better word for making sure that the capabilities of emergent frontier models don’t disrupt security than to say ‘let’s test it and institute guardrails,’” the official said.  

While debate about how best to regulate AI-related harms continues, most agree there are genuine national security concerns around the technology.

Ram Shankar Siva Kumar, founder of Microsoft’s AI red team, told CyberScoop that in 2019, his staff consisted of himself and a few other security and machine learning specialists. Now a much larger staff of technologists are supported by specialists in psychology, linguistics, bioweapons and other fields.

“Because of frontier harms, what we have done has really morphed,” Siva Kumar said.

The United States, along with Israel, Russia, Ukraine and others have already deployed AI in targeted military operations or integrated the technology into their larger command and control structure. AI is being used to supercharge drone warfare, global hacking campaigns, and sophisticated surveillance and targeting of military personnel and civilians, imbuing the engineering choices of frontier AI companies with life and death consequences.

Some congressional members who previously opposed allowing AI to make autonomous kill decisions on the battlefield have been reconsidering their position.

Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., who co-chaired the Congressional AI Caucus and was appointed to a bipartisan AI task force in 2024. said that while he thinks “we need to guard against dehumanizing” those decisions, he also worries that adversarial countries will use the same technology against the United States.

“It’s like if we say that Americans have to have a human in the loop and the Chinese don’t have to have a human in a loop, the non-human one will beat the human one every time,” Beyer said at an AI conference in Washington D.C. earlier this month.  

Meanwhile, experts have been increasingly concerned about the technology’s impact on cybersecurity, as current models are remarkably good at finding software bugs and vulnerabilities, while newer models like Anthropic’s Mythos and OpenAI’s Daybreak are capable of chaining together multiple exploits to conduct more sophisticated attacks.

While state-sponsored hackers are experimenting with the technology and using it to gain targeted efficiencies in their hacking operations, cybersecurity experts in the private sector and law enforcement agencies say the technology has mostly benefitted cybercriminals and scammers.

Derek B. Johnson

Written by Derek B. Johnson

Derek B. Johnson is a reporter at CyberScoop, where his beat includes cybersecurity, elections and the federal government. Prior to that, he has provided award-winning coverage of cybersecurity news across the public and private sectors for various publications since 2017. Derek has a bachelor’s degree in print journalism from Hofstra University in New York and a master’s degree in public policy from George Mason University in Virginia.



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UK launches ‘Great British Summer Savings’ to ease family costs | Business and Economy News

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Families to benefit from reduced VAT to help lower costs at theme parks, theatres, zoos, and museums.

The British government has launched a scheme aimed at helping families reduce the cost of children’s meals and summer activities, including visits to theme parks, theatres and museums.

From June 25 to September 1, 2026, VAT will be temporarily reduced to help lower the cost of days out and boost customer numbers for struggling businesses, according to a government statement released on Thursday.

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The initiative, dubbed the “Great British Summer Savings” scheme, is intended to ease pressure on household budgets while supporting the leisure and hospitality sectors.

Children aged five to 15 will also be able to travel free on local bus services throughout August.

The programme is estimated to cost about 300 million pounds ($403m), the government said.

“When I think about the summer holidays, I think about the Lake District – where I went as a child and later made memories with my own family,” Prime Minister Keir Starmer said.

“I know how precious that time is, yet too many parents feel they have to hold back because the cost of living is still squeezing budgets,” he added.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced that VAT would be temporarily reduced from 20 percent to 5 percent until children return to school in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

The reduced rate will apply to children’s menus, family tickets for cinemas, theatres, concerts, shows and exhibitions, as well as admission tickets to attractions including amusement parks, fairs, museums and zoos.

“I know the cost of living remains the number one concern for many households. Our economic plan is the right one – supporting families and businesses while building a stronger and more secure Britain,” Reeves said.

The announcement comes as families across the UK and much of Europe continue to face rising fuel costs linked to the war in Iran.

It also comes at a politically difficult moment for Starmer. Earlier this month, his Labour Party suffered significant losses in local elections while the right-wing populist Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, made major gains.



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Intense and violent preview released for new WWII movie about the Battle of the Bulge


The trailer for the upcoming WWII film “Lucky Strike” is here, and it’s incredibly intense.

Basic info:

  • Plot (via IMDB): An injured American soldier is trapped behind German lines during the Battle of the Bulge.
  • Cast: Scott Eastwood, Colin Hanks, Taylor John Smith and Lorne MacFadyen
  • Director: Rod Lurie
  • Release Date: June 26, 2026
American soldiers in the Battle of the Bulge

Three US infantrymen in the snow during the Battle of the Bulge, Ardennes, Belgium, World War II, January 1945. ((Photo by Tony Vaccaro/Getty Images))

Trailer released for new WWII movie ‘Lucky Strike’

There are few things more guaranteed to grab the interest of the regular American male than a story about WWII. The war still fascinates and captivates across generations more than 80 years after it came to an end.

REMEMBERING D-DAY: ‘WE’RE HERE BECAUSE OF WHAT THEY DID’

One of the most famous battles of the war was the Battle of the Bulge. American troops found themselves facing a brutal German assault in the Ardennes.

Airborne infantrymen operating a .30-caliber machine gun in a snowy battlefield

Airborne infantrymen operate a .30-caliber machine gun during the Ardennes-Alsace Campaign, Battle of the Bulge, in 1945. (History Archive/Universal Images Group)

“Lucky Strike” will now tell the story of an American soldier trapped behind enemy lines facing fierce and violent combat.

It looks like it’s going to be exceptional, judging from the trailer. Give it a watch below, and let me know your thoughts at David.Hookstead@outkick.com.

CLINT EASTWOOD AVOIDS ‘PANDERING’ IN HIS WORK TO ACHIEVE MASSIVE SUCCESS: EXPERT

Looks like it’s going to be a pretty intense and crazy ride. It’s also not the first time Scott Eastwood has appeared in a major war film.

He starred in “The Outpost.” The film about the war in Afghanistan is a must-watch for people interested in the subject or genre.

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Now, he’s turning the clock back to WWII with “Lucky Strike.”

Scott Eastwood standing on red carpet at Suicide Squad world premiere in New York City

Scott Eastwood attends the “Suicide Squad” world premiere at The Beacon Theatre in New York City on Aug. 1, 2016. (Andrew Toth/Getty Images)

You can catch “Lucky Strike” starting June 26. Let me know your thoughts on the preview at David.Hookstead@outkick.com.



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Is Islamophobia being re-packaged as feminism?

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A group of female activists at a far-right rally in the UK have sparked a backlash.

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Daniel Goldman trails Brad Lander by 30 points in New York primary poll


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The country met Rep. Daniel Sachs Goldman, D-N.Y., the wealthy scion of the Levi jeans fortune, back in 2019 when he was tapped to be the lead counsel for the first impeachment of President Donald Trump. Since being elected to Congress in 2022, his reputation as an anti-Trump zealot has only metastacized.

So it is shocking, and no doubt in a happy way for Trump, that according to a new Emerson poll, Goldman is trailing in his primary against Democratic Socialist-leaning Brad Lander by over 30 points. In other words, he is getting absolutely smoked.

Goldman must have thought, back when he was leading the charge against Trump, that he had one foot in the White House, but my how the tables have turned.

Fans of the president, and frankly, of the rule of law, cannot be blamed for feeling a bit of schadenfreude at the political demise of the despicable Goldman, who helped to turn Trump’s “perfect” phone call with Ukrainian President Vlodomir Zelenskyy into a pointless national nightmare.

THE PLOT TO STOP MAMDANI: DEMOCRATS SCRAMBLE TO BLOCK FAR-LEFT TAKEOVER IN NEW YORK

His Ahab-like obsession with his great orange whale came with him to Congress. In 2023, he told Jen Psaki on MSNBC, that Trump was “destructive to our democracy,” and “has to be eliminated.” But who is getting eliminated now?

Rep. Dan Goldman

Rep. Dan Goldman is in danger of losing his House seat. (Getty)

There is perhaps no Democrat alive who has spent more time staring at little red lights and gravely warning that Trump is an existential threat to humanity than Goldman, but in the end, it looks like that is not enough.

As smirk-inducing as the smug Goldman’s humiliation in the polls is, it also tells us some deeper truth about the nature of today’s Democratic Party. Because unlike alleged sex fiend and former anti Trump House member Eric Swalwell, Goldman has no scandal rocking him.

JONATHAN TURLEY: ERIC SWALWELL’S ENABLERS KNEW THE TRUTH — AND PROTECTED HIM ANYWAY

Goldman isn’t being punished in the polls for anything he did or failed to do. He is no Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., who regularly bucks the party with his voice and his votes. No, Goldman’s problem is simply that he’s not a socialist.

Lander, the former failed comptroller of Gotham, has the backing of Mayor Zohran “Madman” Mamdani and his Democratic Socialist machine, and in Goldman’s very White and hyper-educated district, socialism is all the rage.

Brad Lander and Zorhan Mamdani appear on "The Late Show"

New York City mayoral candidates Brad Lander and Zorhan Mamdani appeared on “The Late Show” on the eve of the Democratic rank-choice primary. (Screenshot/CBS)

Now, it might have been possible for Goldman to slip on a Che Gueverra T-shirt and start handing out little red books to stay competitive, except for one thing: Goldman supports Israel.

MAMDANI IS AN EXISTENTIAL THREAT TO JEWISH NEW YORKERS

Lander, who like Goldman is Jewish, has bowed before the altar of anti-Israel insanity and flip-flopped in obedience from supporting military aid to the Jewish state to opposing it. At least so far, that is further than Goldman will go.

Let’s be clear: In the eyes of many of the most prominent Democrats, from politicians to podcasters, Goldman’s support of Israel is literally considered support of genocide, and this is a reality that more and more pro-Israel and Jewish Democrats are facing.

Goldman would beg nuance from his constituents, to have them understand that his policies on Israel are complex, but where was his sense of nuance when he gave farcially bad interpretations of Trump’s “impeachable” phone call?

DAVID MARCUS: DEMOCRAT BUS HEADING OFF THE CLIFF, AS NYC SOCIALISTS HIT GAS PEDAL

Goldman has never sought to treat Trump or his administration fairly, or to give them a millimeter of benefit of the doubt. So it is fitting that so many Democrats are ready to kick him out the door, no questions asked.

With Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s hand-picked candidate Chris Raab winning his Congressional primary in Philadelphia, and Lander cruising in New York, the socialist ranks among Democrats in Congress is rapidly growing.

Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries wants to be speaker of the house, but he might wind up more like the general secretary of the Politburo.

LEFT, LEFTER AND LEFTIST: DEMOCRATS COULD BE DEFINED BY RADICAL, BIG CITY MAYORS

Goldman, like so many Democrats, thought that he could just ignore the growing wave of socialism in his party. He must have believed that meritorious service against Trump would win him enough points to keep his seat.

But gratitude is not a quality that socialists value. The revolution is too important for that. History teaches us that the useful idiots who cover for communism always meet just and unsavory desserts.

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Nobody needs to cry for Goldman. He will go back to his life of wealth of leisure, barring a miracle comeback. But there is reason to worry about the country, as one of our major parties succumbs to socialism.

Sadly, instead of fighting to keep his party sane, Goldman watched it go crazy and said nothing. Now, the crazies are coming for him, and nobody can say that he doesn’t deserve it.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM DAVID MARCUS



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Senior civil servants to get bonuses for first time to reward ‘doers, not talkers’ | Civil service

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Senior civil servants will get bonuses for exceptional performance for the first time under a new system that Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, said would reward the “doers, not the talkers”.

Jones, who is also chief secretary to the prime minister, said most civil servants would get a 3.5% pay rise but senior staff would have a base increase of 2.5%, with 1% held back for bonuses for the highest-performing officials.

The idea of performance-related pay for senior civil servants was announced as a trial by the Conservatives before the last election and has since been championed by Labour.

In January, Jones set out his ambition to “rewire” the civil service, pledging to bring in bonuses for top performers across senior ranks to encourage excellence.

On Thursday, he said the government wanted to award “higher but fewer bonuses to those exceptional senior civil servants who go above and beyond”.

The government did not accept the pay review body’s recommendation for a 3.5% increase for senior staff, instead opting to retain some cash to reward a few top performers.

It will bring in an uplift of £5,000 to the lowest band of senior civil servant pay, meaning some officials will get rises.

Jones said: “This is just the start to improving our pay system … This is one of the many steps I am taking to power up the system to make sure words are turned into action and what happens in Westminster is followed through to the streets, schools and livelihoods of people in every part of the country.”

Lauren Crowley, the assistant general secretary of the FDA, the union for senior civil servants, said the 3.5% overall award compared favourably to the wider public sector and current inflation figures.

“Pay systems across the civil service have been blighted by a lack of meaningful pay progression for almost two decades,” she said. “The ability to move up a pay band based on delivery, skills and experience should be a feature of any well-functioning workplace. Its absence has had detrimental consequences on morale, delivery and both attracting and retaining talent.

“The changes to senior civil service pay announced today are finally beginning to address this and have been achieved through sustained work and negotiation. However, pay progression for the rest of the civil service – the majority of our membership – has not yet been secured.”

Jones’s speech in January centred on a promise to “move fast, fix things”, creating savings of £2bn a year by 2030. He suggested more civil servants would be “shown the door” if they did not meet standards.

The government has made a stream of announcements this week as Keir Starmer faces pressure to show he is delivering for the country at a time of threat to his leadership. The views of his potential rivals, including Wes Streeting and Andy Burnham, on civil service reform are not yet known.



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Sen. Susan Collins rips opponent’s Reddit post mocking wounded US soldier


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Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, ripped Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner over his recently exposed Reddit posts mocking a wounded U.S. soldier. 

Platner is the presumptive Democratic nominee challenging Collins in November’s midterm election.

“It’s never appropriate to mock a downed American soldier,” Collins told Fox News Digital. “It’s just appalling.”

PLATNER’S DELETED REDDIT SPARKS OUTRAGE AGAIN AS HE APPEARS TO MOCK WOUNDED SOLDIER: ‘DIDN’T DESERVE TO LIVE’

Split of Sen. Susan Collins and Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner

Sen. Susan Collins blasts Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner for an old Reddit post in which he mocked a wounded U.S. soldier. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

A slew of newly resurfaced Reddit posts from Platner includes comments he made about a viral video of a U.S. soldier — Pfc. Ted Daniels — almost killed in combat. The video from Daniels’ helmet camera shows Daniels being shot four times during a 2012 firefight with Taliban fighters. The Purple Heart was awarded to him after sustaining injuries from this attack.

“Dumb motherf—–  didn’t deserve to live,” was posted in 2019 by the now-deleted Reddit account “P-Hustle,” which Platner has previously acknowledged he owned. 

“At least his stupidity and fat a– wheezing are available for all future infantrymen to witness and hold in contempt. Poor marksmanship on the Taliban’s part is the only reason this mouthbreather made it home, he managed to make every possible s— decision possible when it comes to small unit combat.” 

When Collins was asked about all of Platner’s resurfaced posts circulating online, she asked him to get specific. This response comes as Platner has had lewd Reddit posts continue to come to light since last year.

LEFT-WING DEM SENATE HOPEFUL CHEERED ON ANTIFA VIOLENCE IN UNEARTHED RANT: ‘KILL A MOTHERF—ER’

Graham Platner speaking at a town hall in Ogunquit, Maine

Senatorial candidate Graham Platner speaks at a town hall at the Leavitt Theater in Ogunquit, Maine, on Oct. 22, 2025. (Sophie Park/Getty Images)

“You’d have to narrow your question down because there are so many,” Collins said when asked by Fox News Digital for her reaction to Platner’s posts

These now-deleted posts can be viewed on the Maine Monitor’s database cataloging Platner’s deleted Reddit history. 

A super PAC aligned with Collins launched a website on Wednesday that compiles all of Platner’s “red flags.” Pine Tree Results, a fundraising committee, lists all the controversies that have followed Platner during his campaign to unseat Collins in the midterm.

MORNING GLORY: DEMS’ BERNIE-BACKED OYSTER FARMER HANDS SUSAN COLLINS A MASSIVE 2026 ADVANTAGE

“Over 20 years of a grown man revealing his true character with one red flag after another,” the site states. “He’s radical. Dangerous. Too extreme for Maine.”

The website launch is part of the more than $4 million already spent on attack ads targeting Platner during Collins’ re-election campaign. 

Collins’ seat is expected to be one of Republicans’ most competitive Senate defenses in 2026 as Democrats target Maine in their push to flip control of the chamber. This race is crucial for Republicans as they try to keep their Senate majority.

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While Platner continues to be scrutinized by Republicans, Democrats are seemingly still hopeful that he will secure the Senate seat for their party during the 2026 midterm elections. 

If Collins and Platner win their primary elections next month, they will face off in Maine’s Nov. 3 general election.



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AI is getting pricey, but relief is coming, but not for you

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ai + ml

New hardware promises greater efficiency, user experiences, and most importantly larger margins

Generative AI apps and services are getting more expensive by the day as model devs grapple with surging infrastructure costs. A new generation of GPUs and AI accelerators promises relief from rising inference demand, but you won’t see the savings.

After years and billions spent building bigger and better models, the great AI houses are beginning to find tangible use cases for the technology beyond chatbots and image generators.

Claude Code, Codex, GitHub Copilot, and the slew of other code assistants have arguably become AI’s biggest success story to date, but history tells us they won’t be the last.

But success is a double-edged sword. The bit barns built with borrowed money to train the Sonnets, GPTs, and Geminis at the heart of these apps and services were never meant to serve them at this scale. Inference and training are very different beasts.

Those selling the shovels of the AI boom are now racing to bring new hardware better suited to serving these models. Nvidia pulled $20 billion from its war chest to acquihire AI chip startup Groq for this very reason. And it’s not alone; everyone, from AMD and AWS to Intel and Google, is rearchitecting their GPUs, AI accelerators, and systems to drive down the cost per token.

Cheaper tokens mean better inference economics, higher margins, and the venture capitalists fanning the flames hope that OpenAI, Anthropic, and all the others might actually drag themselves out of the red one day. 

Your AI addiction is their opportunity

There’s just one little problem. All that AI-optimized hardware isn’t quite ready yet. Much of it is promised for the second half of this year, but it takes time to work out the kinks and ramp supply chains, which means the bulk of these new systems won’t have widespread deployments until early to mid 2027.

But here lies a fleeting opportunity for the flag-bearers to see how addictive their products have become, and just how much the market will bear. If Nvidia and AMD are the arms dealers of the AI age, the model devs are the drug dealers: the first hit’s free, the next ones are cheap, and before long you’re hooked.

We’re already seeing this play out. With the launch of GPT-5.5, OpenAI doubled the price per token to $5 (input), $0.50 (cached input), and $30 (output) per million tokens. It didn’t take long for Google to follow suit. The Chocolate Factory’s newly-launched Gemini Flash 3.5 is between 3x and 6x more expensive than Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite and Gemini 3 Flash Preview.

These price hikes are further compounded by the fact that the agent harnesses being built atop these models are burning through tokens orders of magnitude faster than a typical chatbot. 

Flat rate pricing makes a lot of sense when the majority of your customers aren’t running up against usage caps. It makes a lot less sense when customers are spending $200 a month on $5,000 worth of tokens. 

Microsoft seems to have figured this out. It outright abandoned seat-based pricing for GitHub Copilot and began transitioning its customers to usage-based pricing. 

Anthropic appears to be rethinking its pricing model as well, but rather than moving to a pure usage-based pricing model, it’s considering watering down its subscription features.

AI isn’t the payroll paradise execs were promised

Executives who thought AI was going to replace a full-time employee for pennies on the dollar are in for a rude awakening. That’s not happening and it probably never will. Not when Anthropic, Google, or OpenAI can charge the equivalent of $30 an hour in tokens and make the case it’s still cheaper than paying an employee $40 an hour plus benefits and unemployment insurance. Just wait, before long AI pricing will be marketed in dollars per full-time equivalent ($/FTE) instead of dollars per million tokens.

AI may not be the sweet deal execs might have hoped for, but that hasn’t stopped large tech firms from laying off thousands in pursuit of the technology. The FOMO has never been higher, and, if there’s anything big tech loves, it’s leading by example.

So far this month, we’ve learned:

  • Meta is laying off about 10 percent of its global workforce, closing around 6,000 open positions, and reassigning some 7,000 workers to AI-focused divisions. 

  • Cloudflare is cutting more than 1,100 workers, citing increased reliance on AI.

  • Cisco is letting about 4,000 workers go because, as its CEO Chuck Robbins put it, “The companies that will win in the AI era will be those with focus, urgency, and the discipline to continuously shift investment toward the areas where demand and long-term value creation are strongest.”

  • Even New Zealand has revealed plans to use AI to sack around 9,000 government workers.

Competition won’t save us

Competition, it’s said, is the cure to high prices, but for that to happen, there has to be a profit margin to shave and so far the top model devs are all running deep in the red.

Hyperscalers have the advantage here. They can lose billions on AI investments for years while leaning on other product divisions to keep their shareholders from staging a riot.

But it is probably not the death knell for Sam Altman’s hypemaxing or Dario Amodei’s sanctimonious posturing. Someone still has to build the models. Microsoft, Meta, and AWS are dabbling in model training, but have yet to show they can compete with OpenAI or Anthropic in any meaningful way. Google is really the standout in this respect. Gemini routinely trades blows with GPT and Claude, and after this week’s I/O, it’ll be practically inescapable. 

If history tells us anything, the AI boom and inevitable bust will follow a familiar trajectory. Competition abounds in a bubble, but once it bursts, consolidation is inevitable. ®



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Democrats belatedly publish 2024 presidential election autopsy report | Democrats

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The Democrats have belatedly published a postmortem on the party’s disastrous 2024 election defeat, after an initial decision to withhold the document triggered an angry backlash.

Ken Martin, chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), released the report – accompanied by an apology to party members angered by his initial decision to keep the analysis of Kamala Harris’s loss to Donald Trump and defeat in both houses of Congress under wraps.

Martin had initially declined to publish the report, authored by a veteran Democratic strategist, Paul Rivera. He cited a need to focus on this year’s midterm elections and avoid re-opening old wounds.

The decision backfired, leading to a crisis of confidence in Martin’s leadership among senior Democrats, and accusations that he was keeping the findings secret.

The report focuses on key demographics that Harris lost – including Latinos, men and rural voters in many states – and compares her performance to other Democrats in key state races, such as North Carolina governor Josh Stein.

It also takes an in-depth look at campaign spending and advertising, and highlights the need to involve new voters in campaign messaging rather than just pushing out messages.

Notably, the autopsy does not mention the role that Joe Biden’s age or the US’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza played in the wider Democratic defeat, despite widespread polling about the impact of those issues.

Martin acknowledged the lack of comprehensive findings, saying the report “does not meet my standards [and] will not meet your standards”. But he added its release was dictated by the public’s need “to trust the Democratic Party”.

Issuing a convoluted explanation for his actions on Thursday, Martin said: “When I received the report late last year, it wasn’t ready for primetime. Not even close. And because no source material was provided, fixing it would have meant starting over, from the beginning – every conversation, every interview, every data set.

“At the time, Democrats had just come off a series of massive wins in November’s off-year elections, and midterm season was about to start. In December, I announced we would shelve this report, and I meant what I said at the time – that I didn’t think dwelling on 2024 or looking backwards so late in the game helped us to win elections. And at the end of the day, winning elections is my job.”

Martin added: “In short, I didn’t want to create a distraction. Ironically, in doing so, I ended up creating an even bigger distraction. And for that, I sincerely apologize.”

Misgivings about the quality and contents of the 192-page document are stated graphically at the beginning and at the top of each page in the form of a disclaimer marked in red, stating: “This document reflects the views of the author, not the DNC. The DNC was not provided with the underlying sourcing, interviews, or supporting data for many of the assertions contained herein and therefore cannot independently verify the claims presented.”

Sections thereafter are punctuated with multiple qualifiers questioning sourcing, data accuracy or a perceived lack of evidence.

One qualifier undermines the author’s version of the January 6 attack on the US Capitol by Trump supporters bent on overturning the 2020 presidential election result, which he states led to the deaths of five people. “Claim contradicts public reporting”, reads an interposed remark. In fact, five people died within 36 hours of the attack. A further four police officers who responded to the insurrection died by suicide in the following seven months.



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Indiana woman, 75, dies after physical fight with fast food manager


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An Indiana woman is dead after authorities say she got into a physical fight with a fast food restaurant manager over an order dispute. 

Anita Grayson, 75, visited a Tim Hortons in Fort Wayne on Wednesday, May 13 to “address an issue with an order she had received through the drive-thru,” the Fort Wayne Police Department (FWPD) said in a press release

Once inside the restaurant, police said Grayson began “berating” a 17-year-old female employee, which caused a 20-year-old manager to intervene and make repeated requests for Grayson to leave. 

According to police, Grayson subsequently “appeared to move around the shift lead toward the juvenile employee,” which caused her to place “her hands against Grayson in an apparent effort to prevent her from reaching” the minor.

MCDONALD’S TRASH DUTY DISPUTE ESCALATES TO MANAGER ALLEGEDLY SHOOTING TEEN EMPLOYEE’S MOM IN RESTAURANT

Anita Grayson standing outdoors in Fort Wayne, Indiana

Anita Grayson, 75, died after a physical altercation with a Tim Hortons employee in Fort Wayne, Ind., on May 13, 2026. (Anita Grayson/Facebook)

The altercation quickly turned physical as Grayson “forcefully shoved the shift lead backward” and “then struck the shift lead on the left side of the nose with her right hand,” police said. 

The shift lead then attempted to strike Grayson, who police said grabbed the 20-year-old’s face, knocked off her glasses and grabbed her by the hair while dragging her to the ground. 

Grayson then rolled on top of the shift lead, with video footage showing her attempting to swat Grayson’s arm as she was being held by her hair.

TEXAS WHATABURGER BECOMES SCENE OF WILD BRAWL AS WOMEN TRADE PUNCHES AND PULL HAIR ACROSS THE DINING AREA 

Anita Grayson speaking with a Tim Hortons employee inside a store

Surveillance footage shows Anita Grayson speaking with a Tim Hortons employee to address an issue with an order in Fort Wayne, Ind., on May 13, 2026. (Fort Wayne Police Department)

Two employees jumped in to break up the altercation, in which Grayson “pulled a chunk of hair” from the shift lead’s head. 

Grayson then sat down at a nearby table and began speaking on the phone before retrieving the shift lead’s clump of hair and placing it in her purse, according to police.

Anita Grayson engaged in a physical altercation with a Tim Hortons employee.

Surveillance footage shows Anita Grayson in a physical altercation with a Tim Hortons employee in Fort Wayne, Ind., on May 13, 2026. (Fort Wayne Police Department)

Approximately 10 minutes later, police said Grayson laid down on the floor and was unresponsive when the shift lead came to offer her a cup of water.

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First responders arrived at the scene and attempted to perform life-saving measures before transporting Grayson to the hospital, where she was later pronounced dead.

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Anita Grayson in physical altercation with Tim Hortons employee in Fort Wayne Indiana

Surveillance footage shows Anita Grayson in a physical altercation with a Tim Hortons employee in Fort Wayne, Ind., on May 13, 2026, while police examine a clump of hair pulled from the employee’s head. (Fort Wayne Police Department)

Footage released by the department shows the physical altercation between Grayson and the shift lead, but does not include the moment the 75-year-old laid down on the floor. 

In a report released Tuesday, the Allen County Coroner’s Office told WANE-TV that an autopsy found “no significant contributory injuries” on Grayson’s body.

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Her cause and manner of death remain pending, and a completed investigative file has been forwarded to local prosecutors, according to FWPD. 

In the initial news release, police acknowledged “the public concern surrounding the case.”

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“The Fort Wayne Police Department recognizes that any loss of life is tragic,” authorities said. “When the circumstances surrounding a death are not immediately clear, those circumstances must be thoroughly and professionally investigated.”

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Speaking to WPTA, Tawanda Grayson, the woman’s daughter, blasted the employees’ actions before her mother’s death.

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“My mother was wronged in the worst way,” Tawanda Grayson said. “You should not enter a coffee shop for a coffee and a doughnut and come out unalived. That is diabolical.” 

A GoFundMe created by Grayson’s loved ones to cover funeral expenses described the 75-year-old as “a God-fearing woman with a loving spirit who dedicated her life to her faith, her children, and her family.”

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“She was the best mother anyone could ask for — hardworking, compassionate, selfless, and always willing to help others before herself,” the fundraiser continued. “She lovingly raised four children and was the heart of our entire family. Anita’s strength, wisdom, and unconditional love touched everyone who knew her.” 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Fort Wayne Police Department, Tim Hortons and Allen County Prosecutor’s Office for comment. 



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