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Security leaders say the next two years are going to be ‘insane’

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SAN FRANCISCO — Every RSA Conference has its buzzwords. Cloud. Ransomware. Zero trust. Plastered across the 87-acre Moscone Center complex on every booth, banner and bar. This year was AI, with vendors pitching AI-powered solutions to every security problem imaginable. But 2026 stood out for a different reason: Industry leaders spent the conference warning about disruption from the very technology everyone was selling.

In an exclusive discussion with CyberScoop at this year’s conference, Kevin Mandia, founder of AI security company Armadin, Morgan Adamski, former executive director of U.S. Cyber Command, and Alex Stamos, a researcher and former chief security officer at several major technology companies, said the industry is entering what they described as an unprecedented two- to three-year period of upheaval, driven by AI systems that are discovering vulnerabilities exponentially faster than defenders can respond and threatening to render decades of security practices obsolete.

“We are just at the inflection point that is going to be pretty insane, at least two to three years,” Stamos said, describing a near-term future in which AI systems flood the threat landscape with working exploits while organizations struggle to patch vulnerabilities faster than attackers can weaponize them.

Mandia put the timeline more bluntly. “It’s a perfect storm for offense over the next year or two,” he said.

The core problem, according to the executives, is speed. AI has made vulnerability discovery almost trivial, while remediation takes time and effort, creating a widening gap that favors attackers across every stage of the kill chain.

“Because of the asymmetry in the cyber domain, where one person on offense can create work for millions of defenders, speed leverages that asymmetry,” Mandia said. “In the near term, there’s an advantage to the attackers as they start to use models and agents to do a lot of the offense.”

Bug discovery goes exponential

The shift is already underway. Stamos, who is currently chief security officer at Corridor, said foundation model companies are sitting on thousands of bugs discovered through AI-assisted analysis that they lack the capacity to verify or patch. 

“The exploit discovery has gone exponential,” Stamos said. “What we haven’t seen go exponential yet is plugging that into working shellcode that bypasses protections on modern processors. But maybe six months or a year from now” AI will be generating sophisticated exploits on demand.

He pointed to examples of AI systems discovering vulnerabilities in decades-old code that had been reviewed by thousands of developers and professional security researchers. In one case, he said, an AI system identified a flaw in foundational Linux kernel code that humans had overlooked for years.

 “This superintelligent system was able to figure out a way to manipulate the machine into a place that, when you look at the bug, I’m not sure how a human could have found that,” Stamos said.

The pace of discovery is creating what Stamos called “a massive collective action problem.” Each successive generation of AI models could surface hundreds of new vulnerabilities in the same foundational software. “It’s quite possible that all this development we’ve done in memory-unsafe languages, without formal methods, that none of that is actually secure in the presence of superintelligent bug-finding machines,” he said. “In which case we need to be massively rebuilding the base infrastructure we all work on. And nobody is doing that.”

The timeline for when those capabilities become widely accessible is measured in months. When Chinese open-source models, like DeepSeek or Alibaba’s Qwen, reach current American foundation model capability levels, Stamos said, “you’re going to have every 19-year-old in St. Petersburg with the same capability” as elite vulnerability researchers.

Models trained on existing shellcode are already “reasonably good” at generating exploit code, he said, and may be capable of producing EternalBlue-level exploits within a year. That NSA-developed exploit, leaked in 2017, was used in the WannaCry and NotPetya attacks and remained effective for years because of how difficult such capabilities were to develop. 

“Imagine when that becomes available on demand,” Stamos said.

Agents already operating beyond human scale

Mandia’s company Armadin has built AI agents capable of autonomous network penetration that he said would be devastating if deployed maliciously. Unlike human attackers who must manually type commands and wait for results, AI agents operate across hundreds of threads simultaneously, interpolating command outputs before they arrive and launching follow-on actions in microseconds.

“The scale and scope and total recall of an AI agent compromising you and swarming you is not humanly comprehensible,” said Mandia, who founded Mandiant and served as CEO from 2016 to 2024. “If the old way was a red team that would get in, there’s a human on a keyboard typing commands. That’s a joke compared to” what AI agents can do.

Those agents can evade endpoint detection and response systems in under an hour, he said, and operate at human speed to avoid rate-limiting detection mechanisms. Once inside a network, an AI agent can analyze documentation, packet captures and technical manuals faster than humans can read them, designing attacks tailored to specific control systems on the fly.

“When you build the offense, it scares the heck out of you,” Mandia said. “If we let the animal out of the cage today, nobody’s ready for it.”

He said Armadin recently tested a Fortune 150 company with a strong security team and found either remote code execution vulnerabilities or data leakage paths in every application tested. “Both of us were shocked,” he said.

The shift changes the fundamental question boards ask after penetration tests. Historically, directors wanted to know the probability a demonstrated attack would occur in the real world. “In the age of humans, you could never really answer,” Mandia said. “But with AI, it’s 100 percent. It’s coming and it’s going to get cheaper and more effective at the same time.”

Defenders face impossible timelines

The compression of attack timelines is colliding with organizational realities that are moving in the opposite direction. Adamski, who is now the U.S. lead for PwC’s Cyber, Data & Technology Risk business, said chief information security officers face pressure from boards to adopt AI rapidly, often with explicit goals of reducing headcount, even as compliance requirements remain unchanged and the threat landscape accelerates.

“CISOs are getting squeezed in that they cannot stop adoption because of demand from the board, from the CEO,” Adamski said. “None of the SOC 2 requirements have changed. ISO 27000, anything that helps people get through from a compliance perspective, all those rules are exactly the same.”

Stamos said patch cycles illustrate the mismatch. Where previously only sophisticated adversaries could reverse-engineer Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday updates to develop exploits, AI will democratize that capability. “You’re going to be able to drop the patch into Ghidra, driven by an agent, and come up with [an exploit],” he said. “Patch Tuesday, exploit Wednesday.”

Many CISOs are trying to bolt AI capabilities onto existing security operations, an approach the executives said is insufficient. “They’re not stepping back and looking at the bigger picture, that we have a fundamental, much more holistic problem in terms of how to reimagine and redo an entire cyber defense ecosystem that is solely driven by AI machine to machine,” Adamski said.

Avoiding Pandora’s box

The national security implications compound the problem. While other former government leaders talked at the conference about what they saw as the United States’ slipping in offensive cybersecurity, the three industry leaders spoke to what they believe nation-states have developed with the use of AI.

“I think we’re seeing less than 50 percent of the AI capability from modern nation-states right now,” Mandia said. “They’re not pressing. Nobody wants to be the first one to open that door.”

Stamos said the operational tempo favors U.S. adversaries. Russian intelligence services can observe and record data from the hundreds of businesses hit by ransomware daily, using that operational experience to train offensive AI models. “We don’t have that kind of operational pace in the U.S.,” he said.

Adamski said any AI capability the United States develops for offensive cyber operations carries inherent risks. “Anything you introduce, you’re introducing it to an ecosystem that they can use back at us,” she said.

Stamos said AI’s impact on cybersecurity will likely produce harmful consequences before other domains because the threshold for cyber operations is already low. “We allow on a Tuesday to happen in the cyber world what we would consider an act of war if it was in any other context,” he said. “I think this is where AI will be used first to hurt people, will be in cyber.”

Two years, maybe

The executives offered limited optimism that AI could also accelerate defensive capabilities, primarily by making security testing affordable at scale and enabling autonomous response systems. But the timeline for when defensive capabilities might catch up depends on immediate action. 

“Two years if we’re good,” Stamos said. “Two years is the minimum if we actually start really fixing code and refactoring stuff into type-safe languages using formal methods.”

Mandia offered optimism “a few years out” if offensive AI built by defenders successfully trains autonomous defensive systems. But he acknowledged the current state is dire. Organizations will need autonomous systems capable of immediately quarantining anomalous behavior, he said, because traditional detection and response timelines will collapse.

“You’re not going to have time to call Mandiant on a Thursday afternoon, get people in, sign a contract,” Mandia said. “You’re going to have to be able to respond at machine speed.”

Stamos said defenders must assume they cannot patch their way out of the problem and focus instead on defense in depth, particularly around lateral movement and persistence, which remain more difficult for AI to automate than initial exploitation.

But even that assumes organizations have time to prepare. The executives suggested that window is closing rapidly, if it hasn’t already shut for good.

Adamski summed up the reckoning facing the industry: “AI is going to potentially make us pay for the sins of yesterday.”

Greg Otto

Written by Greg Otto

Greg Otto is Editor-in-Chief of CyberScoop, overseeing all editorial content for the website. Greg has led cybersecurity coverage that has won various awards, including accolades from the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Society of Business Publication Editors. Prior to joining Scoop News Group, Greg worked for the Washington Business Journal, U.S. News & World Report and WTOP Radio. He has a degree in broadcast journalism from Temple University.



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School dinners in England dominated by grab-and-go foods such as pizza and sausage rolls | School meals

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Pupils in England are routinely eating pizza slices, sausage rolls and paninis for lunch as school canteens become dominated by a “grab-and-go” culture of unhealthy food.

Convenience foods eaten on the move are ousting sit-down meals as the main way secondary pupils in England refuel during lunch breaks, a report backed by the TV chef Jamie Oliver found.

Food campaigners fear the trend could worsen childhood obesity, leave pupils struggling to focus in classes and undermine the government’s pledge to raise “the healthiest generation ever” of children.

Time and money pressures are driving pupils to increasingly buy food that is less nutritious but easier to consume while moving around, according to Bite Back, the charity behind the report. Such options also include chips, rolls, sugary drinks, cakes and confectionery.

Main meals were being ‘edged out’, the charity said, in favour of cheaper and more convenient options. Photograph: monkeybusinessimages/Getty Images

Bite Back found that 60% of pupils buy “grab-and-go” options at lunchtime at least once a week, 40% do so three, four or five times a week and 32% consume such items at morning break.

“Grab-and-go food and soft drinks now make up a substantial and routine part of the food on offer at secondary schools in England,” the report found. “Despite these items frequently falling short of the school food standards, they have become embedded. Current provision prioritises convenience and profitability over nutrition.”

Jamie Oliver has long campaigned for healthier school dinners. Photograph: Paul Stuart 2025/PA

Bite Back surveyed 2,000 secondary school pupils, as well as some teachers and head teachers, and analysed school lunch menus.

The charity, founded by Oliver, said: “Grab-and-go is not inherently problematic and can play a positive role in busy school days.” However, it said the option had become dominated by unhealthy “nutrient-poor, predominantly carbohydrate-based items, including pizza, rolls, pastries and chips, which are cheaper than main meals”.

“Its popularity and affordability is edging out main meals which are more expensive and nutritionally balanced,” Bite Back said.

D’Arcy Williams, its chief executive, said widespread breaches of long-established standards for school food, which are supposed to guarantee nutritious fare, were going unchecked. “The real problem here is that no one is clearly responsible for enforcing school food standards, and in practice, that means they’re not being enforced at all,” he said.

“We have rules that are meant to protect children’s health. But without proper monitoring or accountability, they’re being undermined by a system that increasingly prioritises speed, convenience and profit. That’s how we’ve ended up with a grab-and-go culture taking hold in schools. Unhealthy, nutritionally poor food has become the easiest option.

“With short lunch breaks, long queues and limited healthier choices, young people are being pushed towards quick fixes. But these options are often leaving them hungry, tired and unable to focus in lessons.”

Oliver, a veteran campaigner for healthier school food, said: “What children eat at school shapes their health, their confidence and how well they learn, so when the food isn’t nutritious, it’s a missed opportunity. This report is a stark reminder that we’re still not getting this right.”

The findings come as ministers consider new moves to improve school dinners, including an overhaul of the standard to ensure food contains less fat, salt and sugar. Groups such as Bite Back, the Food Foundation and the all-party parliamentary group on school food want monitoring of school food to be overseen by Ofsted, the Food Standards Agency or school governors.

Ministers are considering new moves to improve school dinners. Photograph: SDI Productions/Getty Images

Shalom, a 17-year-old pupil and Bite Back activist, said: “By the time the lunch bell rings, the grab-and-go section is always the busiest place in school. Students run past the main meal to avoid long queues and wasted free time.

“The shelves are filled with packaged sandwiches, pizza slices, paninis and fizzy drinks, the smell of pastry and cheese dampening the air. It looks tempting at first but week after week becomes beige, bland and boring.”

Bite Back believes that too many schools are getting trapped into long-term contracts with big food companies that then provide too many unhealthy “grab-and-go” products.

The Department for Education said: “We know school food needs to improve, which is why we are working with experts to revise the school food standards for the first time in over a decade as part of our mission to create the healthiest ever generation of children.

“This, alongside our historic step to offer free school meals to every child from a household in receipt of universal credit, will ensure children across the country have access to good-quality nutritious food in that sets them up to achieve and thrive.

“We recognise the importance of compliance and are developing options to help supports schools and caterers to get this right.”



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Remains of ‘Three Musketeers’ inspiration may have been found in Netherlands

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Archaeologists may have uncovered the remains of Charles de Batz de Castelmore d’Artagnan, the legendary French musketeer who inspired Alexandre Dumas’ “The Three Musketeers.”

The skeleton was found in front of an altar at St. Peter and Paul Church in Maastricht, the Netherlands, local officials said Wednesday.

Workers found the human remains in February after the floor caved in, Reuters reported.

ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNCOVER EERIE ANGLO-SAXON ‘SAND BODIES’ AT NUCLEAR POWER STATION SITE

Researchers are now testing DNA from the jawbone to see if it lines up with d’Artagnan’s descendants. 

The church has long been considered a possible burial site for d’Artagnan, according to officials.

Aerial of altar, portrait of d'Artagnan

Archaeologists in the Netherlands are investigating whether newly discovered remains could belong to d’Artagnan, the famed musketeer linked to Alexandre Dumas’ novel. (John Thys/AFP via Getty Images; Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Speaking to Reuters, archaeologist Wim Dijkman said the excavation has become a “top-level investigation.”

He added, “We want to be absolutely certain — or as certain as ​possible — whether it is the famous musketeer, who was killed here near Maastricht.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Dijkman for further comment.

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Born in 1611, d’Artagnan served under King Louis XIV — known as the “Sun King” — and rose to captain of the Musketeers of the Guard, an elite military unit.

He was killed on June 25, 1673, near Maastricht, after being shot in the throat during a French siege.

Cartoon of musketeers, view of hole in church

The remains were discovered after the church floor collapsed, opening a hole that led archaeologists to a burial possibly tied to d’Artagnan. (De Agostini via Getty Images; REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw)

It’s believed that d’Artagnan was buried nearby, as it would have been impractical to transport his body back to France in the summer heat.

Jos Valke, a deacon of the church, told Reuters that additional clues also pointed to d’Artagnan.

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These included a coin from 1660 and a fragment of a lead bullet near the burial.

Valke noted that d’Artagnan was supposedly buried in consecrated ground, according to a contemporary letter.

“When you add it all up … it seems plausible to us.”

“Well, ⁠under ​an altar — it couldn’t be much holier than that,” ​he said.

Valke added, “When you add it all up, then, it seems plausible to us. But of course, nothing ​is certain yet.”

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Dumas published “The Three Musketeers” in serial form beginning in May 1844, immortalizing d’Artagnan in fiction. 

Published in book form later that year, it has since been widely read and adapted into films, plays and TV shows.

View of covered hole in church

“We want to be absolutely certain — or as certain as ​possible — whether it is the famous musketeer, who was killed here near Maastricht,” said an archaeologist. (John Thys/AFP via Getty Images)

The discovery is one of many significant archaeological finds in the Netherlands in recent years.

Last summer, officials showcased a medieval sword with rare symbols that was found in a river by Dutch construction workers.

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In 2024, archaeologists in North Holland found a creepy, centuries-old floor made of animal bones in a red-light district.

Reuters contributed reporting.



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Swindon man accused over wife’s suicide tells court it was ‘worst day of his life’ | Wiltshire

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A man accused of subjecting his wife to a campaign of “physical and sexual violence” said finding out she had died by hanging was the “worst day of my life”.

Tarryn Baird, 34, was found dead at her home in Swindon, Wiltshire, on 28 November 2017. Christopher Trybus, 43, is charged with his wife’s manslaughter as well as two counts of rape and coercive and controlling behaviour. He denies all the charges.

On Friday, Winchester crown court heard about the day Baird was found dead in Swindon, Wiltshire, on 28 November 2017. Trybus was on a work trip in Stuttgart, Germany, when he received the news. “I was just in such a state of shock and it hit me. I went back to my desk and booked a flight,” he said.

He said that as he was on his way to the airport to return home, he “broke down” in tears.

“Halfway down the drive, I broke down and cried. I got to the airport, dumped the car, asked them to put me at the front of the plane because I wanted to get out as soon as possible,” he said. “It’s not something anyone can prepare themselves for; it’s a cliche but you never think it’s going to happen to you.

“So, worst day of my life, just absolutely terrible, I don’t know how else to describe it.”

An audio recording Baird made of her being allegedly assaulted by Trybus during sex was played in court. Trybus said the noises were “bumps and thumps” and that the “microphone seems to have picked up quite a lot”, including the sound of a door moving. “It’s hard to say exactly what’s going on but certainly not me assaulting or restraining” her, he said.

Prosecutor Tom Little KC asked Trybus if he was angry at being labelled a “wife-beater” by Baird, who accused him of assaulting or sexually assaulting her on 25 occasions. He replied: “It’s difficult to be angry with someone who is dead.”

Little continued: “Why aren’t you furious with her?” He added that if Trybus’s version of events was correct, Baird was “lying her teeth off every week”. Trybus responded: “I don’t know the reasons for that and me being angry won’t change any of that.”

The court heard that Trybus got a new phone on the same day Baird was interviewed by police in relation to allegations he had abused her. Messages from his old phone, including those between him and Baird, did not carry over, meaning they were lost. Little asked: “Isn’t the reality that you were eager to remove any evidence of the domestic abuse … that had been contained on your old mobile phone?” Trybus said: “No.”

Trybus was also questioned about a diary Baird kept where she detailed their sex life and her attempts to get a space in a women’s refuge. One entry read: “One night, during sex, I felt his hands around my neck. Something was unleashed that night. Progressively, sex got rougher. The more I fight back, the more he enjoys it”. Baird added that this was “a side” of her husband “that has been hidden all these years”.

Asked about this entry, Trybus said: “There was a lot of strange things she wrote in her diary.”

Trybus, who is a software consultant and developer, denies the charges and the trial continues.



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AI Newsletter: Kentucky farming family rejects $26M from AI giant

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Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

– Kentucky family turns down $26M from AI giant to keep farmland that ‘fed a nation’

– Trump names David Sacks co-chair of tech advisory council, expanding AI, crypto role 

– Hollywood union praises Trump’s AI policy as ‘protections for human creativity’

MOOVE ALONG: A Kentucky family reportedly rejected a massive $26 million offer from a major artificial intelligence company. The family chose instead to preserve their historic farmland, citing its legacy of helping feed the nation over corporate tech expansion.

Train along Ohio River in Maysville, Kentucky

A train sits in front of houses on the banks of the Ohio River in Maysville, Kentucky, Sept. 13, 2017. (REUTERS/Brian Snyder)

GROWING INFLUENCE: President Donald Trump has appointed David Sacks as the co-chair of his technology advisory council. This strategic move signals an expanded focus on shaping both artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency policies under the current administration’s economic and political agenda.

‘STRONGLY SUPPORT’: A major Hollywood union is offering praise for President Trump’s approach to artificial intelligence policy. The union specifically highlighted the administration’s efforts to implement protections for human creativity in the face of rapidly evolving generative AI tools in the entertainment industry.

Melania Trump walking through the White House alongside a humanoid robot.

First lady Melania Trump arrives, accompanied by a robot, to attend the “Fostering the Future Together Global Coalition Summit,” with other first spouses, at the White House, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Washington. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo)

FUTURE FORWARD: First lady Melania Trump welcomed a humanoid robot during a historic artificial intelligence summit hosted at the White House. The event underscores the administration’s active engagement with rapidly advancing emerging technologies.

WASTE WATCH: Vice President JD Vance’s anti-fraud task force intensifies its efforts to identify and root out fraudulent activities nationwide. The ramped-up initiative follows a major enforcement action that resulted in the suspension of 70 providers in Los Angeles.

TECH SHOWDOWN: House Speaker Mike Johnson outlined two specific conditions that he argues must be met for the United States to successfully win the highly competitive global artificial intelligence race.

SIDELINING PROGRESS: Sen. John Fetterman sharply criticized a proposed moratorium on the construction of AI data centers. Fetterman argues that pausing infrastructure development would place the United States at a severe disadvantage, characterizing the proposal as a “China first” policy.

A work center in Nevada

Nevada Big Blind center. (Zanskar)

EARTH’S EDGE: Fox News’ Bret Baier explores the intersection of political energy strategy and next-generation technology, reporting on how artificial intelligence is playing a crucial role in unlocking new potential for geothermal energy development across the country.

POWER PLAY: Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar addresses what he calls America’s “undeclared emergency.” The sweeping cultural and geopolitical conversation covers the threat posed by Iran, the development of deadly new U.S. weapons systems and strategic maneuvers required to avoid World War III.

CAUTION ADVISED: Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak expressed skepticism about the current state of artificial intelligence. Weighing in on the tech industry’s latest obsession, Wozniak stated plainly that he is not a fan of the technology’s current trajectory.

MONEY MATTERS: BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warned about the financial disparities potentially exacerbated by technological advancements. Fink emphasized that expanding market participation is absolutely necessary to address the growing wealth gap amid the current artificial intelligence boom.

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Stay up to date on the latest AI technology advancements, and learn about the challenges and opportunities AI presents now and for the future with Fox News here.



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US law enforcement foils plot to assassinate Palestinian American activist | New York

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Federal US law enforcement has foiled a plot to assassinate New York-based Palestinian American activist Nerdeen Kiswani.

Kiswani wrote in post on X that late on Thursday, the FBI joint terrorism taskforce informed her that a plot against her life was “about to” take place, and that agents had conducted an operation in Hoboken, New Jersey, in connection to it.

A federal law enforcement official and an attorney for Kiswani told the New York Times that the FBI said one or more people had been arrested in connection to an imminent attempt on her life. They reportedly did not identify the suspects or their motive.

The FBI and Kiswani did not immediately respond to requests for comment from the Guardian.

“For months, Zionist organizations like Betar and politicians like Randy Fine have encouraged violence against my family and me,” she added on X. “I will have more to say as additional details come to light. I will not stop speaking up for the people of Palestine. Thank you for your support.”

Kiswani recently sued the far-right pro-Israel group Betar. Eric Lee, an attorney representing Kiswani in the case , did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court last month, Kiswani accused the group of stalking and harassment, including social media “bounties”.

“For years, Betar USA stalked & harassed me even offering $1,800 for someone to hand me a beeper while I was pregnant,” Kiswani wrote on X at the time.

The group recently ceased its New York operations as part of a settlement with Letitia James, the attorney general whose office investigated the group and found that it had engaged in “bias-motivated assaults, threats and harassment targeting Muslim, Arab, Palestinian and Jewish New Yorkers”.

In a social media post commenting on the foiled plot, Betar wrote, “violent terrorist Nerdeen Kiswani wants to globalize the intifada not surprising if other terrorists targeted her”.

Randy Fine, a Republican representative of Florida whom Kiswani also referenced in her post, has made repeated Islamophobic remarks, and has previously singled out Kiswani.

Kiswani, who was born in Jordan and has been living in the US since she was a young child, is the founder of Within Our Lifetime, a pro-Palestine group that’s been behind many New York protests against Israel’s war on Gaza.

The group – and Kiswani herself – have been condemned by some for their rhetoric, including their stated support for armed resistance and the claim that Palestine must be liberated “by any means necessary”.

Pro-Israel groups, including Betar, have frequently called her a “terrorist” or “terror supporter”. She has also at times had heated disagreements with fellow pro-Palestine activists and has repeatedly criticized Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s mayor, for positions she views as compromising to the Palestinian cause.

But Kiswani has repeatedly denied allegations of antisemitism, arguing that the group’s focus is the state of Israel, not Jews.

“This is horrifying but not surprising in a political climate where our own president constantly sows division and pushes extremist rhetoric,” said Antonio Reynoso, the Brooklyn borough president, of the foiled plot.

“Political violence has no place in New York,” he added.



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Why is NASA going back to the moon? | Science, Climate & Tech News

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Artemis II is NASA’s next big mission to the moon – the first in over 50 years. It’s part of the space agency’s long-term plans to build a space station called Lunar Gateway, where astronauts will be able to live and work.

It is also America’s best effort to beat the likes of China in the space race to return to the moon.

Niall speaks to Tom Clarke, our science and technology editor, and Thomas Moore, our science and medical correspondent about what NASA hopes to achieve with the lunar flyby.

Have you got a question for the podcast? Email us: why@sky.uk



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House Freedom Caucus threatens to block DHS funding deal over ICE, voter ID

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House conservatives are ripping into a Senate-passed deal that would end the 42-day Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown, citing concerns that the bill fails to fund President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

The House Freedom Caucus said Friday it will withhold its support for the DHS funding measure until Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) are given full-year appropriations. The conservative group also wants voter ID requirements added to the bill.

“We can’t believe that the Senate abdicated its responsibility this morning of not funding the child sex trafficking investigation division of ICE, that they didn’t fund the Border Patrol,” HFC chairman Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., told reporters. “The only thing we’re going to support is adding that funding into the bill, adding voter ID, sending it back to the Senate, make them come back in and do their work.”

“The bottom line is … this deal is bad for America,” Harris continued.

House Freedom Caucus

The House Freedom Caucus speaks at the U.S. Capitol Building on May 21, 2025. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

TWO DOZEN HOUSE REPUBLICANS GO TO WAR WITH SENATE GOP OVER SAVE AMERICA ACT

The Senate-passed product provided funding for all of DHS minus ICE and parts of the Border Patrol, enraging some conservatives who viewed the agreement as a capitulation to Democrats. 

“Republicans must also make sure this never happens again,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., told Fox News Digital, adding that he opposed the funding deal.

The measure, however, did not include a bevy of immigration reforms demanded by Democrats — a notable win for Republicans. Scott and other Senate Republicans have teased a forthcoming budget package that would give an infusion to Trump’s immigration agenda.

Amid the conservative backlash, House GOP leadership will pitch a short-term stopgap measure funding all sub-agencies of DHS, including ICE and the Border Patrol, Fox News confirmed. 

House Republicans’ rejection of the Senate deal could force the upper chamber to return to Washington mid-recess as early as next week. A 60-day DHS continuing resolution (CR) is expected to face an uphill battle in the Senate due to Democrats’ continued opposition to funding Trump’s immigration efforts absent reforms. 

The disagreement between both chambers will almost certainly make the partial government shutdown the longest in history. 

“We just have the number one main objective to see that we can get the entire Department of Homeland Security properly funded,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., told Fox News on Friday. “There’s a lot of threats out there.”

House Democrats, who indicated support for the Senate deal, will also likely balk at a short-term funding package for DHS that includes ICE funding. 

Steve Scalise at microphones next to Mike Johnson

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, left, and House Speaker Mike Johnson, during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. (Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

TED CRUZ UNLEASHES ON DEMS FOR ‘RISKING AMERICAN LIVES’ WITH DHS SHUTDOWN

The pivot from House GOP leadership came after House conservatives’ opposition to the Senate deal complicated its passage through the chamber.

A traditionally partisan “rule” vote teeing up the legislation for a vote on final passage would almost certainly fail if Democrats withhold their support and there is more than one GOP defection. Meanwhile, House rules prohibit Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., from advancing the measure through a suspension vote — requiring a two-thirds majority — between Thursday and Sunday.

House conservatives are also voicing frustration that the SAVE America Act has stalled in the Senate due to bipartisan opposition from all Senate Democrats and a handful of moderate Republicans.

The Senate left Washington on Friday for the Easter recess rather than continue to debate the Trump-backed election integrity bill.

“We the House should AMEND the Senate bill, ADD VOTER ID AND FORCE A VOTE in the SENATE,” Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., wrote on social media Friday morning. 

Senate Democrats notably filibustered a voter ID measure sponsored by Sen. Jon Husted, R-Ohio, on Thursday.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., speaks during the House and Senate Democrats’ joint news conference on DHS funding negotiations in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

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Conservative GOP lawmakers have also argued that because Trump took executive action to fund beleaguered Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents on Thursday, delaying the passage of a DHS funding measure would not worsen air travel disruptions.

“The president has already said he’s going to fund TSA out of funds he has,” Harris said Friday. “It’s not going to affect the airports if we don’t do this today.



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Apple’s last tower topples… and the others will follow • The Register

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Apple has discontinued the Mac Pro – but it’s just the first of the tower computers to go. The rest will follow soon.

Fruit-sniffers extraordaire 9-to-5 Mac got the news yesterday, complete with official confirmation from Apple itself. It’s official and it’s happened, but there have been warning signs for months – in November 2025, Bloomberg’s Matt Gurman said “The Mac Pro is on the back burner.”

The phantom fruit-flingers of Silicon Valley launched the seven-thousand-buck Apple Silicon-based Mac Pro in June 2023, with an M2 Ultra SoC. It sported seven PCIe slots – but the problem was that cash-rich customers couldn’t add the sorts of expansion that normally go into a PCIe slot… to the extent that Apple publishes a page about PCIe cards you can install in your Mac Pro (2023). Notably, the machine did not support add-on GPUs: only the GPU that’s integrated into the CPU complex along with the machine’s RAM and primary flash storage. The machine also had no RAM expansion whatsoever.

Presumably, this limited its appeal for many traditional buyers, and the machine never saw an M3 or M4 model, let alone the M5 SoC that The Register covered shortly before Bloomberg called the Arm64 cheesegrater’s fate.

Thus ended a line of distinctive machines, from the original G5-lookalike Xeon based Mac Pro that 20 years ago was the “fastest PC in the UK”, followed in 2014 by the polarizing “Darth Vader’s dustbin, and then in 2019 the original Intel-based “cheesegrater”.

Tracing the integration trend

This machine is a high-profile example, but the trend is inexorable. This is how the rest of the industry is going to go. The path to performance is increasing integration. The original 1981 IBM PC had very little on the motherboard. A 16-bit CPU on an eight-bit bus, 16 kB of RAM, a keyboard port and cassette interface. Everything else was on expansion cards: graphics, serial and parallel ports, an optional-extra floppy disk controller. Over the 45 years since then, most of the PC’s possible expansions and peripherals and addons gradually migrated onto the motherboard, then into the chipset, then into the processor. Processors went from 8-bit to 16-bit, then to 32-bit bringing a memory controller onto the CPU die. Then the next generation absorbed the math co-processor and a tiny amount of static RAM as a cache, so the cache on the motherboard was demoted to “level 2” cache… then that migrated onto the CPU die as well. This was not just some Intel thing: for instance, Motorola’s 680×0 family went through much the same evolution.

Bringing a whole second CPU core on-board followed: AMD launched the Athlon X2 in early May 2005, and Intel the Pentium D mere weeks later. The gap was narrowing: AMD launched the 64-bit Opteron in April 2003, while Intel’s 64-bit Xeon was almost a year later.

Graphics followed: by the end of the 1990s, the Intel 810 chipset included a GPU. To this day, the Linux kernel driver for Intel integrated GPUs is named after the Intel 915 chipset for the Core 2 Duo in 2005. The next year, AMD bought ATI. By 2008 it was talking about on-chip GPUs, although it took a while to happen: it announced the “Llano” APU chips in 2010, and they launched the next year – the same time as Intel’s GPUs moved onto the CPU die, with the second generation of Core i-series chips, codenamed Sandy Bridge. The x86 market was finally catching up with where Arm had been with the ARM250 SoC in 1992 – nearly 20 years later.

In 2020, Apple moved the bar on desktop and laptop processors with the M1 generation Apple Silicon, integrating the computer’s RAM and nonvolatile storage onto the SoC as well. For laptops, this wasn’t such a huge shift – ever since the “Retina” MacBook Pro in 2012, Apple’s laptops had soldered-in, non-upgradable RAM, just like every MacBook Air since the first one in 2008.

In August last year, we mentioned the new Reg FOSS desk testbed, a Dell XPS 13 made in 2018. It has no DIMM slots: the RAM it came with is all it will ever have.

Who’s next? Everyone

The trend is inexorable. Thanks to Moore’s Law, for 60 years buyers and users have expected computers to keep getting faster. The effects of Dennard scaling started to put the brakes on that, leading to its successor Koomey’s Law, which fewer people remember: that they take ever less electricity to do it. Most of us don’t know Moore’s Second Law: that as chips get ever-more integrated, the fabs to make them cost more and more.

The writing on the wall is large and clear. You can still have high-end kit, but you don’t get to put it together from discrete bits. The fastest parts – the CPU, GPU, volatile and non-volatile storage – all get assembled as a single, highly integrated, non-upgradable component.

The fabrication failure rates will be horrendous at first, but that’s OK: so long as the duff region can be turned off, you can sell the working remainder as a lower-end part. This is how Sinclair made the original ZX Spectrum so affordable: it bought known faulty RAM chips cheaply, and turned off the bad half of each chip.

Apple offered a Mac Studio with 512 GB RAM, although one year on, thanks to spiraling RAM prices, that model quietly disappeared earlier this month.

If you want faster x86 kit, it is heading in the same direction: huge, highly-integrated SoCs with all the core of the system in one package. AMD is well set for this: it already has very capable on-chip GPUs and the lead in chiplet-based manufacturing. The FOSS folks favor them, too, as AMD’s GPU drivers are all open source. They’re good enough for gaming, as Valve’s Steam hardware shows.

Nvidia didn’t get to buy Arm, so it can’t offer a combined package. Meanwhile, Apple’s respectable graphics performance demonstrates that a smaller, simpler integrated GPU, accessing the same RAM on the same die as the CPU shows, can rival a more capable GPU that is bigger, hotter, but further away and has its own local RAM.

This, we reckon, is what’s behind the “AI” boom. Nvidia is so gung ho for vast LLM clusters that it’s taking its vast market capitalization and investing money in its own customers. Its GPGPU line – graphics chips that don’t even have graphics outputs – are the last gasp of the discrete GPU market. When this bubble pops, Nvidia has nowhere else to go.

Aside from them, discrete graphics cards are history, just as disk controllers were a few decades earlier. DIMM slots are going too. The primary storage will be built in. (The industry missed a great deal there.)

What’s the point in a tower Mac Pro which despite lots of slots can’t take more memory, or newer GPUs, or even a bigger primary SSD? Well, not much, and so it’s gone. But as was the case with GUI desktops, and laptops with built-in pointing devices, and USB ports replacing everything else, and indeed with fondleslabs in general, the rest of the computer industry is going to follow where Apple goes first. There’s no point in tower or big desktop cases any more, when the board can’t have any expansion slots. You may as well build it all into a neat little closed box at the factory – you get better cooling that way, and it’s quieter as well as cuter.

The first microcomputer expansion bus was the Altair 8800’s S-100 bus, although DEC’s UNIBUS predated it, just as minicomputers predated micros. The late great Gordon Bell invented UNIBUS in 1969, but 57 years later, the idea of the expansion bus has reached the end of its route. We predict much resistance to the idea, but the expandable desktop (and laptop, and server) computer is obsolete. ®



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