Rotten Tomatoes denies ‘Melania’ film audience score manipulation claims

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Rotten Tomatoes is pushing back against claims the audience score for the “Melania” film was artificially inflated. The film has one of the widest gaps in Rotten Tomatoes history, with more than a 93-percentage-point difference between critic and audience scores.

The film follows first lady Melania Trump during the 20 days leading up to President Donald Trump’s second inauguration. As of Friday, it holds a 6% critics score and a 99% audience rating.

Versant, the parent company of Rotten Tomatoes, denied any tampering with the score, telling Variety there was “no bot manipulation” of audience reviews.

“Reviews displayed on the Popcornmeter are VERIFIED reviews, meaning it has been verified that users have bought a ticket to the film,” they added.

DAVID MARCUS: WHY MELANIA AND HER FANS DESERVE HER SILVER SCREEN STAR TURN

Melania Trump stands on New York Stock Exchange floor.

First lady Melania Trump stands on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Jan. 28. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) has logged more than 48,200 user ratings for the “Melania” film since its release, with most votes landing at one star. 

The film currently holds a 1.3-star rating on that site. IMDb has also posted an “unusual activity” warning under the title reading, “Our rating mechanism has detected unusual voting activity on this title.”

MELANIA TRUMP EXPOSES ‘VERY CHALLENGING’ REALITY OF LEGAL BATTLES, MAR-A-LAGO RAID

Several media outlets have called out the large disparity in reactions online. The Daily Beast was among the first to report on the gap, calling it suspicious and citing claims that ticket sales may have been artificially boosted.

Melania Trump meets freed American-Israeli hostage at White House.

First lady Melania Trump meets with Keith Siegel, a freed American-Israeli hostage, in the Blue Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 4.

Late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel also questioned the film’s ticket sales on his show, joking that the success may have been “rigged.”

AMAZON AXES ‘MELANIA’ SCREENINGS AT OREGON THEATER OVER MARQUEE MOCKING FIRST LADY

“A lot of people, myself included, have been wondering how this movie managed to sell $7 million worth of tickets last weekend when almost every theater seemed to be empty leading up to the release,” Kimmel said during his monologue on Wednesday.

Donald Trump and Melania Trump attend election night event

President Donald Trump stands alongside first lady Melania Trump during an election night event at the Palm Beach Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Nov. 6, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

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The host continued by speculating that tickets to the movie were purchased and distributed to Republican activists and senior citizens’ homes.

“Melania” beat expectations during its opening weekend, bringing in more than $7.1 million at the box office. The film marked one of the strongest opening weekends ever for a non-music documentary. Amazon MGM Studios paid $40 million for the project and spent an additional $35 million on marketing.



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Use of Irish airport for ICE deportation flights of Palestinians ‘deeply disturbing’ | Ireland

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Politicians in Ireland have said the use of an airport in County Clare by planes deporting Palestinians from the US to Israel is “reprehensible”.

A private jet owned by the Donald Trump donor Gil Dezer was chartered by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for two separate flights that took detainees to Israel, a Guardian investigation revealed this week.

The flights left the US on 21 January and 1 February. Both made refuelling stops at Shannon airport in the west of Ireland.

Dezer’s family property company has built a series of Trump-branded residential towers in Miami. He recently spoke of his “love” for the US president, with whom he claims to have had a 20-year friendship.

Some of those onboard the flights on Dezer’s jet said they had their wrists and ankles shackled for the duration of the journey. After arriving in Tel Aviv, they appear to have been taken to the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The Irish government said in a statement that as the flights stopped in the country for “non-traffic purposes” and were “not picking up or setting down passengers” they did not require prior approval from its transport department.

However, on Friday, opposition politicians expressed concern to the Irish Times about the practice.

Duncan Smith, foreign affairs spokesperson for the Labour party in Ireland, said: “It is absolutely reprehensible that any ICE deportation flights would be allowed stop and refuel in Shannon. The taoiseach and minister for transport must intervene and ensure this ends.” He added: “Ireland cannot in any way be complicit in these ICE flights.”

Roderic O’Gorman, leader of the country’s Green party, said that it was “deeply disturbing” to learn “that Shannon is being used to facilitate the cruel actions of Donald Trump’s ICE”.

Patricia Stephenson, foreign affairs spokesperson for the Social Democrats, said the government “must make a statement on whether it knowingly facilitated these flights”. She told the Irish Times that she believed the human rights of those onboard had been violated.

Dezer’s aircraft was chartered via Journey Aviation, a company based in Florida that is regularly used by the US authorities to source private jets. It declined to comment on the flights to Israel.

According to Human Rights First (HRF), which tracks deportation flights, Dezer’s jet – which he has described as his “favourite toy” – was first chartered for removal flights last October. The organisation said the plane had been used to fly detainees to Kenya, Liberia, Guinea and Eswatini, before its recent trips to Israel.

One of those onboard the first flight was Maher Awad, 24. Originally from the West Bank, he has lived in the US for almost a decade. He has a partner and baby in Michigan.

“They dropped us off like animals on the side of the road,” Awad said. “We went to a local house, we knocked on the door, we were like: ‘Please help us out’.”

In an email, Dezer told the Guardian he was “never privy to the names” of those who travelled onboard his jet when it was privately chartered by Journey, or the purpose of the flight. “The only thing I’m notified about is the dates of use,” he said. He did not respond to further questions about the use of his jet by the Trump administration to deport Palestinians through Israel.

Aviation industry sources have estimated the flights would have cost ICE between $400,000 and $500,000.

A spokesperson for the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not answer questions about the deportation flights to Israel, but said: “If a judge finds an illegal alien has no right to be in this country, we are going to remove them. Period.”



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‘If America attacks then…’, Iran got angry when US imposed sanctions and threatened, Trump’s tension will increase after hearing this!

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Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

iran Amid tensions with India, America has imposed new sanctions on it, due to which the Foreign Minister of the Middle Eastern country has issued a major threat to Washington. This threat from Iran may increase the tension of US President Donald Trump. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that if America attacks Iran, Iran will target American military bases located in the Middle East. He also said that this should not be seen as action against the countries where these American military bases are located.

Araghchi’s statement came on Saturday (February 7, 2026), a day after Tehran and Washington agreed to continue indirect nuclear talks following positive talks on Friday (February 6, 2026) mediated by Oman.

US The date of the next conversation with Araghchi has not been decided.

Abbas Araghchi said in an interview with Al Jazeera TV on Saturday (February 7, 2026) that the date for the next talks with the US has not been decided yet, but US President Donald Trump indicated that these talks could take place early next week. He said that both we and Washington believe that talks should happen soon.

Trump has threatened to deploy American marines

In fact, America US President Donald Trump has threatened to attack Iran after increasing the deployment of US naval forces in the Middle East region. He has demanded that Iran stop uranium enrichment, which is considered an important path towards making nuclear weapons.

Apart from this, America has also demanded to stop the ballistic missile program and not support armed groups in the area. However, Tehran has long denied any intention to use nuclear fuel production for military purposes.

Also read: ‘Will do transaction as per our wish, not under anyone’s pressure’, Mohan Bhagwat bluntly after US-India trade deal

NFL news: Matt Hasselbeck reveals his regret from Seahawks’ Super Bowl XL loss

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When the Seattle Seahawks take the field against the New England Patriots on Sunday, it will be their fourth Super Bowl appearance.

The franchise’s first appearance came in 2006 in Super Bowl XL, as quarterback Matt Hasselbeck led them to a 13-3 record in the regular season. However, the Seahawks’ first trip to the big game did not go as they hoped, as they lost 21-10 to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

In that game, Hasselbeck completed 26 of his 49 passes for 273 yards with one touchdown and one interception. In a recent interview with Fox News Digital, the 50-year-old said there is only one thing he would have done differently.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Matt Hasselbeck warms up

Seattle Seahawks quarterback (8) Matt Hasselbeck warms up before the Super Bowl XL against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan, on Feb. 5, 2006. (Matthew Emmons/USA TODAY Sports Copyright © 2006)

“I don’t think there’s anything that I would have done differently other than maybe not losing my poise. There were a couple of calls in the game that didn’t go our way, and I lost my cool on the referee and didn’t regain my poise by the time the 40-second clock had, you know, it was time to snap the next play,” Hasselbeck told Fox News Digital in a recent interview with the Family Heart Foundation.

“So, I did throw an interception on that play that I’m talking about and then I made the tackle on that interception and then I got flagged again for making the tackle which, you know, that’s a whole (other thing) I got even more upset.”

PRO BOWL QUARTERBACK MATT HASSELBECK ADVOCATES FOR CHOLESTEROL SCREENING AFTER FATHER’S CARDIAC ARREST DEATH

Matt Hasselbeck throws

Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck (8) of the Seattle Seahawks throws a pass in the second quarter against the Chicago Bears in the 2011 NFC divisional playoff game at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, on Jan. 16, 2011. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

The three-time Pro Bowler said that he learned the lesson of just taking things at a time. That lesson from the Seahawks’ Super Bowl loss didn’t just help him as an athlete, but also a father.

“If something in your mind (that’s) ridiculous happens, move on. And so I think that’s something that’s helped me certainly as an athlete, it’s helped me as a dad. You know, you get in the car, my kids would tell you, you get in the car after a sporting event with me, you are not allowed to talk about the referees. You can talk about whatever you want to talk about, but you’re not talking about the officials. Not doing it. And it’s a lesson I had to learn the hard way,” Hasselbeck said.

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Matt Hasselbeck greets

Former Seattle Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck greets fans before the NFC Championship game against the Los Angeles Rams at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington, on Jan. 25, 2026. (Jane Gershovich/Getty Images)

While the Seahawks did not win Super Bowl XL, they returned to the Super Bowl in the 2013 season, and trounced the Denver Broncos 43-8 to capture the franchise’s first-ever title. They made the Super Bowl the following season, against the Patriots, but lost 28-24 as Russell Wilson was intercepted on the goal line by Malcolm Butler to seal the loss.

Now, the latest iteration of the Seahawks hopes to bring the franchise’s record in Super Bowls to .500 and get revenge on the Patriots for the heartbreaking defeat from over 11 years ago.

The Seahawks play the Patriots at 6:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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Will pro-military message bring Thailand’s ‘most hawkish’ party to power? | Politics News

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As Thailand prepares to vote on Sunday in a nationwide election, the country’s months-long border dispute with Cambodia continues to cast a shadow over election proceedings.

Brief but deadly armed clashes in May last year on a disputed section of the Thai-Cambodia border escalated into the deadliest fighting in a decade between the two countries, killing dozens of people and displacing hundreds of thousands.

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Fallout from the conflict toppled the government of Thailand’s Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra – daughter of the billionaire populist leader Thaksin Shinawatra – before bringing Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul to power in September.

Now, while the fighting may have ceased, the conflict remains an emotive topic for Thais and a means for Anutin to rally support for his conservative Bhumjaithai Party as a no-nonsense prime minister, unafraid to flex his country’s military muscle when required, analysts say.

“Anutin’s party is positioning itself as the party that’s really willing to take the initiative on the border conflict,” said Napon Jatusripitak, an expert in Thai politics at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

“It’s a party that has taken the strongest stance on the issue and the most hawkish,” Napon said of the recent military operations.

Anutin had good reason to focus on the conflict with Cambodia in his election campaign. The fighting created a surge in nationalist sentiment in Thailand during two rounds of armed conflict in July and December, while the clashes also inflicted reputational damage on Anutin’s rivals in Thai politics.

Chief among those who suffered on the political battlefield was the populist Pheu Thai Party, the power base of Thailand’s former prime minister Thaksin and his family.

Pheu Thai sustained a major hit to its popularity in June when a phone call between its leader, then-Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn, and the strongman of Cambodian politics, Hun Sen, was made public.

In the June 15 call, Paetongtarn referred to Hun Sen, an erstwhile friend of her father, as “uncle” and promised to “take care” of the issue after the first early clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops, according to Reuters news agency.

For factions in Thailand’s politics and Thai people, Paetongtarn’s deference to Hun Sen was beyond the pale of acceptable behaviour for a prime minister, especially as she appeared to also criticise Thailand’s military – a major centre of power in a nation of more than 70 million people.

Hun Sen later admitted to leaking the call and claimed it was in the interest of “transparency,” but it led to the collapse of Paetongtarn’s government. She was then sacked by the constitutional court at the end of August last year, paving the way for Anutin to be voted in as Thailand’s leader by parliament the following month.

The border conflict with Cambodia has given a major boost to Thailand’s armed forces at a time of “growing popular discontent with the military’s involvement in politics, and with the conservative elite”, said Neil Loughlin, an expert in comparative politics at City St George’s, University of London.

Anutin’s government focused its political messaging when fighting on the border re-erupted in early December. Days later, he dissolved parliament in preparation for the election.

“Bhumjaithai has leaned into patriotic, nationalist messaging,” said Japhet Quitzon, an associate fellow with the Southeast Asia programme at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, DC.

“Anutin himself has promised to protect the country at campaign rallies, signalling strength in the face of ongoing tensions with Cambodia. He has vowed to retaliate should conflict re-emerge and will continue protecting Thai territorial integrity,” Quitzon said.

‘War against the scam army’

During the fighting, Thailand took control of several disputed areas on the border and shelled Cambodian casino complexes near the boundary, which it claimed were being used by Cambodia’s military.

Bangkok later alleged some of the casino complexes, which have ties to Cambodian elites, were being used as centres for online fraud – known as cyber scams – a major problem in the region, and that Thai forces were also carrying out a “war against the scam army” based in Cambodia.

Estimates by the World Health Organization say the conflict killed 18 civilians in Cambodia and 16 in Thailand, though media outlets put the overall death toll closer to 149, before both sides signed their most recent ceasefire in late December.

While the fighting has paused for now, its impact continues to reverberate across Thai politics, said the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute’s Napon.

Pheu Thai is still reeling from the leaked phone call between Paetongtarn and Hun Sen, while another Thai opposition group, the People’s Party, has been forced to temper some of its longstanding positions demanding reform in the military, Napon said.

Former Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra shakes hands with Pheu Thai Party supporters during a major rally event ahead of the February 8 election, in Bangkok, Thailand, February 6, 2026. REUTERS/Patipat Janthong TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Former Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra shakes hands with Pheu Thai Party supporters during a campaign event in Bangkok [Patipat Janthong/Reuters]

“[The People’s Party] vowed to abolish the military’s conscription and to cut the military’s budget, but what the border conflict with Cambodia did was to elevate the military’s popularity to heights not seen in longer than a decade since the 2014 coup,” Napon told Al Jazeera.

“Its main selling point used to be reform of the military, but after the conflict it seems to be a liability,” Napon continued.

The party has now shifted its criticism from the military as an institution to specific generals, and turned its focus back to reviving the economy, which is expected to grow just 1.8 percent this year, according to the state-owned Krungthai Bank.

In the past two weeks, that messaging seems to be hitting home, Napon said, with the People’s Party once again leading at the polls despite a different platform from 2023.

“It will be very different from the previous election,” Napon said.

“Right now, there’s no military in the picture, so it’s really a battle between old and new,” he added.



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NFL news: Matt Hasselbeck reveals his regret from Seahawks’ Super Bowl XL loss

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When the Seattle Seahawks take the field against the New England Patriots on Sunday, it will be their fourth Super Bowl appearance.

The franchise’s first appearance came in 2006 in Super Bowl XL, as quarterback Matt Hasselbeck led them to a 13-3 record in the regular season. However, the Seahawks’ first trip to the big game did not go as they hoped, as they lost 21-10 to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

In that game, Hasselbeck completed 26 of his 49 passes for 273 yards with one touchdown and one interception. In a recent interview with Fox News Digital, the 50-year-old said there is only one thing he would have done differently.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Matt Hasselbeck warms up

Seattle Seahawks quarterback (8) Matt Hasselbeck warms up before the Super Bowl XL against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan, on Feb. 5, 2006. (Matthew Emmons/USA TODAY Sports Copyright © 2006)

“I don’t think there’s anything that I would have done differently other than maybe not losing my poise. There were a couple of calls in the game that didn’t go our way, and I lost my cool on the referee and didn’t regain my poise by the time the 40-second clock had, you know, it was time to snap the next play,” Hasselbeck told Fox News Digital in a recent interview with the Family Heart Foundation.

“So, I did throw an interception on that play that I’m talking about and then I made the tackle on that interception and then I got flagged again for making the tackle which, you know, that’s a whole (other thing) I got even more upset.”

PRO BOWL QUARTERBACK MATT HASSELBECK ADVOCATES FOR CHOLESTEROL SCREENING AFTER FATHER’S CARDIAC ARREST DEATH

Matt Hasselbeck throws

Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck (8) of the Seattle Seahawks throws a pass in the second quarter against the Chicago Bears in the 2011 NFC divisional playoff game at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, on Jan. 16, 2011. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

The three-time Pro Bowler said that he learned the lesson of just taking things at a time. That lesson from the Seahawks’ Super Bowl loss didn’t just help him as an athlete, but also a father.

“If something in your mind (that’s) ridiculous happens, move on. And so I think that’s something that’s helped me certainly as an athlete, it’s helped me as a dad. You know, you get in the car, my kids would tell you, you get in the car after a sporting event with me, you are not allowed to talk about the referees. You can talk about whatever you want to talk about, but you’re not talking about the officials. Not doing it. And it’s a lesson I had to learn the hard way,” Hasselbeck said.

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Matt Hasselbeck greets

Former Seattle Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck greets fans before the NFC Championship game against the Los Angeles Rams at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington, on Jan. 25, 2026. (Jane Gershovich/Getty Images)

While the Seahawks did not win Super Bowl XL, they returned to the Super Bowl in the 2013 season, and trounced the Denver Broncos 43-8 to capture the franchise’s first-ever title. They made the Super Bowl the following season, against the Patriots, but lost 28-24 as Russell Wilson was intercepted on the goal line by Malcolm Butler to seal the loss.

Now, the latest iteration of the Seahawks hopes to bring the franchise’s record in Super Bowls to .500 and get revenge on the Patriots for the heartbreaking defeat from over 11 years ago.

The Seahawks play the Patriots at 6:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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ICC in Pakistan talks to revive India T20 World Cup clash | ICC Men’s T20 World Cup News

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Cricket’s global governing body hopes to persuade Pakistan to reverse decision to boycott India T20 World Cup fixtures.

The International Cricket Council is in talks with the Pakistan Cricket Board to resolve the boycott of its T20 World Cup 2026 fixture against India on February 15.

Any clash between archrivals India and Pakistan is one of the most lucrative in cricket, worth millions of dollars in broadcast, sponsoring and advertising revenue.

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But the fixture was thrown into doubt after Pakistan’s government ordered the team not to play the match in Colombo.

The Pakistan Cricket Board reached out to the ICC after a formal communication from the cricket world body, a source close to the developments has told the AFP news agency.

The ICC was seeking a resolution through dialogue and not confrontation, the source added.

The 20-team tournament has been overshadowed by an acrimonious political build-up after Bangladesh, which refused to play in India, citing security concerns, was replaced by Scotland.

As a protest, Pakistan refused to face co-hosts India in their Group A fixture.

Pakistan, which edged out the Netherlands in the tournament opener on Saturday, will lose two points if they forfeit the match and also suffer a significant blow to their net run rate.

India skipper Suryakumar Yadav said this week that his team would travel to Colombo for the clash.

Pakistan and India have not played bilateral cricket for more than a decade, and meet only in global or regional tournaments.



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DHS fires CBP official for leaking sensitive personnel information to press

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FIRST ON FOX: The Department of Homeland Security fired a senior Customs and Border Protection official on Thursday after it was revealed that the officer was allegedly leaking sensitive, personal information about CBP personnel, as well as negotiations regarding the border wall to the press, sources within the department told Fox News Digital. 

The official, who was unnamed, was marched out of his CBP office in Washington D.C., after DHS discovered the leak, sources said.

“As DHS law enforcement face an 8000% increase in death threats, leaking law enforcement sensitive information is abhorrently dangerous,” a DHS spokesperson told Fox News Digital. “DHS is agnostic about your standing, tenure, political appointment, or status as a career civil servant — we will track down leakers and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law.”

The news comes just days after a Fox News Digital investigation uncovered an underground communications network being used by anti-U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agitators across the country. Tactics include the doxxing of agents, the tracking of license plates and releases of personal information about agents.

NOEM PRAISES DHS OFFICERS ON LAW ENFORCEMENT APPRECIATION DAY AS ATTACKS ON FEDERAL AGENTS SPIKE NATIONWIDE

Minneapolis ICE protestors argue with border patrol

An agitator faces a Border Patrol federal agent during a rally against increased immigration enforcement following the shooting of Renee Good across the city outside the Whipple Building in Minneapolis, Minn., on Jan. 8, 2026. (Tim Evans/Reuters)

Fox News Digital also learned that at least 13 database systems are now known to store the data, which includes personal information as well as photographs, uniform details, behavior patterns, phone numbers, and other sensitive items. 

Last week, FBI Director Kash Patel said the agency is investigating the now widely known Signal messaging chats that have allowed agitators to communicate to obstruct and confront federal agents in Minneapolis and in cities across the country. 

It is unclear whether the officer who was fired on Thursday had any involvement in Signal group activities, as sources at DHS could only confirm leaks to the press.

THE FAR-LEFT NETWORK THAT HELPED PUT ALEX PRETTI IN HARM’S WAY, THEN MADE HIM A MARTYR

The same Fox News Digital investigation reveals that sensitive information is at the center of what’s driving vigilante-type agitators to travel to hot spots where demonstrations are taking place. 

Party for Socialism and Liberation immediately published protest graphics

The Party for Socialism and Liberation turned Alex Pretti into a poster boy for its protests by using quick graphics for its anti-ICE efforts. (Party for Socialism and Liberation/X)

A nationwide web of hundreds of anti-ICE groups facilitates a “rapid response” system to train civilians and call them to action. Federal law enforcement officers have clashed with the trained and allegedly well-funded agitators on multiple occasions. These clashes have led to assaults on agents, raising concern over potentially physical and potentially deadly outcomes for both agitators and agents.

One such arrest was that of Kyle Wagner, a self-described Antifa member and Minneapolis resident who was arrested after Wagner allegedly encouraged followers to attack ICE agents. In a video obtained by Fox News Digital, he is heard telling followers they should “get your guns” and identify agents. 

In announcing his arrest, Attorney General Pam Bondi said Wagner “allegedly doxxed and called for the murder of law enforcement officers, encouraged bloodshed in the streets, and proudly claimed affiliation with the terrorist organization Antifa before going on the run.”

Kyle Wagner arrested by federal agents split

Antifa agitator Kyle Wagner was arrested after threatening ICE agents with violence. (DOJ)

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Wagner’s case and the uncovering of a multichannel communications network allegedly used to push and promote agitators to confront ICE agents are being investigated by a number of federal agencies. 

The senior CBP official’s firing is just the latest development by individuals exposing the identities of federal law enforcement officers that could ultimately put agents or their families in danger.

Fox News’ Andrew Mark Miller and Asra Q. Nomani contributed to this report.



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LLMs need companion bots to check work, keep them honest • The Register

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interview Don’t trust; verify. According to AI researcher Vishal Sikka, LLMs alone are limited by computational boundaries and will start to hallucinate when they push those boundaries. One solution? Companion bots that check their work.

“To expect that a model that has been trained on a certain amount of data will be able to do an arbitrarily large number of calculations which are reliable is a wrong assumption. This is the point of the paper,” said Sikka, CEO of Vianai Systems during a call this week to discuss that research.

Sikka is a towering figure in AI. He has a PhD in the subject from Stanford, where his student advisor was John McCarthy, the man who in 1955 coined the term “artificial intelligence.” Lessons Sikka learned from McCarthy inspired him to team up with his son and write a study, “Hallucination Stations: On Some Basic Limitations of Transformer-Based Language Models,” which was published in July. The former CTO of SAP and ex-CEO of Infosys, Sikka set out to study the efficacy of LLMs and AI agents last year.

“We have an example my son came up with of two prompts that have identical tokens and when you run them, the exact same number of operations get performed independent of what the tokens are,” he said. “Therein is the entire point, that whether the prompt is expressing the user’s desire to perform a particular calculation or the prompt is expressing a user’s desire to write a piece of text on something, it does exactly the same number of calculations.”

Attempting to push an LLM beyond that limit gives rise to the hallucinations that bedevil the model’s output.

“When we say, ‘Go book a ticket for me and then charge my credit card or deduct the amount from my bank and then send a post to my financial app,’ which is what all these agent vendors are kind of saying, you are asking the agents to perform an action which holds a meaning to you, which holds a particular semantic to you, and if it is a pure LLM underneath there, no matter how that LLM works, it has a bounded ability to carry out these kinds of tasks,” he said. “So with agentic use of pure LLMs, you have to perform extreme caution when you do these kinds of things.”

But, Sikka – who founded Vianai in 2019 – said that, when LLMs are supported by systems that can verify the work and use the foundation model only for the computational power, the output becomes more accurate. Sikka said that, in the case of Vianai’s Hila, it can perform mission-critical tasks such as reducing financial reporting from 20 days of human labor to five minutes.

“For certain domains, when you surround the LLM with guardrails, with reliable approaches that are proven, then you are able to provide reliability in the overall system,” he said. “It’s not only us. A lot of systems out there work like that where they pair the LLM with another system which is able to ensure that the LLM has correctness. So we do that in our product Hila. We combine the LLM with a knowledge model for a particular domain and then, after that, Hila does not make mistakes.”

Sikka compared it to the structure Google uses to identify proteins that could be used to make medicines. Google’s AlphaFold has a custom LLM called Evoformer that creates candidates for proteins and that is fed into another “non imaginative” system that can check the configuration for flaws.

“And so anything that comes out of that has a much higher likelihood of being an actual protein, and then it repeats this cycle three times, and the outcome of that is pretty much guaranteed to be a protein for a particular situation,” Sikka said. “They have produced, I think 250,000 proteins that way, which, producing one protein used to take teams of scientists years to do that.”

He continued, “As to ‘why?’ as a scientist you always have to try and understand the boundaries of a technique. Some call it the ‘overview effect.’ John McCarthy used to call it ‘circumscription.’ He also named a set of AI techniques for this, to try and build systems with circumscription,” Sikka said. “Plus of course, Gen AI hallucinates, so ‘Why?’ is a natural question to ask. And finally, since the beginning of Vianai we were working on bringing in explainability, observability, and transparency to AI systems.”

Fourth time around for AI mania

During The Register’s conversation with Sikka, he dropped nuggets of wisdom he picked up first hand from other tech pioneers, like Alan Kay and Marvin Minsky.

“Marvin Minsky used to say the Society of Mind, right?” Sikka said referring to the phrase that was the title of Minsky’s influential 1986 book about human intelligence that was based on his work with AI. “That there is a collection of things that come together to create intelligence. I think that’s kind of where we will end up, but we’ll stumble along our way through to that.”

Minsky actually wrote a letter of recommendation that helped Sikka reach Stanford. While the letter remains somewhere in the admissions office in California, Minsky’s nudge has given Sikka an unobstructed view of AI’s development since the 1980s.

“This is my fourth time observing this AI mania in my career,” Sikka said. “In the 80s, there was a whole hype that came and went over a decade. Same thing (as now). Custom hardware. Custom silicon for AI. AI models. Foundation applications. There were even venture firms being formed to fund AI. There were companies with names like Thinking Machines, Applied Intelligence. It was a different time and different technique. Then people realized this is cool, but it’s not intelligence. It has a certain boundary of applications and then it kind of died.”

Despite spending more than 40 years with AI, Sikka said that even now the technology is in its early stages. While there have been notable successes with coding, he pointed to the MIT study that revealed 95 percent of AI projects fail and compared the current use of AI to the early days of television news when anchors would read updates over the air, just as they had done with radio.

“I think so far, we are just regurgitating our prior known things using AI, but soon we will see breakthrough, new things that are possible,” he said. “I think with carefully chosen products, there is dramatic return on investment to be had, but a blanket use of LLMs, you have to be very, very careful.” ®



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Federal judge reverses Trump’s freeze on $16bn for NY-NJ tunnel project | New York

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A federal judge has reversed a freeze put on funds by Donald Trump for $16bn in enhanced rail links connecting New York and New Jersey amid reports that the US president wants major travel landmarks named after him in return for continued investment.

The Gateway Project will build a new commuter rail tunnel between Manhattan and New Jersey under the Hudson River on the western side of New York City and repair a century-old tunnel used by more than 200,000 travelers and 425 trains daily.

The existing River tunnel was heavily damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and needs frequent emergency repairs that disrupt travel on the nation’s most heavily used passenger rail line.

US district judge Jeannette Vargas in New York on Friday handed down the temporary ruling hours after New York and New Jersey authorities said construction would halt for lack of funding.

Vargas said the states were likely to succeed on their claims that a Trump administration directive freezing the funds was arbitrary and ran afoul of legal procedures for making policy changes.

The White House and the US Department of Transportation did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the ruling.

New Jersey’s acting attorney general, Jennifer Davenport, and New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, issued statements praising the ruling.

“The Trump administration must drop this campaign of political retribution immediately and must allow work on this vital infrastructure project to continue,” Davenport said.

The two states said in a 3 January lawsuit that the Trump’s Republican administration had frozen the funds in a “brazen act of political retribution” against their Democratic leaders. They said a work stoppage would hold up a crucial infrastructure project, damage their economies and saddle them with costs from securing idled construction sites.

The Trump administration has withheld $205m in reimbursements for the project since 1 October. Trump has reportedly demanded that the Washington Dulles international airport and New York’s Penn Station be renamed for him in exchange for unfreezing the funds, drawing strong criticism from Democrats.

He told reporters on Friday that he had not proposed renaming Dulles or Penn Station. Trump did not comment on Vargas’s decision.

The US Department of Transportation said on 30 September that it froze the funds pending a review of the project’s compliance with new federal prohibitions against race- and sex-based considerations in contracting decisions.

The Gateway Development Commission informed the department that it had made changes and conducted a review to ensure compliance with the regulations but has not heard back, according to the lawsuit.

Gateway said the suspension would idle 1,000 construction workers and that Trump’s decision had endangered passengers who had to rely on “decaying, century-old rail infrastructure”. Gateway had previously said work was already suspended.

Trump last month asked Chuck Schumer, the minority leader of the US Senate, to back the renaming of the Washington Dulles international airport and Penn Station after the president. Trump told reporters on Friday that Schumer had proposed renaming Penn Station, but Schumer, who represents New York, called the claim an “absolute lie” in a social media post.

Cory Booker, the senator from New Jersey, said Trump was holding the tunnel hostage, while the New York senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a fellow Democrat, said the president “continues to put his own narcissism” over the projects’s union jobs and economic benefits.

Reuters contributed reporting



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