Elon Musk’s xAI to pull about half of its smog-belching turbines powering Colossus
Newly completed substation will help bear the load
Updated Elon Musk's xAI is removing about half of the temporary gas-turbine generators powering its Colossus AI datacenter over the next two months, according to the Memphis Chamber of Commerce, not due to environmental concerns, but because a new nearby substation now supplies the needed power.…
The Darkness' bizarre performance in VE Day concert leaves fans baffled as they question BBC's 'odd' choice to sign the rock band (and even Queen Camilla covers her ears!)
The BBC's VE Day 80th Anniversary celebration saw an unlikely addition to its lineup on Thursday, as iconic rock band The Darkness took to the stage.
When Calls The Heart star dies 'suddenly at home' at the age of 53
Beloved crew member Nathaniel 'Nate' Pelletier of Hallmark's When Calls the Heart tragically passed away last month at the age of 53.
Donald Trump demands a 30-day 'unconditional' ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine - as Zelensky says his country 'is ready'
In an intervention that piles pressure on the two sides, the US President warned his country and its partners will impose further sanctions if the month-long truce 'is not respected'
Cloudflare CEO: AI Is Killing the Business Model of the Web
In a recent interview with the Council on Foreign Relations, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince warned that AI is breaking the economic model of the web by decoupling content creation from value, with platforms like Google and OpenAI increasingly providing answers without driving traffic to original sources. He argued that unless AI companies start compensating creators, the web's content ecosystem will collapse -- calling most current AI investment a "money fire" with only a small fraction holding long-term value. Search Engine Land reports: Google's value exchange with content creators has collapsed, Prince said: "Ten years ago... for every two pages of a website that Google scraped, they would send you one visitor. ... That was the trade. ... Now, it takes six pages scraped to get one visitor." That drop reflects the rise of zero-click searches, which happen when searchers get answers directly on Google's search page. "Today, 75 percent of the queries... get answered without you leaving Google." This trend, long criticized by publishers and SEOs, is part of a broader concern: AI companies are using original content to generate answers that rarely/never drive traffic back to creators.
AI makes the problem worse. Large language models (LLMs) are accelerating the crisis, Prince said. AI companies scrape far more content per user interaction than Google ever has -- with even less return to creators. "What do you think it is for OpenAI? 250 to one. What do you think it is for Anthropic? Six thousand to one." "More and more the answers... won't lead you to the original source, it will be some derivative of that source." This situation threatens the sustainability of the web as we know it, Prince said: "If content creators can't derive value... then they're not going to create original content."
The modern web is breaking. AI companies are aware of the problem, and the business model of the web can't survive unless there's some change, Prince said: "Sam Altman at OpenAI and others get that. But... he can't be the only one paying for content when everyone else gets it for free." Cloudflare's right in the middle of this problem -- it powers 80% of AI companies and a 20-30% of the web. Cloudfaire is now trying to figure out how to help fix what's broken, Prince said. AI = money fire. Prince is not against AI. However, he said he is skeptical of the investment frenzy. "I would guess that 99% of the money that people are spending on these projects today is just getting lit on fire. But 1% is going to be incredibly valuable." "And so maybe we've all got a light, you know, $100 on fire to find that $1 that matters." You can watch a recording of the interview and read the full transcript here.
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David Beckham takes his mind off family feud as he leads Nespresso launch in London - after son Brooklyn failed to attend his 50th birthday events
The former footballer donned a smart navy suit with thin blue pinstripes, adding a black t-shirt to his slick look on Thursday. He accessorised with a dark brown belt and sported some tan trainers.
Nicole Scherzinger put on a very busty display in a plunging brown dress as she enjoys Tony Awards nominees party following 'Anna Wintour's Met Gala snub'
The Pussycat Dolls star, 46, looked chic as she stepped out in an ankle-length buttoned-up shirt dress.
David Jason sends fans wild as he reprises his iconic role as Del Boy for surprise appearance
The actor, 85, harped back to his days on Only Fools and Horses during an appearance on The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X on Thursday.
Pope Leo makes moving tribute to his predecessor Francis in first speech as the Holy Father: Read full transcript
Robert Prevost gave a heartfelt appraisal to Pope Francis, who died aged 88 on Easter Monday last month, as he addressed adorning crowds in Rome after being unveiled as the 267th pontiff.
I was an anti-abortion advocate, but after being forced to carry my dead baby for months, it's made me rethink EVERYTHING
Elisabeth Weber used to attend abortion protests, standing outside clinics and waving a placard as patients filed inside. But now the South Carolina mother is fighting for her own abortion.
Update turns Google Gemini into a prude, breaking apps for trauma survivors
'I'm sorry, I can't help with that'
Google's latest update to its Gemini family of large language models appears to have broken the controls for configuring safety settings, breaking applications that require lowered guardrails, such as apps providing solace for sexual assault victims.…
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck make a HUGE cut to $68M asking price for marital mansion after money 'feud'
That is a massive reduction and one that will likely hit their pocket book as they snapped up the massive home for $60,850,000 in May 2023.
Linux Drops Support For 486 and Early Pentium Processors
An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: RIP, 486 processor. You've had a long run since Intel released you back in 1989. While Microsoft stopped supporting you with the release of Windows XP in 2001, Linux kept you alive and well for another 20+ years. But all good things must come to an end, and with the forthcoming release of the Linux 6.15 kernel, the 486 and the first Pentium processors will be sunsetted.
Why? Linus Torvalds wrote recently on the Linux Kernel Mailing List (LKML), "I really get the feeling that it's time to leave i486 support behind. There's zero real reason for anybody to waste one second of development effort on this kind of issue." Senior Linux kernel developer Ingo Molnar put Torvalds' remark into context, writing, "In the x86 architecture, we have various complicated hardware emulation facilities on x86-32 to support ancient 32-bit CPUs that very very few people are using with modern kernels. This compatibility glue is sometimes even causing problems that people spend time to resolve, which time could be spent on other things." "This will be the first time Linux has dropped support for a major chip family since 2012, when Linux stopped supporting the 386 family," notes ZDNet's Steven Vaughan-Nichols. "Moving forward, the minimum supported x86 CPU will now be the original Pentium (P5) or newer, requiring the presence of the Time Stamp Counter (TSC) and the CMPXCHG8B (CX8) instruction. These features are absent in the older 486 and early 586 processors, such as the IDT WinChip and AMD Elan families."
That said, you can continue running Linux on Pentium CPUs, but you'll have to "run museum kernels," as Torvalds pointed out in 2022 when he first floated the idea of ending support for 486.
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Blake Lively's lawyer weighs in on whether Taylor Swift will testify in the upcoming Justin Baldoni trial
Blake Lively 's attorney, Mike Gottlieb, has opened up about who is set to take the stand in his client's upcoming trial involving her It Ends with Us costar Justin Baldoni .
Terrifying footage reveals US military's new suicide drone that creates its own kill list
The US military may soon have an army of suicide bombers at their disposal, as an American defense contractor has revealed their newest war-fighting drone.
Jaguar Land Rover hunting for new advertising agency after disastrous woke rebrand unveiling new Tesla Cybertruck-style car
JAGUAR Land Rover is looking to replace its current advertising agency just months after the company faced a backlash over its controversial rebrand.
Primark's 'timeless' summer outfits that fans are 'obsessed' with
One person described one of the outfits as 'fire'
‘Infuriated’, ‘disappointed' ... Ex-VMware customers explain why they migrated to Nutanix
As Broadcom flings legal nastygrams at its own punters
Next Dominic Johnston is fed up with VMware.…
New pope is revealed: Robert Prevost is named as successor to Francis - becoming the first American pontiff
The pontiff is the 267th Pope, becoming the religious leader of Catholics across the globe and someone believed to be called to be the successor to St Peter, who was the first.
Delta Air Lines Class Action Cleared For Takeoff Over CrowdStrike Chaos
A federal judge has allowed key parts of a class action lawsuit against Delta Air Lines to proceed, stemming from massive flight disruptions caused by CrowdStrike's faulty Windows update in July 2024. The Register reports: Delta blamed its reliance on Microsoft software and the CrowdStrike incident for its woes. However, according to the plaintiffs in the action (PDF), both companies offered the airline assistance, which Delta turned down. Customers of the Atlanta-based carrier affected by the delays and cancellations claim they struggled to secure refunds and compensation from the airline. The plaintiffs allege that "although Delta offered reimbursement of eligible expenses through their website and app, Delta failed to clarify that the customer would only be receiving a partial reimbursement."
"Furthermore, Delta did not disclose to its customers that acceptance of the partial reimbursement would release any legal claims the customer may have against Delta until after the customer 'click[ed] on the button to accept the partial reimbursement.'" The action concerns both US domestic and international travel. The former is covered by US Department of Transportation rules, which require airline agents to "inform customers of their right to a refund ... before making an offer for alternative transportation, travel credits, vouchers, or other compensation in lieu of refunds."
The latter claims come under the Montreal Convention, which is designed to be a single, universal treaty to govern airline liability. Delta, which estimated its operational losses at around half a billion dollars due to the outage, sought to dismiss the complaint. While the US District Judge, Mark H. Cohen, granted the airline's motion to dismiss some of the claims, he permitted others to proceed. These were Count I (breach of contract based on failure to refund) and Count XII (violation of the Montreal Convention).
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