
A 13-year-old Australian boy swam twice as far as an Olympic triathlon swim to get help for his stranded family, in a remarkable story of endurance. CC-licensed photo by Erin Koch on Flickr.
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A selection of 9 links for you. Give him a bicycle. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.
Anthropic says “Claude will remain ad-free”, unlike an unnamed rival • The Verge
Dominic Preston:
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Anthropic has announced that it won’t be bringing ads to its AI chatbot Claude, in sharp contrast to confirmed plans from OpenAI to allow advertising in ChatGPT. To hammer the point home further, the company is releasing a Super Bowl commercial that makes fun of unnamed rivals adding adverts to their AI.
“We want Claude to act unambiguously in our users’ interests,” the company says in a new blog post. “So we’ve made a choice: Claude will remain ad-free. Our users won’t see ‘sponsored’ links adjacent to their conversations with Claude; nor will Claude’s responses be influenced by advertisers or include third-party product placements our users did not ask for.”
The announcement goes on to highlight exactly why including ads “would be incompatible with what we want Claude to be.” It suggests the profit incentive could interfere with providing the most helpful advice to a user asking about health problems like sleeping issues, and that ads might prove a distraction for anyone using Claude to work.
That said, Anthropic does make sure to leave the door open for a reversal: “Should we need to revisit this approach, we’ll be transparent about our reasons for doing so.”
An about-face a few years down the line might look hypocritical in light of the new Super Bowl ad the company is releasing to highlight its announcement. It’s one of four commercials released so far on YouTube along the same theme, with humanized AIs dropping adverts in the middle of their advice.
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The Anthropic advert (which, given it’s being dropped in the Superbowl, is going to cost anywhere between $25m and $100m, depending how many times they run it) is very reminiscent of the Black Mirror episode in Season 7 of a woman whose brain implant makes her speak adverts. Unless, of course, she upgrades to the new, premium subscription. (“So it is $500 a month on top of the existing package. So, $800 in total.”)
The problem for Anthropic is that it can’t keep its promise. There’s no way to make a LLM pay just on subscriptions. OpenAI has recognised that; Anthropic will have to do the same, in time. Or just go bust. (Especially if it’s going to splurge millions on Superbowl ads.)
Meanwhile, the foundations are beginning to look a bit rickety. Over to you, Nvidia:
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Nvidia’s $100bn OpenAI deal has seemingly vanished • Ars Technica
Benj Edwards:
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In September 2025, Nvidia and OpenAI announced a letter of intent for Nvidia to invest up to $100bn in OpenAI’s AI infrastructure. At the time, the companies said they expected to finalize details “in the coming weeks.” Five months later, no deal has closed, Nvidia’s CEO now says the $100bn figure was “never a commitment,” and Reuters reports that OpenAI has been quietly seeking alternatives to Nvidia chips since last year.
Reuters also wrote that OpenAI is unsatisfied with the speed of some Nvidia chips for inference tasks, citing eight sources familiar with the matter. Inference is the process by which a trained AI model generates responses to user queries. According to the report, the issue became apparent in OpenAI’s Codex, an AI code-generation tool. OpenAI staff reportedly attributed some of Codex’s performance limitations to Nvidia’s GPU-based hardware.
After the Reuters story published and Nvidia’s stock price took a dive, Nvidia and OpenAI have tried to smooth things over publicly. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted on X: “We love working with NVIDIA and they make the best AI chips in the world. We hope to be a gigantic customer for a very long time. I don’t get where all this insanity is coming from.”
The September announcement described a wildly ambitious plan: 10 gigawatts of Nvidia systems for OpenAI, requiring power output equal to roughly 10 nuclear reactors. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC at the time that the project would match Nvidia’s total GPU shipments for the year. “This is a giant project,” Huang said.
But the deal was always a letter of intent, not a binding contract. And in recent weeks, Huang has been walking back the number.
…Nvidia shares fell about 1.1% on Monday following the reports. Sarah Kunst, managing director at Cleo Capital, told CNBC that the back-and-forth was unusual. “One of the things I did notice about Jensen Huang is that there wasn’t a strong ‘It will be $100 billion.’ It was, ‘It will be big. It will be our biggest investment ever.’ And so I do think there are some question marks there.”
In September, Bryn Talkington, managing partner at Requisite Capital Management, noted the circular nature of such investments to CNBC. “Nvidia invests $100 billion in OpenAI, which then OpenAI turns back and gives it back to Nvidia,” Talkington said. “I feel like this is going to be very virtuous for Jensen.”
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So the money that was never there turns out not to be there. We shouldn’t be surprised, but maybe people shouldn’t have acted as though it was there in the first place. It’s like pretending that your house is worth a billion pounds because someone said “If I had a billion pounds, I’d buy your house.”
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Austin Appelbee speaks after “superhuman” swim off Quindalup to save family in Geographe Bay • ABC News
Kate Christian and Briana Shepherd:
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A mother who sent her 13-year-old son to swim four kilometres back to shore after the family were swept out to sea in rough conditions off WA’s South West says it was “one of the hardest decisions” she has ever made.
Joanne Appelbee and her three children had been holidaying at Quindalup, about 250 kilometres south of Perth, and had set out from the beach on a kayak and inflatable paddleboards in seemingly calm conditions on Friday morning.
The family had planned to be out for an hour, leaving their picnic rug on the beach and taking no water or food with them. But they soon ran in to trouble as the sea became rough, causing their kayak to flip and take on water as they started getting pushed further out to sea around midday.
“One of the hardest decisions I ever had to make was to say to Austin, ‘Try to get to shore and get some help, this could get really serious really quickly,'” she said. “I knew he was the strongest and he could do it. I would have never went because I wouldn’t have left the kids at sea, so I had to send somebody.”
…The brave teen then decided to ditch both the kayak, which he said was pulling him further out to sea, and his life jacket, which was impeding his swimming, and attempt the marathon swim to shore.
“I was trying to get the happiest things in my head, and trying to make it through, [and not think of] the bad things that will distract me,” he said. “And at this time, you know, the waves are massive, and I have no life jacket on … I just kept thinking ‘just keep swimming, just keep swimming’.”
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Took him about four hours to swim the four kilometres, and he then ran two kilometres to the accommodation that had a phone. The photographs show him on crutches, because medics reckon his physical exertion was equivalent to running two marathons. His is an amazing story of what the human body can do; the mother’s, of patience – because they were out there for up to 10 hours, and it got dark with no sign of rescue.
For reference, in an Olympic triathlon you swim 1.5km. A Full Ironman has a 3.8km open water swim.
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Preserving the open web: inside the new Wayback Machine plugin for WordPress • Internet Archive Blogs
Chris Freeland:
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Link rot. There’s nothing quite as frustrating as clicking on a link that leads to nowhere.
WordPress, which powers more than 40% of websites online, recently partnered with the Internet Archive to address this problem. Engineers from the Internet Archive and Automattic worked together to create a plugin that can be added to a WordPress website to improve the user experience and check the Wayback Machine for an archived version of any webpage that has been moved, changed or taken down.
The free Internet Archive Wayback Machine Link Fixer, publicly launched last fall, combats link rot by seamlessly redirecting the user to a reliable backup page when it encounters a missing page. When the plugin is added to a website, it will do a scan, see what pages exist, and then automatically save those pages to a queue to be archived. If it doesn’t exist, then it will be sent for capture.
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Very useful, and free.
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The lithium boom: could a disused quarry bring riches to Cornwall?• The Guardian
Sam Wollaston:
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It looks more like the past than the future. A vast chasm scooped out of a scarred landscape, this is a Cornwall the summer holidaymakers don’t see: a former china clay pit near St Austell called Trelavour. I’m standing at the edge of the pit looking down with the man [Jeremy Wrathall] who says his plans for it will help the UK’s transition to renewable energy and bring back year-round jobs and prosperity to a part of the country that badly needs both. “And if I manage to make some money in the process, fantastic,” he says. “Though that is not what it’s about.”
We’ll return to him shortly. But first to the past, when this story begins, about 275-280m years ago. “There was a continental collision at the time,” Frances Wall, professor of applied mineralogy at the Camborne School of Mines at the University of Exeter, explained to me before my visit. This collision caused the bottom of the Earth’s crust to melt, with the molten material rising higher in the crust and forming granite. “There are lots of different types of granite that intrude at different times, more than 10m years or so,” she says. “The rock is made of minerals and, if you’ve got the right composition in the original material and the right conditions, then within those minerals there are some called mica. Some of those micas contain lithium.”
That’s what we are talking about here: lithium, the L-word. Or possibly the El Dorado word; lithium is often referred to as “white gold”, and in 2021 the then PM Boris Johnson declared that Cornwall would be the “Klondike of lithium”.
…Wrathall says the UK – particularly Cornwall – will be able to extract 50,000 tonnes of lithium (actually lithium hydroxide and lithium carbonate equivalent, depending on how it’s extracted) a year for more than 20 years – about 50% of the UK’s annual needs by 2030.
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It’s nice to have a hobby. Hard to see this working, but if he manages it, all power to his elbow.
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FBI couldn’t get into WaPo reporter’s iPhone because it had Lockdown Mode enabled • 404 Media
Joseph Cox:
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The FBI has been unable to access a Washington Post reporter’s seized iPhone because it was in Lockdown Mode, a sometimes overlooked feature that makes iPhones broadly more secure, according to recently filed court records.
The court record shows what devices and data the FBI was able to ultimately access, and which devices it could not, after raiding the home of the reporter, Hannah Natanson, in January as part of an investigation into leaks of classified information. It also provides rare insight into the apparent effectiveness of Lockdown Mode, or at least how effective it might be before the FBI may try other techniques to access the device.
“Because the iPhone was in Lockdown mode, CART could not extract that device,” the court record reads, referring to the FBI’s Computer Analysis Response Team, a unit focused on performing forensic analyses of seized devices. The document is written by the government, and is opposing the return of Natanson’s devices.
The FBI raided Natanson’s home as part of its investigation into government contractor Aurelio Perez-Lugones, who is charged with, among other things, retention of national defense information. The government believes Perez-Lugones was a source of Natanson’s, and provided her with various pieces of classified information. While executing a search warrant for his mobile phone, investigators reviewed Signal messages between Pere-Lugones and the reporter, the Department of Justice previously said.
Then, the government obtained search warrants for Natanson’s residence, vehicle, and person to seize her electronic devices. Those warrants included language that would have legally allowed them to press Natanson’s fingers onto the devices, or hold them up to her face, to unlock them if biometrics were enabled.
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Lockdown Mode and disabling biometrics are surely two essential elements for any reporters in the US just now. Speaking of the Washington Post…
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‘It’s an absolute bloodbath’: Washington Post lays off hundreds of workers • The Guardian
Jeremy Barr:
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The Washington Post laid off hundreds of employees on Wednesday, which its former executive editor said “ranks among the darkest days” in the newspaper’s history. Approximately one-third of employees were affected.
Staffers at the Post have been on edge for weeks about the rumoured cuts, which the publication would not confirm or deny. “It’s an absolute bloodbath,” said one employee, not authorized to speak publicly.
During a morning meeting announcing the changes, the editor in chief, Matt Murray, told employees that the Post was undergoing a “strategic reset” to better position the publication for the future, according to several employees who were on the call.
Murray acknowledged that the Post had struggled to reach “customers” and talked about the need to compete in a crowded media marketplace. “Today, the Washington Post is taking a number of actions across the company to secure our future,” he said, according to an audio recording of the meeting.
Murray told employees that the Post was ending the current iteration of its popular sports desk, though some employees would remain on a new team. The Post is also restructuring its local coverage, reducing its international reporting operation, cutting its books desk and suspending its flagship daily news podcast Post Reports.
Murray said that while the Post’s international coverage team will be scaled back, approximately 12 bureaus will remain “with a focus on national security issues”.
“We all recognize the actions we are taking today will be painful – most of all, of course, for those of you who are directly affected, but for everybody,” Murray told staffers on the call. “I know that the reset is going to feel like a shock to the system and raise some questions for everybody.”
Martin Baron, the Post’s executive editor until 2021, said: “This ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”
Seeking to lay out the business case for the layoffs, Murray said the move was “about positioning ourselves to become more essential to people’s lives in what is becoming a more crowded and competitive and complicated media landscape”.
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Among those fired: the reporter who covered Amazon, and the entire San Francisco bureau. The Post, as a reminder, broke and then pursued the Watergate story. In 2021, it had just over 1,000 journalists. It lost about $100m in 2024. Jeff Bezos, the owner, could probably afford that sort of cost for a long, long time. But it seems that nothing in modern America is seen as worth keeping. White House East wing? Washington Post? The wrecking ball is here for all.
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Bypassing the grid: how data centres are building their own power plants • Cleanview
Michael Thomas:
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Many data centres claim to use clean energy to power their operations. But in a report Cleanview published today, we found that’s increasingly not true. Instead data centres are using natural gas—and doing so in very strange ways.
It can now take as long as seven years to connect a data centre to the power grid. Beginning about a year ago, developers began pursuing new power strategies. Rather than wait, many data centres are now building their own power plants.
In what we believe is the most comprehensive analysis of this trend to date, we identified 46 data centres with a combined capacity of 56 GW that plan to build their own power “behind-the-meter.” That represents roughly 30% of all planned data centre capacity in the United States, according to Cleanview’s project tracker.
In the last year, this trend has gone from niche to mainstream. 90% of the projects we identified—representing approximately 50 GW—were announced in 2025 alone. A year ago, behind-the-meter data centre power was a curiosity, embodied by xAI’s controversial decision to truck mobile generators into Memphis. Now it’s an increasingly common development strategy.
…Most of the press releases we found mentioned “all of the above” strategies [for power supply] that include renewables. But ~75% of the generation equipment we could identify (23 GW) was natural gas-powered. Virtually none of the developers planned to build renewables in the short term.
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AI won’t kill the software business, just its growth story • WSJ
Dan Gallagher:
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Artificial intelligence won’t destroy the software business. But the persistent belief that it will can still do a lot of damage.
And that has already been done. Software stocks have been on a downhill slide for several months, and the selloff has picked up steam the past few days. The IGV Software Index is down around 30% from its peak in late September, a decline punctuated by a brutal selloff Tuesday.
The latest move was triggered by Anthropic’s release of new capabilities for its Claude Cowork assistant. Those new functions are aimed at legal users and are designed to automate processes like contract reviews and legal briefings.
Anthropic’s release initially sparked a selloff in publishing companies geared toward the legal market. It quickly fed into a continuing narrative about the potential for AI tools to disrupt established software businesses. Major software names like Salesforce, ServiceNow, Adobe and Workday dropped 7% Tuesday while Intuit slid nearly 11%.
Is that enough? The belief that major corporations will replace highly complex software platforms with vibe-coded apps is a stretch. Such platforms run mission-critical tasks like payroll and IT management, and require deep subject-matter expertise that goes well beyond the actual coding of the software itself. Even the key enabler of today’s AI industry seems to agree.
“There’s this notion that the software industry is in decline and will be replaced by AI,” Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang said on stage at Cisco Live on Tuesday. “It is the most illogical thing in the world, and time will prove itself.”
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But killing a growth story is as bad as just killing the company, as far as the stock market’s concerned.
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| • Why do social networks drive us a little mad? • Why does angry content seem to dominate what we see? • How much of a role do algorithms play in affecting what we see and do online? • What can we do about it? • Did Facebook have any inkling of what was coming in Myanmar in 2016? Read Social Warming, my latest book, and find answers – and more. |
Errata, corrigenda and ai no corrida: none notified








