
If Amazon makes a new smartphone, can it avoid the mistakes of its 2014 Fire Phone? CC-licensed photo by Diego Gómez on Flickr.
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A selection of 10 links for you. Not smart. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.
Government’s “cheap fuel finder” stuck in the slow lane • The Times
Aubrey Allegretti, Ben Clatworthy and Laurence Sleator:
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Downing Street has been pressing for the service, named Fuel Finder, to be ramped up as quickly as possible but performance issues have delayed its full introduction.
Sources told The Times that 20% of petrol stations were not updating their prices weekly, despite the fact that many forecourts are changing their prices every day because of the volatility in the market. Some 15% of those signed up to the scheme have not reported a single pump price since regulations came into force in February.
10% of petrol stations have also yet to be uploaded to the service, which is designed to monitor their costs in real time. Under the regulations, fuel retailers must update the government portal within 30 minutes of any change of pump price.
Forecourt prices are expected to rise further next week, as the conflict enters its fourth week. Higher prices can take three weeks to feed through to the pumps because of the mechanism retailers use to buy oil.
…Fuel prices have surged in recent weeks as a result of the war in Iran and the wider Middle East crisis. Latest data from the RAC shows that the average price of a litre of petrol is now 144.51p and 166.24p for diesel. The prices have increased by 9% and 17% respectively since the start of the war.
…The Times understands that major motoring groups including the AA and RAC, as well as apps such as Google Maps, will not have integrated the data until much later in the year.
However, privately ministers are threatening to strip a contract worth nearly £2m from VE3 Global, the company responsible for the programme. The Times understands that the move has been planned and held in reserve as a contingency.
A motoring industry source who uses Fuel Finder daily said: “There is so much that is amateurish about the technology and the back end. When you first look at it, it appears superficially very good and if you stuck some screenshots on a PowerPoint or gave a minister a quick overview of it, they’d be impressed. But very quickly when you dig into it you find out what an absolute nightmare it is. There are so many basic errors.”
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Not to mention the plan floated by the last (and this) government to have a single parking app. How’s that going?
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My journey from foreign correspondent to Uber driver in Trump’s America • Navigating the Drift
Steve Scherer:
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When I was moved to Canada by Reuters in 2019, I realized a professional dream. I had become a bureau chief in a G7 country, which is the bloc of wealthy countries that seeks a common stance on the main economic and political challenges facing the world. Both Italy and the United States are also members. After a couple years I convinced my Italian wife that we should apply for permanent residency, which would give us both the right to work in Canada indefinitely. All I had was a work permit allowing me to work for my news agency.
I hired an immigration lawyer to put everything together. After a year of bureaucratic delay, I was asked to apply in 2023. Canada’s immigration process is governed by a point system and is by invitation only.
A few months later I was fired amid budget cuts in the struggling news industry. My jobless status weakened my application, and I would never be asked to apply again. The great and kind Canada, the country where I thought I would settle at least until my children were adults, had chewed me up and spit me out.
I couldn’t legally work, not even for Uber. When I lost my job, my entire family lost state healthcare coverage, and there is virtually no private healthcare. We had no family doctor and, God forbid, any hospital visit would have to be paid for out of pocket. Despite having good local contacts, I couldn’t find an employer willing to sponsor me. The clock was ticking on our legal right to reside in Canada. We were no longer welcome.
In June of 2025 I sold my house, the first I had ever owned. Not knowing how long it would take me to find a job in Washington, I put my family on a plane in Montreal. They flew to Italy where they could live rent free in a family member’s home, where they were covered by state healthcare, and where the kids could go to high school. After I said goodbye to them, I wept uncontrollably in the airport parking lot, not knowing when I would see them again.
After a life spent both crossing borders and freely reporting on those who struggled to overcome them, I didn’t expect one to rise up beneath my feet.
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And so Scherer became an Uber driver – the sort of job that he’d observed from the back seat while on his way to endless jobs in his previous life. There are plenty more articles at his Substack; he is optimistic of getting back onto the writing bus.
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A pro-Trump “Army girl” went viral online. Experts say she isn’t real • The Washington Post
Drew Harwell:
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The beautiful Army blonde Jessica Foster has posed with an F-22 Raptor fighter jet, donned camouflage in the desert and walked a tarmac with President Donald Trump on the first day of the strikes on Iran.
The slew of photos and videos depicting the patriotic life of the MAGA dream girl have led her Instagram account to explode, gaining more than a million followers since she began posting four months ago.
But Foster is an illusion — a fake woman who experts say was probably created by an artificial intelligence image generator. There’s no public record of Foster’s military service and the account, despite not being labeled AI, is packed with indicators that she is fake. Between many of her pro-Trump posts, Foster also prominently displays her feet.
Foster’s viral takeoff highlights an increasingly prevalent strategy for winning online attention. A slew of right-wing accounts, peddling patriotism mixed with soft-core pornography, use fake women and convincing imagery to grab viewers across a distracted internet, monetize their interest and score political points.
Accounts showing AI-generated women masquerading as Trump-supporting soldiers, truckers and police officers have built surging audiences on platforms such as TikTok, Instagram and X, where thousands of commenters have offered responses suggesting they believe the women are real.
A version of the strategy has also played out in recent weeks beyond the United States. Hundreds of AI-generated videos showing Iranian female soldiers and pilots cheering on the nation’s military have proliferated online, as the BBC first reported. One telltale sign they’re fake: Iran bans women from combat roles.
Sam Gregory, executive director of Witness, a video-advocacy group that researches deepfakes, said Foster exemplifies how deceptive AI video generators can be.
…By applying political trappings and current events to these characters’ fake lives, their creators probably hope to maximize their virality and stand out in an online crowd, Gregory said. Once they’ve got people’s attention, the creators can — as in Foster’s case — shunt them to a paid platform, where the user is told to pay up for more lurid scenes.
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What, you thought it was about something other than money?
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‘It’s stupid’: why western carmakers’ retreat from electric risks dooming them to irrelevance • The Guardian
Alex Daniel:
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In the US, where trade barriers were erected to block the wave of Chinese EVs, Ford took a $19.5bn (£14.6bn) hit, killing off several future electric models and scrapping a battery venture.
These companies are “having a hard time”, said Julia Poliscanova, the director for EVs at the Brussels thinktank Transport & Environment. “They have tariffs in the US, they are nowhere in China [where homegrown brands are booming] … So they’re thinking: ‘Maybe at least in Europe, we can have a few years where we prioritise short-term profits selling petrol and diesel cars.’
“That is probably a valid business view if your term as a CEO finishes in two years,” she added. “That is a stupid view if you still want to be in the car market in 2035.”
At Stellantis, the pivot was especially sharp. Carlos Tavares, its former boss, was among the industry’s loudest champions of electrification, but he was forced out in late 2024. The automotive group has since announced a reset of its plans, giving customers’ “freedom to choose” petrol cars again and launching a fresh spending spree on hybrids, which combine an electric motor and a petrol or diesel motor.
“The only fundamental question for carmakers is how to curb emissions significantly,” Tavares told the Guardian by email. “Those who believe that EVs are not the solution have to explain the ‘how’ without EVs.”
Europe’s manufacturers have yet to do so convincingly. Instead, they blame weak consumer demand for the retreat. The argument goes that high costs and patchy charging infrastructure have slowed EV sales, which accounted for only one in five new cars sold in Europe last year.
…A Volkswagen spokesperson said the group was “clearly in favour of electric mobility” and had invested heavily in it. “However, this requires a reliable, long-term and binding political framework … the ball is now in the politicians’ court to create the necessary framework conditions to make electromobility a success,” they said.
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They’re all pointing to each other waiting for someone to create the nirvana for EVs. Not going to happen. Meanwhile the Chinese EV companies flood the markets with the cars they’ve made, and people buy them.
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Val Kilmer set to be be resurrected with AI for new film • The Guardian
Owen Myers:
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Val Kilmer will be the latest Hollywood star to be resurrected by AI. The acting legend, who died last year at age 65, will star in the drama As Deep As the Grave.
Kilmer was attached to the project prior to his death from throat cancer.
The late actor will play Father Fintan, a Native American spiritualist and Catholic priest. Speaking to Variety, director and writer Coerte Voorhees said that the role was designed around Kilmer, who was an advocate for Native American rights and claimed to have Cherokee heritage.
“He was the actor I wanted to play this role,” Voorhees said. “It drew on his Native American heritage and his ties to and love of the south-west.” But Kilmer was unable to make it to set due to his battle with throat cancer.
The film-maker is working in conjunction with the late actor’s estate and his daughter, Mercedes, to bring Kilmer back to life with state-of-the-art, generative AI. Voorhees says that Kilmer’s son, Jack, an actor who starred alongside Rory Culkin in 2018’s Lord of Chaos, also supports the project.
“His family kept saying how important they thought the movie was and that Val really wanted to be a part of this,” Voorhees told Variety. “He really thought it was important story that he wanted his name on … Despite the fact some people might call it controversial, this is what Val wanted.”
…The AI-generated version of Kilmer will appear in a “significant” portion of the film, Voorhees said. The film will use images of the actor taken throughout his life to re-create Kilmer through the decades.
In recent years, AI has begun to creep into Hollywood films, and in 2024 Brady Corbet’s Oscar-winning epic The Brutalist used AI to fine-tune actor Adrien Brody’s Hungarian accent. Last year, Matthew McConaughey and Michael Caine signed deals with startup ElevenLabs, allowing the company to create AI versions of their voices.
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Wedges always start realllly thin.
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Amazon’s smartphone would be ill-timed: IDC analyst • The Register
O’Ryan Johnson:
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Amazon is reported to be developing a new smartphone, its first since 2014, and, according to industry tracker IDC, it will face entrenched competition with better products and a market that is expected to contract by double digits.
“Amazon is unlikely to build a better smartphone than Apple, Samsung, or leading Chinese OEMs,” Francisco Jeronimo, vice president of client devices with IDC told The Register via email. “Competing on hardware or traditional user experience is a losing game. On the other hand, according to IDC, the smartphone market is expected to contract 13% in 2026 due to the memory shortage crisis, making it the worst possible time to launch a new device.”
News of the Amazon smartphone was first reported by Reuters. It said that the phone is known internally as “Transformer” and would sync across other Alexa smart devices while also putting Amazon shopping at the center of the experience.
There was no price or a timeframe for when the phone might be released. Amazon had no comment.
BezosCorp’s previous foray into the smartphone race was the Fire, which released in 2014 to underwhelming sales and quickly got cancelled.
The new device is being developed by an internal Amazon unit known as ZeroOne, which has former Microsoft exec and early Xbox impresario J (no period) Allard at the helm.
The team is also reportedly working on a “dumb” version of the phone for customers who wish to scale down their screentime. One reference has been the LightPhone, which has a camera, phone, and GPS, but no browser.
Jeronimo said that while there is plenty of talk about digital detoxes, it appeals to a small cohort of customers and the actual number of units sold is “negligible.”
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It’s hard to exaggerate how incredibly unusual it is for IDC to step up and say “nuh-uh, that’s a bad idea”. In decades of reading analyst comments, I can count on one hand – possibly one finger – the number of times I’ve seen any of them being negative about a product, especially a theoretical one. Let’s see if Amazon is listening, since it wasn’t in 2014.
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Profiling Hacker News users based on their comments • Simon Willison’s Weblog
Simon Willison:
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Here’s a mildly dystopian prompt I’ve been experimenting with recently: “Profile this user”, accompanied by a copy of their last 1,000 comments on Hacker News.
Obtaining those comments is easy. The Algolia Hacker News API supports listing comments sorted by date that have a specific tag, and the author of a comment is tagged there as author_username. Here’s a JSON feed of my (simonw) most recent comments, for example:
https://hn.algolia.com/api/v1/search_by_date?tags=comment,author_simonw&hitsPerPage=1000
The Algolia API is served with open CORS headers, which means you can access the API from JavaScript running on any web page.
Last August I had ChatGPT build me a simple tool for hitting that API for any user which fetches their comments and gives me a mobile-friendly “copy to clipboard” button. I’ve since tweaked it a few times with Claude.
I can then paste the whole lot into any LLM—these days I mostly use Claude Opus 4.6 for this—and prompt “profile this user” to see what it can figure out.
It’s startlingly effective! It feels invasive to quote the profile of another user here, so I’ll show you what it produces for me…
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What it comes back with definitely checks out for Willison. Of course now people are going to start using this aggressively against commenters they don’t like…
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The world energy shock is coming • New Statesman
Isabella Weber and Gregor Semieniuk:
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It is unclear when the Strait of Hormuz might fully reopen to ship traffic, but one thing is certain – there is a blow coming for the global economy through the supply chain, no matter how soon the war ends.
European and US consumers are still, for the movement, relatively insulated, even if they already see elevated gasoline prices that bring a major cost burden to households. The full scale of the effects to come remain hidden in the complexity of the global supply network. Here is a sketch of what might be coming: inflation, redistribution shocks, shortages, stagflation and global financial instability.
So far only the prices of essential commodities – oil, gas, fertiliser etc – have shot up. Firms buying these inputs that can’t influence the price of their product must absorb the cost or stop producing, as many small-scale producers have done, like fishermen in the Philippines that can’t afford the doubly expensive fuel anymore.
However, most of today’s global economy is run by giant corporations that set their own prices, and our research shows that cost shocks helped them coordinate price hikes. They did not swallow the cost of pandemic and war but pushed it on to consumers, protecting their margins and lifting their bottom line in the process. This is sellers’ inflation. Corporations transmit price explosions in essential inputs across the whole economy through their own price setting, ultimately causing inflation.
Such corporate price hikes become even easier when inputs are not just more expensive but in short supply. This grants companies a temporary monopoly. During the Covid-era computer chip shortage, each car company could only produce as many cars as they had chips for, so customers waiting months for new cars could not escape high prices and waits by switching to another company, and the car companies reaped extraordinary profits. Furthermore, when input prices fall, consumer prices tend to stay up, or to fall by less, generating yet another round of windfalls.
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Weber and Semieniuk say that we’re presently in that breath-bated moment like February 2020, when you could see that Covid was affecting other parts of the world, but it hadn’t yet reached our shores. (No paywall on the article.)
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The Economist waves goodbye to its jet-setting disruptor • The Observer
Merissa Marr:
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How much more the Economist can expand its readership as a specialist publication is also unclear. The paper did an impressive job of conquering the US, which is now its biggest market, but like many legacy publications, it has struggled to attract younger readers, not least because of the decline in reading for pleasure and the rise of AI which is changing the way people search for news.
Yet the real crisis may lie in its liberalist roots. Founded by a Scottish hat maker to campaign for free trade, the Economist has stuck fiercely to that mission. Alexander Zevin argues in his book Liberalism at Large: The World According to the Economist that the magazine has played such a big role in promoting liberalism that it shaped the world its readers inhabit. But it now finds itself at a crossroads as the modern world turns against liberalism – a trend the Economist has described as “profoundly worrying”.
“When the Economist was founded 175 years ago, our first editor, James Wilson, promised ‘a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress’,” the Economist wrote in a manifesto to mark its anniversary. It concluded: “We renew our pledge to that contest. And we ask liberals everywhere to join us.”
Forester de Rothschild had no easy task to find a new shareholder for her [26.9%] stake in the magazine [which she sold for £300m]. There are strict guardrails put in place to protect the Economist’s independence, leaving shareholders with limited control, so those who do buy into the company are largely seeking the cachet or for philanthropic reasons. Whereas the landscape is littered with billionaires tinkering with media toys.
[Canadian billionaire Stephen] Smith claims he won’t be one of those tinkerers. The 74-year-old, who is investing through his Smith Financial Corp family holding, said in a statement that he has “full support for the Economist’s longstanding tradition of rigorous editorial independence.”
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The Economist has survived all sorts of ups and downs, and successfully made the transition to digital, but ownership and editor changes (the latter also being lined up) are always troublesome moments.
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Reading Socrates in Silicon Valley • Financial Times
Jemima Kelly:
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“If you go back, like, 400 years ago it never would have occurred to anybody to be introspective,” said a great sage of Silicon Valley last week, during the modern-day equivalent of a Socratic dialogue (a podcast). “Great men of history didn’t sit around doing this stuff.” The sage was none other than Marc Andreessen — venture capitalist, crypto enthusiast, devoted Democrat turned Donald Trump adviser, and author of the 2023 late-capitalist cry for help, the “Techno-Optimist Manifesto” (“love doesn’t scale . . . let’s stick with money”). The man who bet big on Web3 (remember that?) and NFTs (remember them?), and who once described criticisms of the metaverse as “reality privilege”. (Meta, on whose board Andreessen sits, announced this week it was all but pulling the plug on the metaverse.)
The a16z founder was proudly explaining to Founders podcast host David Senra that he had “zero” levels of introspection. “Move forward. Go,” was his own anti-introspective mantra. “I’ve found that people who dwell on the past get stuck in the past. It’s a problem at work and it’s a problem at home.” He went on to claim that the very concept of the individual was only invented a few hundred years ago and that it wasn’t until the start of the 20th century that we started to believe in guilt and self-criticism.
…My main issue with Andreessen is not so much that he’s wrong; it’s that he’s so confident about it. He sounded similarly confident when he told us that bitcoin represented a breakthrough akin to the internet, that Web3 was the future and that we shouldn’t fear AI because “the moral of every story is the good guys win”.
We seem to believe, as a society, that wealth, influence and confidence can be equated with wisdom. But Silicon Valley billionaires are not our sages; they’re our enablers, keeping us distracted and dumb, and making sure we never stop scrolling for long enough to think about why we are wasting our lives on their platforms.
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It’s a typically great column from Kelly, though one can fervently wish that the target of it might read it and indulge in some.. introspection?
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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








