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A selection of 10 links for you. Crowded. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.
Exclusive: Meta planning sweeping layoffs as AI costs mount • Reuters
Katie Paul, Jeff Horwitz and Deepa Seetharaman:
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Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers.
No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said.
Top executives have recently signaled the plans to other senior leaders at Meta and told them to begin planning how to pare back, two of the people said. The sources spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to disclose the cuts.
“This is speculative reporting about theoretical approaches,” Meta spokesperson Andy Stone said in response to questions about the plan.
If Meta settles on the 20% figure, the layoffs will be the company’s most significant since a restructuring in late 2022 and early 2023 that it dubbed the “year of efficiency.” It employed nearly 79,000 people as of December 31, according to its latest filing.
The company laid off 11,000 staffers in November 2022, or around 13% of its workforce at the time. Around four months later, it announced it was cutting another 10,000 jobs.
…The company has said it plans to invest $600bn to build data centers by 2028. Earlier this week, it acquired Moltbook, a social networking platform built for AI agents. Meta is also spending at least $2bn to buy Chinese AI startup Manus, Reuters previously reported.
…Meta’s planned AI investments follow a series of setbacks with its Llama 4 models last year, including criticism that it provided misleading results on the benchmarks it used for early versions. It abandoned the release of the largest version of that model, called Behemoth, which had been due out in the summer.
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This level of spending is not sustainable. It’s surely going to be cut back, especially with everything coming down the track as a result of the Iranian conflict.
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Arizona indicts prediction market Kalshi for running illegal gambling operation • Financial Times via Ars Technica
Stephanie Stacey and Oliver Roeder:
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Arizona’s attorney general filed criminal charges against prediction market Kalshi, accusing it of operating a gambling business without a license and offering illegal wagers on elections.
“Kalshi may brand itself as a ‘prediction market,’ but what it’s actually doing is running an illegal gambling operation and taking bets on Arizona elections, both of which violate Arizona law,” Attorney General Kris Mayes said in a statement on Tuesday.
While Arizona’s case is the first time criminal charges have been brought against the company, several other US states have alleged that Kalshi’s markets constitute illegal and unregulated sports betting.
“There’s clearly going to be a domino effect,” said Daniel Wallach, a lawyer who specializes in gaming law. “These are the first criminal charges filed against Kalshi anywhere in the US but they may not be the last.”
In a statement, Kalshi said: “Sadly, a state can file criminal charges on paper-thin arguments. States like Arizona want to individually regulate a nationwide financial exchange, and are trying every trick in the book to do it.”
Prediction market platforms such as Kalshi offer shares in binary outcomes, such as a certain team winning or losing a football match. Kalshi has argued that these contracts should continue to be regulated as derivatives by the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission, enabling it to bypass states’ sports-gambling bans or regulations by arguing that its regulatory status under the CFTC preempts state-level laws.
Arizona’s case focuses on betting contracts Kalshi offered on four separate elections, including the 2028 US presidential race and 2026 race for Arizona governor. Gambling on elections is illegal under Arizona state law.
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One can imagine this escalating all the way up to Supreme Court. Though given that that court gave gambling the green light, it’s hard to see Arizona prevailing.
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Supply-chain attack using invisible code hits GitHub and other repositories • Ars Technica
Dan Goodin:
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Researchers say they’ve discovered a supply-chain attack flooding repositories with malicious packages that contain invisible code, a technique that’s flummoxing traditional defenses designed to detect such threats.
The researchers, from firm Aikido Security, said Friday that they found 151 malicious packages that were uploaded to GitHub from March 3 to March 9. Such supply-chain attacks have been common for nearly a decade. They usually work by uploading malicious packages with code and names that closely resemble those of widely used code libraries, with the objective of tricking developers into mistakenly incorporating the former into their software. In some cases, these malicious packages are downloaded thousands of times.
The packages Aikido found this month have adopted a newer technique: selective use of code that isn’t visible when loaded into virtually all editors, terminals, and code review interfaces. While most of the code appears in normal, readable form, malicious functions and payloads—the usual telltale signs of malice—are rendered in unicode characters that are invisible to the human eye. The tactic, which Aikido said it first spotted last year, makes manual code reviews and other traditional defenses nearly useless. Other repositories hit in these attacks include NPM and Open VSX.
The malicious packages are even harder to detect because of the high quality of their visible portions.
“The malicious injections don’t arrive in obviously suspicious commits,” Aikido researchers wrote. “The surrounding changes are realistic: documentation tweaks, version bumps, small refactors, and bug fixes that are stylistically consistent with each target project.”
The researchers suspect that Glassworm—the name they assigned to the attack group—is using LLMs to generate these convincingly legitimate-appearing packages.
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Well isn’t that fun news.
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Wired’s new editor doesn’t care if the tech bros are mad • The New York Times
Katie Robertson:
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In less than three years, [Katie] Drummond, 40, has transformed Wired from a fading magazine and website into a buzzy brand that has become a bright spot for Condé Nast, the publishing giant better known as the home of Vogue, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker.
She started its about-face by creating a politics team that landed major scoops about Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, including uncovering the young engineers given key roles in the project and revealing that members of DOGE’s staff had direct access to U.S. Treasury payment systems. The publication has recently been focusing on artificial intelligence, the war in Iran and the ties between technology companies and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The edgier coverage has generated grumbles from parts of the tech community, including in recent weeks. Wired’s February print cover, for a feature titled “Inside the Gay Tech Mafia,” drew outrage online for its suggestive visual of two men shaking hands at crotch level through the flies of their pants. Trae Stephens, a prominent venture capitalist, argued on social media that Wired was “irreparably broken in its current form” and floated the possibility of buying it.
But Ms. Drummond’s approach appears to be working. Condé Nast does not disclose profits or losses for its publications, but Ms. Drummond said Wired had added more than 200,000 new paying subscribers in the past year, and subscription revenue increased 24% last year in the United States. Wired currently has more than 500,000 paid subscribers. It has a newsroom of around 80 people with plans to hire up to a dozen more this year, and was recently named a finalist for general excellence in the National Magazine Awards.
“We cover technology with a great deal of curiosity,” Ms. Drummond said, “with a great deal of skepticism as I think behooves any smart journalist, with an eye toward accountability, which I believe is of paramount importance in this moment.”
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How Europe and Canada can stay relevant in the AI wars • The Washington Post
Sam Winter-Levy and Anton Leicht are based at the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace:
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The middle powers in the West — European countries and Canada — are increasingly hoping to chart a course through the artificial intelligence revolution independent of China and the United States.
At the Munich Security Conference last month, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz declared the rules-based order dead and laid out a road map for “a strong sovereign Europe.” Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, declared that “our digital sovereignty is our digital sovereignty.” French President Emmanuel Macron, echoing Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, called for “de-risking vis-à-vis all the big powers.” Days later, at an AI summit in New Delhi, the same impulse surfaced in explicitly technological terms. Delegates from over 100 countries discussed sovereign AI infrastructure and how to prevent the technology’s benefits from being captured by a handful of American firms. On paper, it was the most ambitious assertion of middle-power independence in years.
But all this hopeful and ambitious talk ignores a painful reality: It’s too late in the AI race for the middle powers to play catch-up. The leaders calling for autonomy in Munich and New Delhi are doing so at a moment in which the defining technology of the next decade is controlled by the very powers they seek independence from.
In other sectors, settling for developing homegrown second-best technology might be a viable strategy for preserving sovereignty. In AI, that’s a riskier bet. If the gap between cutting-edge and second-tier systems continues to widen, and especially if advanced AI accelerates scientific research and industrial innovation, access to the best systems could become decisive for economic growth.
…Today’s AI infrastructure projects determine tomorrow’s catch-up capacity, and middle powers lag far behind. The European Union’s up to five planned AI “gigafactories” are slated to come online between 2026 and 2027; in 2024, Elon Musk’s xAI built a cluster of comparable size in 122 days. Europe’s most ambitious AI infrastructure projects are two to three years behind the curve, an eternity in AI development. Canada has committed roughly $2bn to “sovereign AI compute” over five years; Microsoft will spend over $100bn, more than 50 times as much, on its biggest data center in Wisconsin.
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Population around a point • Tom Forth
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Human population within a distance, from any point in the world.
Select a radius and click on the map.
The data is the Global Human Settlement Layer population grid for 2025. This release was known to be less accurate for small areas, especially where there has been rapid change in population.
The bus stop, tram stop, and train/metro stop data is from Open Street Map from early 2023 and has errors. Many stops are missing, especially outside of Europe. Stops included rarely used or heritage service stops.
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Fun! Though also likely to get overloaded as everyone discovers it.
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Cuba begins restoring power after energy grid collapses in nationwide blackout • CBS News
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Officials in Cuba reported an island-wide blackout Monday in the country of some 11 million people as its energy and economic crises deepen. Cuba has blamed its woes on a U.S. energy blockade after President Trump in January warned of tariffs on any country that sells or provides oil to it.
The Ministry of Energy and Mines noted on the social network X a “complete disconnection” of the country’s electrical system and said it was investigating. The ministry later said some “microsystems” were beginning to operate in various territories but did not go into further details.
It was the third major blackout in Cuba over the past four months. The cause was still unknown as of Monday night, Cuban state media said.
President Miguel Díaz-Canel on Friday said the island had not received oil shipments in more than three months and was operating on solar power, natural gas and thermoelectric plants, and the government has had to postpone surgeries for tens of thousands of people.
A massive outage over a week ago affected the island’s west, leaving millions without power. In 2025, almost exactly a year ago, the country suffered a massive outage in western Cuba.
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The US is effectively blockading Cuba, which has in the past relied on oil from Venezuela, along with Russia and Mexico. Though it can produce 40% of the petroleum it needs, that gap is the reason for the outages.
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Samsung discontinues its Galaxy Z TriFold after just three months • The Verge
Jess Weatherbed:
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Samsung is preparing to axe its first three-panel foldable phone less than three months after launching the device in the US. Sales of the $2,899 Galaxy Z TriFold will first be wound down in Korea and then discontinued in the US once remaining inventory has been cleared, an unnamed Samsung spokesperson told Bloomberg.
This follows a report from Korean media outlet Dong-A Ilbo on Monday that says the TriFold will be getting a final domestic restock today, March 17th. Samsung’s website stopped providing future restock updates for the foldable earlier this month, with the TriFold currently listed as “sold out” in the US.
It was only available to purchase directly from Samsung, with Dong-A Ilbo reporting that just 6,000 units have been stocked and sold domestically since the phone launched in Korea on December 12th. Meanwhile, Huawei is already on the second generation of its own trifold phone, but while the original Mate XT Ultimate eventually launched in other regions, the Mate XTs is still limited to China.
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Francisco Jeronimo of IDC sent out a press comment:
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“The Trifold was never intended to be a high-volume, mass-market device. It was conceived as a limited-production initiative, designed to test both technological feasibility and market reception. Samsung positioned it as an exploratory project, a forward-looking concept aimed at evaluating consumer interest, usage patterns, and design viability for next-generation form factors.
Production volumes were deliberately limited, and the initiative was not driven by short-term sales objectives but by longer-term innovation goals and learning. Reports of discontinuation should not be interpreted as a failure or a strategic withdrawal.”
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Perhaps it’s envy of Huawei, which IDC reckons has sold 1.2m trifold devices, generating $3.2bn in revenues – suggesting average prices of $2,666. There’s premium, and there’s premium.
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Why (and how) everyone is cold-calling the president • Semafor
Max Tani:
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The calls come in late at night, when the president can’t sleep. They come in when he’s watching TV in the evenings, and right after a game of golf, when he’s in a good mood. They come in early in the morning, as soon as he starts posting to Truth Social — but sometimes he’s a little snappy at that hour.
President Donald Trump’s iPhone won’t stop ringing because his Palm Beach number has become the ultimate status symbol in a town obsessed with proximity to power and influence.
This has produced a curious new form of journalism. In the two weeks since the US and Israel began military operations in Iran, Trump has done more than 30 cell phone interviews. He has become the presidential version of a drive-time radio host, picking up without screening his callers and conducting brief conversations with the public — in this case, journalists from outlets from The New York Times to Washington Reporter. One day earlier this month, ABC News’ Jonathan Karl and Rachel Scott each got separate interviews with Trump, in which he told them each how well the Iranian operation was going.
…When the president picks up, “he is often preoccupied, puts them on speaker in front of a large group of people, and he is loosely chatting and has fun messing with them,” said a White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to say something that reporters ought to realize: Trump isn’t taking these calls that seriously.
“Reporters who think they are being serious journalists by calling him are frankly doing themselves a disservice.”
…One television insider called the breathless Trump phone exclusives “shameless.” Another said they thought it was “silly and doesn’t add much value.” Another said the interviews were “useless.” Of course, all three acknowledged that they had at one point or another called Trump on the phone and reported out the details. But they suggested that the real offenders were others who were abusing the privilege for largely meaningless interviews and, let’s face it, clout.
“He’s having a good time and saying whatever he wants having gotten softball questions,” one journalist who has spoken to Trump told Semafor.
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So it’s a little like when everyone and their cousin had British PM Boris Johnson’s mobile number, though he might have been more coherent.
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Google Maps just got a major AI upgrade. Here’s how “Ask Maps” will work • PC Mag
Jibin Joseph:
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Google Maps can easily pull up nearby locations, but what if you’re not exactly sure what you need? A new Gemini-powered “Ask Maps” button in the app will let you ask natural-language questions about your surroundings. Plus, a dramatic 3D navigation upgrade will help you get there.
When available, the Ask Maps button will appear below the Search bar in Google Maps. The company touts its latest addition as “a new conversational experience that answers complex, real-world questions a map could never answer before.”
Tapping Ask Maps opens a chat interface familiar to Gemini users. Google says you can ask the chatbot questions like “My phone is dying — where can I charge it without having to wait in a long line for coffee?” or “Is there a public tennis court with lights on that I can play at tonight?”
You can also ask the AI to prepare an itinerary for your upcoming trip, and it will respond with details like directions, ETAs, and tips from users on how to explore a hidden gem, the best route to take, or ways to get free tickets.
Ask Maps taps into your Google Maps search and save history to provide personalized responses. If you search for a restaurant, for example, it may recommend vegan options if your past searches and saved places indicate that preference.
Each response option will include photos of the place, an AI-generated summary of user reviews, opening hours, and options to save the location or get directions. You can also share Ask Maps’s response with friends and family before deciding.
The other new Maps addition is supports for Immersive Navigation, which Google describes as the “biggest update in over a decade.” It gives you a 3D view of the buildings, overpasses, and terrain around you; video demos make it look like you’re in a driving game.
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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








