-
Archives
- June 2026
- May 2026
- April 2026
- March 2026
- February 2026
- January 2026
- December 2025
- November 2025
- October 2025
- September 2025
- August 2025
- July 2025
- June 2025
- May 2025
- April 2025
- March 2025
- February 2025
- January 2025
- December 2024
- November 2024
- October 2024
- September 2024
- August 2024
- July 2024
- June 2024
- May 2024
- April 2024
- March 2024
- February 2024
- January 2024
- December 2023
- November 2023
- October 2023
- September 2023
- August 2023
- July 2023
- June 2023
- May 2023
- April 2023
- March 2023
- February 2023
- January 2023
- December 2022
- November 2022
- October 2022
- September 2022
- August 2022
- July 2022
- June 2022
- May 2022
- April 2022
- March 2022
- February 2022
- January 2022
- September 2021
- August 2021
- July 2021
- June 2021
- May 2021
- April 2021
- February 2021
- January 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- September 2020
- August 2020
- July 2020
- June 2020
- May 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- March 2015
- January 2015
-
Meta
The Donaldson Sex Abuse Trial: 10. Jeffrey’s police interviewe. Source: BBC Northern Ireland is an UK public broadcast service
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
OCCRP: We Investigated Ireland’s Alumina Scandal: Here’s What Followed
2 of 1,662
We Investigated Ireland’s Alumina Scandal: Here’s What Followed
Inbox
| OCCRP Videos <videos@occrp.org> Unsubscribe | 3:02 PM (2 hours ago) | ||
to me![]() | |||
We Investigated Ireland’s Alumina Scandal: Here’s What Followed Pressure is mounting on the EU to ban the export of alumina to Russia in its next sanctions package.Watch the video |
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
GZERO Media ask ian. The battle for the Senate. Can the Dems flip the Senate?
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
Axios: Confessions of an AI lab rat
| Confessions of an AI lab rat |
![]() |
| Illustration: Lindsey Bailey/Axios |
| Axios CEO Jim VandeHei previewed his lab-rat learnings in his weekly newsletter for CEOs, Axios C-Suite, and wrote this broader version for Axios AM: I’ve spent the past year using AI obsessively — inputting copious amounts of personal and business data, turning myself into a lab rat for Axios and our readers. Why it matters: This experiment has shown me in unmistakable, hands-on ways the superhuman possibilities — and real-world limitations — hitting and awaiting us. In short: AI is way better, more accurate and mind-expanding than most think. (Sorry, it’s true.) But it’s colliding with hard human realities, making it confusing, clunky and chaotic for lots of people in its current form. How I did it: Over the past year, Axios aggressively tested AI (mainly OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude Code) across every layer of every department. We provided access and instruction to every employee. Most of my leadership team operates with chief-of-staff agents, and we’re knee-deep in agent-to-agent prep. I personally use ChatGPT or Claude for one to two hours daily, usually in the early mornings, and control an AI personal operating system via my phone. That’s connected to an always-on computer that runs several agents, including one that scans daily for CEO-relevant data and trends. I’ve dumped every medical record and blood test into it, and detailed my diet, workouts and supplements. It knows more about my health than my wife does! So here are my takeaways: It’s way better than most think. I’ve spent the year with my head buried in this, while talking to the smartest people in tech, politics and business. AI is smarter than 95% of the people on 95% of topics, 95% of the time. Even for someone using it obsessively with real discipline, I’m still discovering it’s way better than I thought possible. Its ability to think creatively and research deeply is extraordinary — if and only if you know how to use it. It takes real work. You can’t wing it. You need to work at it daily, so AI learns you — and you learn AI. That’s when the magic happens. You have to feed it copious amounts of information and persistently tell it what works and what sucks. This feedback loop creates a new form of super-knowledge about you — and super-skills for you. Most people get unimpressive results and move on, assuming it’s overhyped. Don’t. It’s the smartest doctor I’ve met. I fed AI every medical record I have — MRIs, blood work, heart rate — and told it to be clinical and brutally honest. I’ve run most solutions past my doctor, and almost every time, he agrees. I still validate with physicians. But if I had to pick someone to diagnose something, I would turn to AI over human docs for anything complicated. Short-term job losses are overhyped. A year ago, I assumed AI’s story would be subtraction: automate ruthlessly, cut costs, shrink headcount. That’s real. We’ve done it at Axios. But over the last three months, my view shifted. The bigger opportunity isn’t efficiency. It’s new business lines that were economically impossible before AI. We’re exploring three new revenue-generating projects that simply weren’t possible without AI. I now believe many specific jobs here will change, but that we’ll end up hiring more people over time than I would’ve thought a year ago. Business gains are overhyped, too — for now. As good as it is, AI hits internal walls when it comes to human use, security, connections to other systems and decisions about what data it can access inside companies. In most cases, it’s simply not ready for deployment at scale. This problem is getting worse because agent-to-agent work is a mess. If AI transforms our business — and I think it will — agents need to work flawlessly with other agents. This is the unfolding frontier. My exec team has chief-of-staff agents, but we hit constant walls in determining what they can know, share and act on once the agents collaborate. This must be fixed before companies experience what I have at an individual level. A new class of super-worker is born. Here’s the best news: We’re spotting rank-and-file workers daily whose brains are wired for AI. It’s been easier than expected to spot them, then train them to be AI accelerators on their team or across the company. These people are not technologists. You don’t need to be an AI savant or lab rat. But every person reading this should figure out ASAP how AI can augment their work. If your company does not have AI teaching, demand it. It’s affected my mind, mood and performance. I’m not a coder and rarely use AI for more than that hour or two per day, but these stories about people in Silicon Valley getting swept up in a manic AI fever — AI-pilled! — hit home for me. On the good side, I’ve jumped out of bed at 3 a.m. more than I care to admit, jazzed to test or explore a new idea. At 55, I’ve written and accomplished a lot more than any other time in my life. But you must train it to challenge and expand your thinking — not replace it. On the flip side, I find myself waking up after shorter bursts of sleep with more anxiety. Maybe it’s coincidence, not causation. But I doubt it. The bottom line: We’re living history. For $20 a month, any of us can experiment with exceptionally advanced AI models. Be clear-eyed about the good, bad and ugly. Most importantly, be curious. Use it daily. Read about it regularly. Figure out what parts of you can be vastly improved with AI — and then do it. Screenshot: Axios Watch a video of Mike quizzing Jim about his lab rat learnings (34 mins. … Executive producer: Jimmy Shelton). … Share this story.Tell us what you think: finishline@axios.com. If you’re a CEO or on a CEO’s team: Ask to join Jim’s new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter. |
2. Scoop: Trum |
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged ai, artificial-intelligence, chatgpt, technology, writing
Leave a comment
GOV.UK: On the shoulders of giants for Ireland to follow: Legal innovation in the context of AI Growth
Press release
Legal innovation to be supercharged by new AI Growth project
In a major boost to the economy, the Government has launched a new AI growth project to fast-track innovation in legal technology, often known as LawTech.
From:Ministry of Justice and The Rt Hon David Lammy MPPublished8 June 2026

- New AI testing labs to fast-track breakthrough LawTech solutions
- Cutting-edge innovation to boost efficiency and ensure safe, ethical AI use
- Part of drive to deliver legal modernisation and boost economic growth
The Government has unveiled state-of-the-art testing environments – coined AI Growth Labs – that will allow for ground-breaking AI software to be trialled and tested in a secure environment, enabling it to be rolled out to market quicker.
Legal services have been chosen as the first sector to benefit from the pioneering growth project, reflecting strong demand from the industry and clear evidence that smarter regulation can deliver breakthrough LawTech solutions.
The initiative will help innovators navigate the UK’s regulatory landscape with greater clarity, removing barriers that have slowed progress and unlocking the full potential of AI technology, driving economic growth and delivering a modern legal sector.
For example, the lab could be used to test AI tools that help conveyancers analyse property sales packs and flag potential legal issues for review in minutes rather than hours. This would allow busy professionals to identify risks earlier, reduce delays and support faster, more efficient property transactions.
This marks a significant step in modernising legal services – boosting efficiency, strengthening public trust and expanding access to justice – while positioning the UK at the forefront of global AI innovation and economic growth.
Deputy Prime Minister and Lord Chancellor David Lammy said:
The legal sector is a cornerstone of the UK economy, contributing over £40 billion a year — yet too often it’s been held back by analogue systems simply not fit for the digital age.
That’s why we’re deploying these new AI Labs to turbocharging legal innovation, helping us drive growth, boost efficiency and deliver smarter justice, as well as positioning the UK to lead internationally in this vital market.
AI Growth Labs give organisations a safe space in which to test innovative legal services products and discuss any regulatory issues directly with regulators.
By providing clearer, joined-up guidance within existing rules, the Labs will cut through complexity and make it easier to bring new ideas to market.
It comes as the Deputy Prime Minister is set to attend London Tech Week next week (Tuesday, 9 June) where he will announce a major new phase of technology and AI investment to drive bold court modernisation – delivering faster, smarter justice for the public.
Applications for the AI Growth Labs will open later this summer for tech innovators – including LawTech firms, legal service providers and conveyancing companies – before being rolled out to other sectors later this year.
Share this page
The following links open in a new tab
Published 8 June 2026
Explore the topic
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged ai, artificial-intelligence, chatgpt, news, technology
Leave a comment
OCCRP: The Russian Watchmen Aboard … the ‘Shadow Fleet’ Tankers
Eyes On The Crew: The Russian Watchmen Aboard Moscow’s Sanctioned ‘Shadow Fleet’ Tankers
Investigation
Dozens of men with security backgrounds have been quietly sailing alongside the standard crews on the tankers carrying sanctioned Russian oil. Now, reporters speak to some of these “watchmen” firsthand to learn about their roles on board.

Banner: James O’Brien/OCCRP
Key Findings
- Crew lists reveal the presence of Russian men with security backgrounds on sanctioned vessels carrying oil out of the country’s Baltic seaports.
- Instead of experience as sailors, many have backgrounds in the Russian military or private military companies.
- Speaking with undercover reporters, several of these men explained that their role was to monitor the ships’ foreign captains and crews, especially when they risked being stopped by European authorities.
Reported by
Nathaniel Peutherer
Ingrid Gercama
OCCRP
Holger Roonemaa
OCCRP, Delfi
Marta Vunš
Delfi
Alina Tsogoeva
OCCRP
Ilia Rozhdestvenskii
Dossier Center
Also published by our partnersDossier Center (Russia, in Russian)Follow The Money (The Netherlands, in Dutch)Delfi (Estonia, in Estonian)Danwatch (Denmark, in Danish)De Tijd (Belgium, in Dutch)Pointer (The Netherlands, in Dutch)Source Material (United Kingdom, in English)Süddeutsche Zeitung (Germany, in German)Tagesschau (Germany, in German)The Times (United Kingdom, in English)VRT News (Belgium, in Dutch)
June 9, 2026
With his shaved head, thick neck, and heavy jaw, Andrei has the look of a man built to intimidate.
His professional background matches that impression. Andrei’s resume describes him as a former commander in an elite Russian airborne unit who served in “combat operations” in Chechnya, worked as a personal bodyguard, and later held senior corporate security roles.
More recently, however, he had an altogether different mission: ensuring that tankers carrying sanctioned Russian oil reached their foreign destinations.
His job, he says, was to “to watch, to report in a timely manner — and, let’s say, to not allow the vessel to deviate from its course.”
Strained by its grinding war on Ukraine, Moscow desperately needs this so-called “shadow fleet” of aging and opaquely-owned vessels to keep delivering its oil to clients around the world. In March, an investigation by OCCRP, Delfi Estonia, Helsingin Sanomat, and iStories laid out in detail how Russian crew members with security backgrounds, like Andrei, were covertly being placed on board alongside largely foreign crews.
Now, OCCRP has joined a consortium of European media outlets led by Follow the Money and Dossier Center to identify dozens more of the men, map the routes they took, and speak to several of them first-hand.
Though often listed as “technicians” or “supernumeraries” on crew lists, their backgrounds are already an indication that they were not normal sailors. A combination of leaked data and open-source research shows that many are veterans of the Russian military, private military companies, or former state security personnel.
By posing as recruiters seeking security guards for upcoming shadow fleet voyages, reporters managed to speak with Andrei (a pseudonym) and three other men to learn more about their experiences on board. The men said that chief among their tasks was keeping an eye on the foreign captains and crews manning the ships, particularly in situations where there was a danger of being boarded.
Reporters used an undercover approach because the watchmen’s work was shrouded in secrecy and because they distrust Western media. Though most of the names in this story are real, reporters used pseudonyms for those quoted from undercover conversations.
Over the past year, European authorities have intercepted tankers belonging to Russia’s shadow fleet on a handful of occasions, often for flying a false flag or for being suspected of damaging undersea cables.
In these situations, Andrei explained in a video call with a “recruiter,” some captains have “behaved correctly” while others “gave in.” His mission, he said, was to “ensure that such incorrect actions did not take place.”
Andrei said his duties also included keeping his superiors, whom he did not identify, apprised of his vessel’s location, speed, and direction in twice-daily reports. And “naturally,” he said, he was to make an “immediate report” in the event of any emergency.

Credit: Andres Putting/Delfi Meedia
The interception of the oil tanker Kiwala by the Estonian Navy in the Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea) on April 11, 2025 as it sailed toward the Russian port of Ust-Luga.
Another watchman, Mikhail, said that he had graduated from a leading officer training center for Russia’s Airborne Forces and spent eight years in Syria heading a personal security detail for a private military contractor. Though registered on board a sanctioned vessel as a “technician,” his job, he said, involved “monitoring the crew, the captain, and the first mate.”
“I was finding out who was snitching, who they were working for, what information was coming from the ship to shore,” Mikhail said. “To the Indian authorities, or maybe even to NATO countries.”
The men also revealed more quotidian details about their time at sea, complaining about spicy food cooked by an Indian crew and bedbug infestations.
“When I board the ship, I’m happy with everything. The cabin is clean,” Mikhail said. “And then a week later, I find that I’ve started waking up covered in bites, and there are blood stains on the sheets.”
“This job, it turns into hell,” he said. “A real hell.”
A European intelligence officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the findings tally with his assessment of the watchmen’s primary task: “to keep the captain in check.”
Their role, he said, is “to ensure captains don’t lose their nerve and enter the territorial waters of Western nations. If they don’t enter, Western countries can’t do anything.”
Michelle Bockman, a London-based maritime intelligence analyst specializing in sanctioned oil flows, noted that ships sometimes carry armed guards in areas where piracy is a threat. But the “constant” deployment of men who have worked for state-linked security companies, such as the former mercenary outfit Wagner Group, is “a really concerning blurring of military and commercial,” she said.
The Russian navy and President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, did not respond to requests for comment. Given the opportunity to provide on-the-record comments to a reporter speaking openly, Andrei described any reference to his work on the shadow fleet as a “lie” and Mikhail said he had never been on board an oil tanker.

Credit: Stefan Sauer/dpa/dpa Picture-Alliance via AFP
The tanker Eventin, reported to be part of Russia’s so-called shadow fleet, seen off Sassnitz in Mecklenburg–Western Pomerania, Germany, on January 12, 2025.
From Russia to India
To begin this investigation, reporters from Dossier Center obtained crew lists from 757 “shadow fleet” tankers who made voyages between January 2023 and April 2026. The vessels had either been sanctioned by the United States or European Union, or flagged by Ukrainian authorities.
Among the tens of thousands of crew members listed, reporters managed to identify 83 men who appeared to fit the pattern of watchmen: They are Russians who have joined largely foreign crews, and most were listed as “supernumeraries,” “technicians,” or, in some cases, “security guards.” Unlike other sailors on the crew lists, many did not have any relevant seafaring diplomas or other qualifications next to their names.
The number of journeys these men took rose sharply in the summer of 2025, a few months after the Estonian navy detained one Russian shadow fleet tanker and nearly boarded another. The men’s presence then dropped off starting this January, a development analysts are still puzzling over.

Credit: Leon de Korte/Follow the Money
They were most frequently deployed on one of Russia’s most commercially important oil routes: Most of their ships set sail from Russia’s Baltic Sea ports before traveling via the Mediterranean to deliver their oil to India, largely to the adjacent ports of Sikka and Vadinar in the state of Gujarat.

Credit: Leon de Korte/Follow the Money
By looking at online recruitment platforms, dating and social media profiles, and information leaked from official Russian databases, reporters from Dossier Center learned more about the men’s professional backgrounds.
Many came from the world of private security, a significant number had military backgrounds, and roughly a quarter of the 83 were veterans of private military companies.
The latter includes Redut, a Western-sanctioned outfit that reportedly works under the Defense Ministry, and the better-known Wagner Group, which fought in conflicts around the world on Moscow’s behalf for nearly a decade.
Many of the men have served in Syria, where the Wagner Group helped Moscow prop up the Assad regime. Among them is Yuri Rzhevsky, a 52-year-old who worked last November on the Selva, a sanctioned tanker sailing under the flag of Oman. According to leaked Wagner Group files obtained by Dossier Center, Rzhevsky served in Syria as a squad leader and combat engineer under the callsign ‘Poruchik,’ a Czarist-era military rank.
Rzhevsky’s profile on VKontakte, a Russian social network, presents another side of the watchman. While some photos show him posing with modern weapons, others show him participating in historical reenactments of Russia’s post-revolutionary civil war — and in one post, he displays a certificate attesting to 300 hours of yoga teacher training.

Credit: Screenshot/Vk.com/Yuriy Yuriy
Yuri Rzhevsky posted a photo on social media platform VKontakte of himself with a gun.
Other men honed their security skills in police forces or other state agencies.
For instance, leaked records show that Evgenii Skorovarov, 45, served in a special rapid response unit of Russia’s customs service. When contacted by an undercover reporter posing as a recruit, Skorovarov denied working in maritime security. Still, his date of birth matches his entry on the crew list — and his profile picture on the Russian messaging platform VK appears to show him standing aboard a large ship.
Rzhevsky and Skorovarov did not respond to requests for comment sent openly by reporters.
Standard Duties and Culture Clashes
Intelligence sources have previously told OCCRP that the Russian men are deployed to deter authorities from boarding, inspecting, or potentially seizing the ships that form an economic lifeline for Moscow.
In the interviews with undercover reporters, several watchmen confirmed that this is one of their most important tasks.
“The usual standard duties,” one explained, include “monitoring the vessel’s crew to ensure compliance with all protocols for countering the detention or seizure of the vessel.”
Part of the role was also to ensure the largely foreign crews manning the oil tankers acted in Russia’s best interests, the men said.
Mikhail recalled high tensions and “endless, endless requests” — though it was not clear from whom — near European countries or when passing through the English Channel on the way to India. “You have to keep an eye on all this, because some assistant captain might blurt out something inappropriate,” he said.
He also related an encounter near Denmark when his ship was boarded by two French-speaking pilots, whose role is to help captains navigate in local conditions.
“The first thing [one of them] did, he rushed at me with a question: ‘Who are you? Who are you? Why are you on the bridge?’” Mikhail recalled, referring to the ship’s command center. “I told them, I’m a radio engineer, I’m here because I’m supposed to be.”
Mikhail said he ended up leaving the bridge and standing on the deck, watching the pilots through the window for hours.
“I stood there practically the whole night,” he said. “Because I thought … there might be some kind of provocation … I thought, even some boarding parties might come. So I wanted to be ready and to have the chance at least to communicate that we’ve been attacked.”
Reporters also spoke to several ordinary sailors who worked on shadow fleet vessels to learn about the role of the Russian men on board.
“Lei,” who worked on a shadow fleet tanker for nine months and asked not to be identified out of fear of losing his livelihood, told a reporter from SourceMaterial, a U.K.-based investigative platform, that he first saw the Russians in mid-2025.
They proudly discussed their military backgrounds with the rest of the crew, Lei recalled, showing photos of themselves on past deployments, posing with weapons and armored vehicles. “One was the Russian officer,” Lei added. “He was in very good rank.”
Lei eventually came to believe the watchmen were not on board simply to monitor the crew, but to act as a link between the vessel and Russia’s military. “If some forces come behind us,” he said, “they should inform their Russian Navy, so they can help our battle.”
Another seaman whose ship carried Russian guards said that when they boarded at Egypt’s Port Said, the chief officer on the vessel simply told the crew “they were coming from the owner’s side.”
While it remains unclear who the watchmen report to, an analyst with the Finnish Security and Intelligence Service (SUPO) told OCCRP in March that they likely acted as “liaisons” for the Russian military. According to Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service, they are typically hired for the job by Russian security companies, such as the Moran Security Group that Andrei lists on his resume as his most recent employer. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Credit: Screenshot/ok.ru
One of Russia’s watchmen, Viktor Aleksandrov, is a former Wagner Group mercenary whose social media profile features a photo of himself, uploaded in May 2021, posing in camouflage gear in Homs, Syria.
Lei, the sailor, also shared other details from his time at sea. He said many of the crew came to resent the Russians, who were felt to eat too much food but contribute little to the operation of the vessel.
At times they were convivial, showing crew members photos of their families and girlfriends. Still, Lei said he felt they did not “deserve” to be on board. “We all don’t like them, because they only stay there like they are coming on the holidays, enjoying a picnic.”
The watchmen had their own complaints. During a conversation with an undercover reporter, Mikhail said he repeatedly asked the ship’s Indian cook to prepare meals “the European way” because “it was impossible to eat” the spicy food they served.
Even basic internet access became a point of frustration, Mikhail said, with data allowances sometimes limiting them to just enough internet for their handful of daily reports back to shore.
Despite their combat-related backgrounds, two of the watchmen who spoke to reporters insisted they were unarmed while on board. But they did recount facing some “emergencies” at sea, including drone attacks from Ukraine, which has targeted several vessels over the past year.
“We caught one of these attacks”, said Andrei, “attacks by scoundrels.”
The details of his story match the attack on the Qendil, an Oman-flagged vessel that had delivered an oil shipment to Port Sikka in India and was crossing the Mediterranean on its way back to Russia when it was struck in December 2025.
Grainy targeting footage released by the Security Service of Ukraine appears to show explosives peppering the ship’s deck, each one erupting into a bright white fireball on impact.
Andrei described the crippled ship’s subsequent journey as an “ordeal.”
“We went for repairs,” he said. “And while we were waiting for this repair, near the Turkish shore, our anchor was torn off — we got slammed against the shore. We were thrown aground there for one-and-a-half, two weeks. Those were the consequences of the attack, you could say … We shouldn’t have ended up there, but we did.”

Credit: Screenshot/Youtube/@Ukrinform-b2f
Ukrainian news media reporting on the attack on the vessel Qendil in December 2025.
The Qendil was not the first shadow fleet tanker to come under attack, but Ukraine’s audacious long-range strike, which took place some 2,000 kilometers from its borders, marked the expansion of its drone campaign from the Black Sea into the Mediterranean.
Immediately after the strike, the number of watchmen appearing in reporters’ data plummeted. Experts are still unsure why.
One Western intelligence source said that the cost of placing the guards may have become too high in light of plummeting oil revenues.
An officer from another country echoed this idea: “It’s cheaper not to deploy them because everyone [in the West] is talking about them being on board anyway.”
With additional reporting by Misha Gagarin.
Research and data expertise was provided by OCCRP’s Research & Data Team.
June 9, 2026
Support fearless reporting.
Unlock crucial insights.
Your donation powers investigations that expose organized crime and corruption worldwide.
As a supporter, you’ll also gain access to events and insights only available to our donors.
Give today and get the inside take.
Related Articles

Jun 5, 2026
Prosecutors Seek Up to Two Years in Prison for Russian Woman Convicted of Lying About Spy Ties
Federal prosecutors are urging a judge to make an example of Nomma Zarubina, who was jailed pre-trial after allegedly…

Axios: Thinking is a muscle
| Thinking is a muscle |
![]() |
| Illustration: Lindsey Bailey/Axios |
| Over time, Americans have transformed how they treat their bodies. Now, one prominent thinker says it’s time to do the same for our minds, Axios’ Natalie Daher writes. Cal Newport — professor and author of bestsellers “Deep Work” (2016) and “Slow Productivity (2024) — has long argued that how we relate to technology is reshaping who we are. His latest warning is more urgent: Our capacity for deep thought is eroding, with consequences that are economic, cultural and personal. Why it matters: Stop viewing distraction as inevitable and start treating thinking as something worth defending.”I’m done ceding my brain,” Newport says. “It’s time… to actually do something about it.” Newport wrote recently on his blog: Letting AI write and speak on our behalf — or serve as a substitute for real human connection — “feels profane.“He’s even more blunt in a recent New York Times essay: “Today I think we’re rapidly losing the ability to think deeply at all, regardless of how much space we can find in our schedules for these efforts.” Newport’s argument: We should treat technology the way we learned to treat food.Thinking, Newport argues, isn’t optional. It’s foundational to everything from economic output to moral clarity. The habit “is what lets us make sense of information in a complicated world.” Case in point: President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1955 heart attack became a national wake-up call that helped change how Americans think about health.Cardiologist Paul Dudley White, brought in as an outside consultant, used the moment to educate the public. White helped demystify heart disease and showed Americans they could lower their risk by changing their diets and embracing exercise. Newport sees a similar reckoning ahead for our minds. Much of what fills our feeds is engineered for compulsion, not value, he says. “What is a TikTok video if not a digital Dorito?“His prescription: “Most people should avoid these diversions most of the time. “Reality check: That doesn’t mean abandoning technology. It means redefining how we use it and what we protect. Take back your brain!Read regularly to rebuild what Newport calls “deep reading processes .”Turn your phone ringer on. You can put down the phone and respond when someone actually needs you, rather than doomscrolling. Use AI selectively, not to avoid hard thinking, but to support it. Zoom out: The bigger idea is collective, not individual. Just as diet and exercise became social norms through institutions, policy and culture, Newport sees a similar shift coming for attention and cognition.“The key to this transformation is action,” he writes — not tweaks or hacks, but a broader reset in how we value focus. |
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged books, life, mental-health, self-improvement, writing
Leave a comment
Futurism: Company Behind AI Surveillance System … being alert is essential
Company Behind AI School Surveillance System in Major Trouble After It Fails to Spot Armed Student Walking In to Commit Mass Shooting
“Why is this any better than a metal detector?”
Published Jun 8, 2026 12:18 PM EDT
Add Futurism(opens in a new tab)More information

Sign up to see the future, today
Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Email address Sign Up
The company behind an “AI gun detection” system is being sued by the survivor of a Tennessee high school shooting after it failed to detect the handgun used by the shooter.
The lawsuit, filed last month and spotted by Ars Technica, targets Omnilert, which designed and marketed the AI weapon detection system, and System Integrations, the company that installed and maintained it. It was filed by Antonyous Henin, who was grazed in the arm during the January 2025 shooting at Antioch High School in Nashville. The perpetrator opened fire in the cafeteria, killing one student before dying of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Omnilert knew or should’ve known about “significant operational limitations in its gun detection systems that could result in detection failures during actual emergencies,” the suit alleges. It goes on to list numerous bold claims that Omnilert made in its marketing copy that its product apparently failed to live up to, which include boasting of “unparalleled reliability” and being able to detect a weapon “before a shot is fired.”
“Omnilert further represented that AI-powered visual gun detection ‘could have mitigated or prevented tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School’ by identifying threats earlier — invoking one of the nation’s most devastating school shootings to convey that its product would prevent similar tragedies,” the suit continues.
The AI system was deployed after Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools approved a $1 million contract with Omnilert and System Integrations in 2023. In the aftermath of the shooting, Omnilert CEO Dave Fraser seemed to suggest that the AI detection system hadn’t failed; the shooter was merely serendipitously positioned relative to the cameras.
“The location of the shooter and the firearm meant that the weapon was not visible,” Fraser told NBC News at the time. “This is not a case of the firearm not being recognized by the system.”
An MNPS spokesperson, meanwhile, reiterated Fraser’s reasoning, by more or less invoking the adage that nothing’s perfect. “It does work, but it’s not going to work in every instance, in every spot, based on where that weapon might be visible,” the spokesperson told NBC News.
Chris Smith, one of the plaintiff’s attorneys, was skeptical of AI gun detection and said it was questionable to list a specific set of situational conditions that have to be met for the system to work as intended.
“I just thought that it was kind of bullshit. I have a Tesla, and I think Tesla’s self-driving is bullshit,” Smith told Ars. “It’s not ready for prime time! How could you possibly be entrusting of that? That’s your plan to protect kids from school shootings? Why is this any better than a metal detector?”
This isn’t the first time Omnilert has made headlines for the wrong reasons. In October 2025, its AI gun detection tech mistook a bag of Dorito chips for a weapon and brought an army of cops down on the unfortunate 16-year-old student whose only crime was toting a snack. Months later, another AI surveillance system, ZeroEyes, sent a school in lockdown after similarly hallucinating a weapon, this time fooled by a middle schooler’s clarinet.
But despite the dubious track record of these tools, AI surveillance is being increasingly used in schools across the country. Whether they represent a genuine attempt to keeps schools safer, or are the work of opportunistic startups providing a facade of safety by awing concerned parents and administrators with flashy AI promises, critics think the millions of dollars spent on deploying them would be better used elsewhere.
“I’ve never seen a school shooting where there was a lack of notification,” David Riedman, an education and security expert who maintains the K-12 School Shooting Database,” told Ars. The money spent deploying Omnilert “could have gone to a counselor or something else to a kid in crisis,” he added. “Every decision that you make is pointing away resources from something else.”
More on AI: US Soccer Scanning Videos of Millions of Youth Players to Identify New Stars
Frank Landymore
Contributing Writer
I’m a tech and science correspondent for Futurism, where I’m particularly interested in astrophysics, the business and ethics of artificial intelligence and automation, and the environment.
Most Popular
Meta Furious Over Bombshell Smart Glasses Revelation
The Math on SpaceX’s IPO Is Virtually Impossible
Scientists Release Results After Scanning 3I/ATLAS for Alien Signals
Scientists Detect Massive Structure Under Antarctica
By Joe Wilkins
College Professors Say Incoming Students No Longer Understand Middle School Math and Science
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged ai, artificial-intelligence, cybersecurity, technology
Leave a comment
Lifelong learning for a person with TBI. 30 plus years and I just did not have the words or confirmation to really grasp this. I can identify with this from the PADULA Institute of Vision Rehabilitation

Concussion: Blurred Vision, TBI and Visual Processing Dysfunction

Individuals with concussions or other traumatic brain injuries (TBI) often report visual symptoms including visual fatigue, eye strain, and intermittent blurred vision. People with a TBI can also experience other symptoms that actually arise from trouble with the visual process within the brain. These may include difficulty with balance, dizziness, vertigo, light sensitivity, double vision, difficulty functioning in busy/crowded environments, panic attacks and visual hallucinations.
Visual problems people with TBIs suffer from are often overlooked and symptoms are usually attributed to other problems which can lead to unresolved problems that reduce one’s overall quality of life.
Concussion Affecting Vision?
Visual symptoms from a concussion are caused by a dysfunction in brain processing. This can affect the balance between the two visual processes and cause a condition called Post Trauma Vision Syndrome (PTVS).
Symptoms of PTVS include:
- Double vision
- Headaches
- Blurred vision
- Dizziness or nausea
- Attention or concentration difficulties
- Staring behavior (infrequent blinking)
- Spatial disorientation
- Losing your place when reading
- Not being able to find the beginning of the next line when reading
- Visual memory problems
- Pulling away from objects when they are brought close to you
- Seeing objects as moving when they are actually stationary
- Difficulty tolerating busy/crowded environments
If you have a history of TBI/concussion or are currently recovering from one and experience any of the symptoms mentioned above, please know that we can help in your rehabilitative process.
Concussion Affecting Vision Causing Difficulty With Balance
Concussions and TBIs can also affect posture and balance. The spatial visual system works with other senses and the neuro-motor system to give your brain information on how your body is oriented in space. In someone with a dysfunctional spatial system as a result of a TBI, difficulty with movement and balance
Symptoms of VMSS include:
- Dizziness or nausea
- Spatial disorientation
- Consistently drifting to one side of hallway or room
- Bumping into objects when walking
- Poor balance or posture (leaning forward, backward or to one side when walking, standing or seated in a wheelchair)
- Back pain or muscle rigidity
- Difficulty tolerating busy/crowded environments
If you experience any of these symptoms, there are tests available to assess you for VMSS. At the Padula Institute of Vision, we combine observation of posture when sitting and walking with gait testing to evaluate and rehabilitate VMSS.
Neuro-Visual Processing Rehabilitation
Individuals with TBIs who have visual dysfunction can benefit from a neuro-visual evaluation. This exam is very different from a routine eye exam. Its purpose is to provide an in-depth analysis of the relationship between the spatial visual process of the neuro-motor system using a variety of tests.
Treatment of visual processing symptoms often comes in the form of yoked-prism glasses which are usually prescribed for therapeutic use and should only be used under the direction of the prescribing doctor. These prisms may also be recommend for use during physical or occupational therapy. Another therapeutic aid that can be employed is bi-nasal occlusion. This involves placing two strips of opaque tape vertically on the part of each lens that is closest to the nose which serves to provide a vertical boundary in the visual environment and can anchor a dysfunctional vision process. We also provide Neuro-Visual Postural Therapy ™ (NVPT) when necessary and appropriate.
For many, dysfunction of the visual process can be a primary cause of the symptoms many experience. Treatment through neuro-optometric rehabilitation becomes an interdisciplinary approach that can maximize potentials in other therapies such as physical, occupation, speech and cognitive therapies. Collaboration is often the key to successful rehabilitation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is treating vision problems after a concussion important?
How are vision problems after a concussion treated?
How do concussions impact balance and posture?
What is Post Trauma Vision Syndrome (PTVS)?
What is a concussion, and how does it affect vision?
PLEASE CONTACT US!Your Name (required) *Phone (required) *
United States +1Your Email (required) *Your Message (required) *
This contact form is not intended for existing patient medical or treatment plan inquiries. For questions related to your care or treatment, please call our office directly at 1-800-591-1160. For all other inquiries, feel free to use this form or contact us by phone. Send
Don’t Wait, Contact the Padula Institute of Vision!
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged health, mental-health, neuroscience, nutrition, wellness
Leave a comment
DW: Our memory – a phenomenal storage system. On learning and forgetting. Comment: as a person with TBI 30 yrs plus now but similar to this woman’s explanation post a few strokes, she gives people hope. Please share with those who have TBI, strokes, conditions like Parkinsons. I am forever thankful to Dr Jim Maguire RIP, who was my psychiatrist but when I returned from Zimbabwe, he referred to the only neuropsychologist in Ireland at that time ie 1990’s. Visual imagery is stated as important but no mind’s eye/aphantasia, as in my case, causes problems. Search: site for aphantasia. Spatial memory, Dr Eleanor Maguire RIP and London taxi drivers and their exceptional memories (Larger) is worth looking up also. Highly recommend
May 29, 2026 #dwdocs#documentary#dwdocumentary
Our memory is a machine of superlatives. Every second, it processes unimaginable amounts of information, decides what’s important and what’s not, and stores what we experience and learn. Our memory also makes us who we are. The experiences and feelings we’ve stored, the knowledge we’ve retained – all of this connects us to ourselves and our past. But how can we improve our memory and make it more efficient? How can we keep it fit and healthy? What happens when it fails us?
This documentary follows people who are connected in different ways to the topic of “memory”. In her late 40s, Nicole Adam lost her memory after suffering several strokes. She’s determined to regain it – with occupational therapy and VR glasses. On her road to recovery, she also asks herself the question: Who am I if I don’t know who I used to be? As her story shows, our memory is both vulnerable and adaptable. For actor Henriette Hölzel, on the other hand, learning large amounts of text for roles at the Dresden State Theatre is part of everyday life. She has eight different roles at her fingertips at the same time. She reveals how she manages to keep complex dialogues in her head. Johannes Mallow, multiple German champion and two-time world champion in memory sports, also explains how he streamlines the process of information recollection. Using methods such as the “mind palace”, he takes us to Magdeburg Cathedral to show how he memorizes his appointments so that he never forgets them. But it’s not just training that keeps our memory fit. In fact, forgetting is also important for keeping our memory healthy. Neuroscientist Andreas Papassotiropoulos explains that forgetting is an active process that helps us distinguish between what’s important – and what’s not. To benefit our memory, he recommends sleep and exercise as well as art and culture. Heidelberg neurobiologist Prof. Hannah Monyer makes it clear that our memories have not only shaped our past, but also shape our future: what we remember today influences who we will be tomorrow. A film that tells stories of learning and forgetting, presents exciting research findings and shows how we can strengthen our memory so that it stays with us throughout our lives.
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment




Screenshot: Axios
If you’re a CEO or on a CEO’s team:
Scoop: Trum
Newport’s argument: We should treat technology the way we learned to treat food.
Case in point: President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1955 heart attack became a national wake-up call that helped change how Americans think about health.
Newport sees a similar reckoning ahead for our minds. Much of what fills our feeds is engineered for compulsion, not value, he says. “What is a TikTok video if not a digital Dorito?
Take back your brain!
Zoom out: The bigger idea is collective, not individual. Just as diet and exercise became social norms through institutions, policy and culture, Newport sees a similar shift coming for attention and cognition.