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    ArsTechnica

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      Trump’s FCC chair threatens Comcast, demands changes to NBC news coverage

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025

    Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr accused Comcast of "news distortion" because its subsidiary NBC isn't parroting the Trump administration narrative on the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

    "Comcast knows that federal law requires its licensed operations to serve the public interest. News distortion doesn't cut it," Carr wrote in a post on X yesterday.

    Carr's use of the phrase "news distortion" is significant because he has been invoking the FCC's rarely enforced news distortion policy to pressure licensed broadcasters that he perceives as being biased against President Trump. For a detailed look at Carr's fight against media, read our feature: " The speech police: Chairman Brendan Carr and the FCC's news distortion policy ."

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump’s FCC chair threatens Comcast, demands changes to NBC news coverage

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025

    Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr accused Comcast of "news distortion" because its subsidiary NBC isn't parroting the Trump administration narrative on the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

    "Comcast knows that federal law requires its licensed operations to serve the public interest. News distortion doesn't cut it," Carr wrote in a post on X yesterday.

    Carr's use of the phrase "news distortion" is significant because he has been invoking the FCC's rarely enforced news distortion policy to pressure licensed broadcasters that he perceives as being biased against President Trump. For a detailed look at Carr's fight against media, read our feature: " The speech police: Chairman Brendan Carr and the FCC's news distortion policy ."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump’s FCC chair threatens Comcast, demands changes to NBC news coverage

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025

    Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr accused Comcast of "news distortion" because its subsidiary NBC isn't parroting the Trump administration narrative on the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

    "Comcast knows that federal law requires its licensed operations to serve the public interest. News distortion doesn't cut it," Carr wrote in a post on X yesterday.

    Carr's use of the phrase "news distortion" is significant because he has been invoking the FCC's rarely enforced news distortion policy to pressure licensed broadcasters that he perceives as being biased against President Trump. For a detailed look at Carr's fight against media, read our feature: " The speech police: Chairman Brendan Carr and the FCC's news distortion policy ."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagbrendan carr tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion tagfcc news distortion

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    • Ar chevron_right

      US Interior secretary orders offshore wind project shut down

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    On Thursday, Norwegian company Equinor announced that it was suspending the construction of a planned 800 MW-capacity offshore wind farm currently being built in the waters off New York. The reason? An order from US Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, who alleged that the project was rushed through review .

    The move comes as the US's nascent offshore wind industry is facing uncertainty, with all future leases placed on hold by an executive order issued on the day of Trump's inauguration. The hold was ostensibly put in place to allow time to review the permitting process. But Burgum's move comes the same week a report from the Government Accountability Office, done in response to the executive order, found only minor issues with the existing permitting process.

    On hold

    The Equnior project, termed Empire Wind , is a key part of New York's plans to meet its climate goals. Combined with a second phase that's currently in planning, Empire Wind would have a rated capacity of two gigawatts, or over 20 percent of the state's planned offshore wind capacity. The initial construction, combined with the development of shore facilities, already has an estimated value of $2.5 billion, Equinor estimates, and is currently employing roughly 1,500 people. Construction was expected to be complete in 2027, although energy production from a subset of the 54 planned 15 MW turbines could have begun before then.

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    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy

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    • Ar chevron_right

      US Interior secretary orders offshore wind project shut down

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    On Thursday, Norwegian company Equinor announced that it was suspending the construction of a planned 800 MW-capacity offshore wind farm currently being built in the waters off New York. The reason? An order from US Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, who alleged that the project was rushed through review .

    The move comes as the US's nascent offshore wind industry is facing uncertainty, with all future leases placed on hold by an executive order issued on the day of Trump's inauguration. The hold was ostensibly put in place to allow time to review the permitting process. But Burgum's move comes the same week a report from the Government Accountability Office, done in response to the executive order, found only minor issues with the existing permitting process.

    On hold

    The Equnior project, termed Empire Wind , is a key part of New York's plans to meet its climate goals. Combined with a second phase that's currently in planning, Empire Wind would have a rated capacity of two gigawatts, or over 20 percent of the state's planned offshore wind capacity. The initial construction, combined with the development of shore facilities, already has an estimated value of $2.5 billion, Equinor estimates, and is currently employing roughly 1,500 people. Construction was expected to be complete in 2027, although energy production from a subset of the 54 planned 15 MW turbines could have begun before then.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy

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    • Ar chevron_right

      US Interior secretary orders offshore wind project shut down

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    On Thursday, Norwegian company Equinor announced that it was suspending the construction of a planned 800 MW-capacity offshore wind farm currently being built in the waters off New York. The reason? An order from US Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, who alleged that the project was rushed through review .

    The move comes as the US's nascent offshore wind industry is facing uncertainty, with all future leases placed on hold by an executive order issued on the day of Trump's inauguration. The hold was ostensibly put in place to allow time to review the permitting process. But Burgum's move comes the same week a report from the Government Accountability Office, done in response to the executive order, found only minor issues with the existing permitting process.

    On hold

    The Equnior project, termed Empire Wind , is a key part of New York's plans to meet its climate goals. Combined with a second phase that's currently in planning, Empire Wind would have a rated capacity of two gigawatts, or over 20 percent of the state's planned offshore wind capacity. The initial construction, combined with the development of shore facilities, already has an estimated value of $2.5 billion, Equinor estimates, and is currently employing roughly 1,500 people. Construction was expected to be complete in 2027, although energy production from a subset of the 54 planned 15 MW turbines could have begun before then.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy tagscience tagscience tagscience tagburgum tagburgum tagburgum tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagdepartment of the interior tagenergy tagenergy tagenergy tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagoffshore wind tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagwind energy tagwind energy tagwind energy

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 Flash comes to the Gemini app as Google seeks improve “dynamic thinking”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Google's Gemini AI may have had a slow start, but it has been anything but in 2025. Barely a week goes by that another model doesn't arrive in the Gemini app or developer tools like AI Studio, and there's a major release coming to the app today. Google has announced that its faster, more efficient Gemini 2.5 Flash model is rolling out widely in preview. At the same time, developers can begin building with 2.5 Flash using the company's newly announced API pricing, which Google says is much lower than competing products.

    A gaggle of Gemini

    The model dropdown in the Gemini app is a bit convoluted, particularly as we see products like Veo 2 and Personalization popping up there. Google has been releasing so many preview models and new ways of using Gemini that it can be hard to know which option to choose for a given task. In fairness, Google is far from the only major AI player with this problem.

    Tulsee Doshi is Google's director of product management for Gemini, which means she leads the team building these models. We asked Doshi what version of Gemini she finds herself using, and unsurprisingly, she likes the more powerful option. "Typically right now, I have been using 2.5 Pro," says Doshi. "I use Gemini throughout the day for my work in a few key areas, like creating documents or slides. That's either for internal consumption or actually sharing externally, and I've found 2.5 Pro to be really helpful for the creative writing element."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 Flash comes to the Gemini app as Google seeks improve “dynamic thinking”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Google's Gemini AI may have had a slow start, but it has been anything but in 2025. Barely a week goes by that another model doesn't arrive in the Gemini app or developer tools like AI Studio, and there's a major release coming to the app today. Google has announced that its faster, more efficient Gemini 2.5 Flash model is rolling out widely in preview. At the same time, developers can begin building with 2.5 Flash using the company's newly announced API pricing, which Google says is much lower than competing products.

    A gaggle of Gemini

    The model dropdown in the Gemini app is a bit convoluted, particularly as we see products like Veo 2 and Personalization popping up there. Google has been releasing so many preview models and new ways of using Gemini that it can be hard to know which option to choose for a given task. In fairness, Google is far from the only major AI player with this problem.

    Tulsee Doshi is Google's director of product management for Gemini, which means she leads the team building these models. We asked Doshi what version of Gemini she finds herself using, and unsurprisingly, she likes the more powerful option. "Typically right now, I have been using 2.5 Pro," says Doshi. "I use Gemini throughout the day for my work in a few key areas, like creating documents or slides. That's either for internal consumption or actually sharing externally, and I've found 2.5 Pro to be really helpful for the creative writing element."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 Flash comes to the Gemini app as Google seeks improve “dynamic thinking”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 17 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Google's Gemini AI may have had a slow start, but it has been anything but in 2025. Barely a week goes by that another model doesn't arrive in the Gemini app or developer tools like AI Studio, and there's a major release coming to the app today. Google has announced that its faster, more efficient Gemini 2.5 Flash model is rolling out widely in preview. At the same time, developers can begin building with 2.5 Flash using the company's newly announced API pricing, which Google says is much lower than competing products.

    A gaggle of Gemini

    The model dropdown in the Gemini app is a bit convoluted, particularly as we see products like Veo 2 and Personalization popping up there. Google has been releasing so many preview models and new ways of using Gemini that it can be hard to know which option to choose for a given task. In fairness, Google is far from the only major AI player with this problem.

    Tulsee Doshi is Google's director of product management for Gemini, which means she leads the team building these models. We asked Doshi what version of Gemini she finds herself using, and unsurprisingly, she likes the more powerful option. "Typically right now, I have been using 2.5 Pro," says Doshi. "I use Gemini throughout the day for my work in a few key areas, like creating documents or slides. That's either for internal consumption or actually sharing externally, and I've found 2.5 Pro to be really helpful for the creative writing element."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence

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