
ASFANDYAR Magazine News & Reviews
Genki’s Energy Pack powers up the Switch 2 using a short USB-C cable. | Screenshot: YouTube With every new portable console comes a mountain of new third-party accessories. We’ve already seen Hori’s Piranha Plant alternative to the Switch 2’s USB-C camera, but Genki has announced […]
World NewsFiber internet providers are worried they won’t see the funds promised under a Biden-era initiative that would bring reliable internet service to rural areas. Louisiana fiber internet provider Cajun Broadband was granted $33 million as part of the plan, but the “money isn’t flowing” and […]
World NewsWith President Donald Trumpâs new tariff plan, your online shopping packages coming directly from China are about to get much more expensive. In February, the Trump administration moved to get rid of a little-known rule that allows US consumers to avoid tariffs on low-value packages. […]
World NewsLorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived […]
Nunc mi ipsum faucibus vitae aliquet nec ullamcorper sit amet. Sit amet justo donec enim diam vulputate ut pharetra sit. Volutpat maecenas volutpat blandit aliquam etiam. Ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipiscing. Nisi quis eleifend quam adipiscing vitae proin sagittis nisl. Nulla facilisi cras fermentum […]
Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived […]
In some ways, I am an incurable romantic. I don’t care for realism in movies; I just want everyone to live happily ever after. I want the good guys to be noble and honorable, and the bad guys to see the error of their ways, […]
Life LoveProin sed libero enim sed faucibus turpis in eu. Purus non enim praesent elementum facilisis leo. Sit amet nisl purus in mollis. Tristique et egestas quis ipsum suspendisse ultrices gravida dictum. Ipsum consequat nisl vel pretium lectus quam. Amet nulla facilisi morbi tempus iaculis urna. […]
TechnologyVulputate ut pharetra sit amet aliquam id. Hendrerit dolor magna eget est lorem. Purus sit amet luctus venenatis lectus. Volutpat lacus laoreet non curabitur. Nunc sed id semper risus in hendrerit gravida rutrum quisque. In arcu cursus euismod quis viverra nibh. Sed enim ut sem […]
Automobile TechnologyIMDB Rating: 7.6/10Genre: DocumentarySize: 1.96 GBRuntime: 12hr 57 min
Hollywood MoviesThe megalodon has long been imagined as an enormous great white shark, but new research suggests that perception is all wrong.
Science & TechnologyThe megalodon has long been imagined as an enormous great white shark, but new research suggests that perception is all wrong.
The study finds the prehistoric hunter had a much longer body—closer in shape to a lemon shark or even a large whale.
The researchers used a novel approach to estimate the shark’s total body length, moving beyond traditional methods that rely primarily on tooth size.
By examining megalodon’s vertebral column and comparing it to over 100 species of living and extinct sharks, they determined a more accurate proportion for the head, body, and tail.
The findings in the journal Palaeontologia Electronica suggest the prehistoric predator may have reached about 80 feet, or about two school buses in length. It also likely weighed an estimated 94 tons, comparable to a large blue whale, but with a body designed for energy-efficient cruising rather than continuous high-speed pursuit.
“This study provides the most robust analysis yet of megalodon’s body size and shape,” says Phillip Sternes, a shark biologist who completed his PhD at the University of California, Riverside.
“Rather than resembling an oversized great white shark, it was actually more like an enormous lemon shark, with a more slender, elongated body. That shape makes a lot more sense for moving efficiently through water.”
Great white sharks have a stocky, torpedo-shaped body built for bursts of speed, with a broad midsection that tapers sharply toward the tail. In contrast, lemon sharks have a leaner, more uniform body shape, with a less pronounced taper. Their longer, more cylindrical build allows for smoother, more energy-efficient swimming. If megalodon had a body structure more like a lemon shark, as this study suggests, it would have looked much sleeker than the bulky predator often depicted in popular media.
Sharks, like airplanes or Olympic swimmers, must minimize drag to move smoothly and easily.
“You lead with your head when you swim because it’s more efficient than leading with your stomach,” says Tim Higham, a biologist who contributed insights to the study on how animals move through water. “Similarly, evolution moves toward efficiency, much of the time.”
The study highlights how large aquatic animals including sharks, whales, or even extinct marine reptiles, follow similar patterns when it comes to body proportions.
“The physics of swimming limit how stocky or stretched out a massive predator can be,” Higham says.
The research also sheds light on megalodon’s swimming capabilities. While debates have raged over whether it was a high-speed predator or a slower, cruising hunter, the new findings suggest a balance. The shark likely swam at moderate speeds, with the ability to burst forward when attacking prey. Given its sheer size and energy demands, constant high-speed swimming wouldn’t have been efficient.
The study also indicates that as a newborn, a megalodon could have been nearly 13 feet long, roughly the size of an adult great white shark.
“It is entirely possible that megalodon pups were already taking down marine mammals shortly after being born,” Sternes says.
A key breakthrough of this study was identifying the lemon shark as the best living analog for megalodon’s proportions. Unlike the great white, lemon sharks have a more elongated body. When the researchers scaled up the proportions of a lemon shark to megalodon’s estimated length, it was a near-perfect match.
“This research not only refines our understanding of what megalodon looked like, but it also provides a framework for studying how size influences movement in marine animals,” Sternes says.
Beyond reshaping our understanding of megalodon, the study offers insight into why only certain animals can evolve to massive sizes.
“Gigantism isn’t just about getting bigger—it’s about evolving the right body to survive at that scale,” Sternes says. “And megalodon may have been one of the most extreme examples of that.”
Source: UC Riverside
The post Study may rewrite what we know about megalodon appeared first on Futurity.
A straightforward but well-executed action-adventure game that’s elevated by artistry and heart.
Video GamesIn an early chapter of South of Midnight, our protagonist Hazel is coming to grips with her newfound powers – it’s an important tone-setter, because it’s representative of what developer Compulsion Games is trying to do throughout a concise 12-hour runtime. Mythical creatures straight out of folklore from the American South drive a human story that stands as a fantastic example of how the local can be universal, with the grand tapestry of that region’s culture and history wrapped around an otherwise fairly straightforward action-adventure game. While there are plenty of aspects of South of Midnight that aren’t necessarily groundbreaking, it’s all uplifted by a clear and well-executed artistic vision that makes it one the more memorable Xbox console exclusives of this generation.
Hazel’s ability to manipulate the magical threads of an ethereal realm is both the weapon she uses to defeat otherworldly demons in combat and the tool she relies on to piece together the tragic pasts of her neighbors and forebears in her hometown of Prospero. It’s a fictional place, but one that’s deeply rooted in the very real experience of the South – traces of its dark history litter the dilapidated houses after a treacherous flood, contrasting with the remnants of communities that struggled to survive in those harsh conditions. These touches provide the rich context South of Midnight is working within while also unraveling a larger story about the pain, guilt, and trauma many of us experience in our own family lives.
From a gameplay perspective, South of Midnight is rather simple – you’re ushered through fairly linear levels that alternate between platforming and combat encounters, with a few secrets hidden off the beaten path like journal entries from the locals that enrich the story and extra upgrades for your powers and health. If you’ve scaled cliffsides in Uncharted, God of War, or Tomb Raider, its frequent climbing sections will feel pretty familiar – but with the authentic sights and sounds of the American South at the forefront, the detailed vistas, ramshackled towns, or rushing rivers create a strong sense of place. With Hazel’s weaving powers, you’ll zip through air, clear paths forward, or summon ethereal objects depending on what obstacles are in front of you. There isn’t really much to figure out per se, although there is an enjoyable momentum as you’re funneled from one fight to the next, or when you’re trying to outrun evil spirits chasing you down in the lengthy platforming sequences that cap off every major chapter.
Combat itself is contained in distinct arenas across each level, with the idea being that Haints – the demonic manifestations of peoples’ pain and sorrow – plague all of Prospero, and Hazel is the one who can cleanse that corruption. It’s a comfortable, if predictable, cadence that doesn’t really wear thin since it’s judicious about when you actually have to fight. This helps South of Midnight not feel repetitive, and I genuinely looked forward to each combat encounter. Similar to the platforming, these fights aren’t really pushing any boundaries, but Hazel’s attack combos and spells have a certain chunkiness that I really enjoyed. That’s especially true when firing off her stun weaves and grappling strand to stack damage, then leaving a burst behind with a perfect dodge. Cycling through a shortlist of fun abilities like that makes the basics satisfying.
It’s everything around South of Midnight’s competent foundation that makes it truly stand out.
Haints come in various forms that give encounters enough variety. Some are swift and pesky, while others are hulking beasts that tunnel underground and cause massive area-of-effect damage. They’re mixed and matched throughout, and things like Hazel’s puppet named Crouton, who can temporarily control enemies, add an interesting wrinkle when thinking about which targets to prioritize. There are a few boss fights to heighten the stakes with a bit of spectacle as well, but they mostly tend to highlight the formulaic nature of combat by relying on derivative versions of mechanics that are used elsewhere.
South of Midnight’s foundation is perfectly competent, but it’s everything else around it that makes it truly stand out, grabbing you with its painterly character designs and striking stop-motion animation style. That unconventional choice helps special moments pop during cutscenes, although it isn’t really noticeable in the action – and if you find it too jarring, you can optionally disable the stop-motion effect altogether. Even without it, the details in characters’ faces, their expressiveness, and the superb voice acting feel like the real reward chapter after chapter. The specific accents and vernacular come across authentically, to the point where I didn’t think twice about them since it all sounded so familiar to me as someone who was born in the region.
Southern gothic folklore hasn’t really been explored in games like this, and South of Midnight showcases how rich it is by bringing these tales to life in ways we rarely see. Mythical creatures embody the pain and suffering of townsfolk, melding broader urban myths with the struggles of specific characters throughout the story. A figure like Florida’s legendary alligator Two-Toed Tom shows up as a boss, while the shapeshifting Rougarou from Cajun tales takes a form I hadn’t heard of before – and Alabama’s Huggin’ Molly has on a fascinating reinterpretation. It’s the sort of amalgamation of folklore that’s wonderful to see as someone who is familiar with some of it, but done in a way that’s still inviting for the uninitiated.
South of Midnight acknowledges the region’s real history in subtle and effective ways as well, recognizing that remnants of slavery and the Reconstruction era persist in our modern world, and that trauma can carry across generations. Passing by abandoned houses along the bayou with eviction notices from greedy landgrabbers reminds you of the rough and unfair economic conditions many of these communities face. It’s woven into its main themes about the complicated dynamics of family – the best and worst parts that can come from blood relations. With her weaving powers, Hazel can peer into the past through visions recreated using the threads that make up The Grand Tapestry – the flow of all life and memory. You’ll see a mother risking life and limb to escape abuse and give their child a fighting chance; A man ashamed of his brother who takes drastic measures to separate himself, only to live with regret forever; A kid who called out to a mythical creature in desperation to escape his abusive father.
It brings Southern folklore to life in ways we rarely see.
From tragic displays of unconditional love to the horrors of the abuse our own kin can inflict on us, South of Midnight focuses on the idea of family being something we either embrace or reckon with, told in a way that’s inseparable from its setting. Through it all, Hazel is desperately chasing any possible thread to find her mother after that devastating flood at the start, but is still willing to lend a helping hand to the spirits that have endured in the afterlife. As you uncover the hard work her mom puts in as a social worker, it shows that a little empathy can go a long way.
There’s a lot I love about the stories in South of Midnight – I do wish they were more elegant or told with more finesse, however. The larger plot is missing some necessary connective tissue at times, and it’s easy to lose track of why Hazel’s journey leads from one thing to another. Characters and narrative threads are sometimes introduced as quickly as they’re resolved through story beats that feel segmented in ways that aren’t entirely clear. There are parts of Hazel’s life I’m still wondering about that get brought up as important pieces to the story, and I wish I could have tied those loose ends together before the credits rolled.
It gets the big picture right, though, and in its exploration of a region as wide-ranging as the American South, there’s an earnest interpretation. While it is also a heavily religious place, the story is more interested in the spirituality that gives rise to these folktales. And it’s not all swamps and basins out there, it’s not just Bourbon street in New Orleans, or a politically hostile place for marginalized folks – those are all part of it, for sure. But I like that we have a story that shows that people live there, and they struggle in ways that are both universal and unique to the region. South of Midnight also understands that hurt people hurt people, and knows it’s not an excuse for the terrible things that pain may drive people to do – it’s a bit of a trope when stories talk about mental health nowadays, but there’s still truth to it, and South of Midnight has its own take by focusing on this concept with regards to family.
Perhaps my favorite touch, however, is how South of Midnight uses its fantastic soundtrack to tie everything together thematically. With a mix of bluegrass, blues, jazz, and American folk tunes that weave in harmonizing choirs, church organs, or banjos and fiddles, it’s a showcase of how important music has been throughout the region’s history. Big story moments are built up through songs written as if a narrator was walking you through what the characters felt and experienced in their life, and they’re queued up at just the right time to propel you forward as you’re playing. It got me in my feelings at times, because there’s not much I love more than a fantastic soundtrack used as an effective storytelling device.
Many of us from the South have a complicated relationship with it. Born in Mississippi and adopting parts of the culture and vernacular as my family and I moved throughout the country, it’ll always have a special place in my heart. I appreciate having a game that helped me reconnect with those roots in a way that was whimsical and harrowing in equal measure, and that’s the sort of value South of Midnight has beyond just being a good action-adventure game – it’s worth playing for a little virtual tour of the South you wouldn’t see otherwise.
NetEase Games has properly welcomed all Marvel fans to Marvel Rivals Season 2’s Hellfire Gala, revealing a wardrobe of what appears to be new outfits and maybe even a few new playable characters.
Video GamesNetEase Games has properly welcomed all Marvel fans to Marvel Rivals Season 2’s Hellfire Gala, revealing a wardrobe of what appears to be new outfits and maybe even a few new playable characters.
The developer published a trailer today, showing off how the upcoming superhero party will shake up the meta come April 11 while finally bringing an end to months of speculation about what Season 2’s theme will be. There’s still much to be unveiled, but for now, it at least confirms the content will indeed center on the Hellfire Gala storyline, with X-Men regular Emma Frost and robot ruler Ultron playing key roles in its trailer.
“Once a year, this sovereign Mutant island opens its gates, welcoming both friend and rival alike to shape a brighter future,” an official description for Marvel Rivals Season 2 says. “Now stranded in the year 2099 by a raging temporal storm, the fate of Krakoa hangs in the balance, its ecosystem suffering from dangerous chronal energy.
“Can a night of glittering festivities bring unity over fine dining and dazzling conversation? Who among the attendees possesses ulterior motives or solely seeks to party? And who is the uninvited guest?”
Emma Frost is Marvel’s diamond-plated mutant and a force to be reckoned with, and she’s been expected to join the roster for a while. The X-Men rep was first teased when NetEase mentioned a mysterious gala in an in-game Gallery Card in late February. For the keen-eyed fans who noticed it, this was all but confirmation that Emma Frost would be a playable character in Season 2.
Ultron, meanwhile, was teased long before Marvel Rivals broke onto the hero shooter scene late last year. While it is possible the metallic villain could be little more than this season’s Dracula-like figure, he’s past due for a proper, playable introduction.
April 11 will see Season 2 kick open the door with new heroes, skins, modes, and more, but one question is already starting to dig its teeth into the Marvel Rivals community: Where is Blade? Marvel’s infamous Daywalker vampire hunter was mentioned time and time again throughout Season 1 and even managed to pop up in-game in more than one instance. Many believed the hero was a lock for Season 2, but the community is growing concerned now that Blade appears to be a no-show at the Hellfire Gala.
She looks great but hearing that we aren’t getting blade yet is still wild since the lore was kinda setting him up https://t.co/Egxrf1p2ZU
— Daboy🕷 🔜SWCJ (@Daboyui) April 3, 2025
So where’s blade
— Jasper (@xxjsprr) April 3, 2025
Still, Marvel Rivals Season 2 is still poised to bring the project’s biggest update since first revealing The Fantastic Four for Season 1 in January, and Blade could always arrive later in the future, maybe even in Season 2. For more on how NetEase has turned Marvel Rivals into the powerhouse it is today, you can read up on why some players believed Marvel was planting fake hero leaks. You can also learn more about an April Fools’ update that gave Venom the power to twerk.
Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor with IGN. He’s best known for his work at sites like The Pitch, The Escapist, and OnlySP. Be sure to give him a follow on Bluesky (@mikecripe.bsky.social) and Twitter (@MikeCripe).
Helldivers 2 has been out for over a year now, and players are returning to one of its most infamous sectors to hold out against a renewed invasion effort from the Automatons. In doing so, though, a new line has been formed, and Helldivers around the world are holding out against improbable odds to rebuff the bots.
Video GamesHelldivers 2 has been out for over a year now, and players are returning to one of its most infamous sectors to hold out against a renewed invasion effort from the Automatons. In doing so, though, a new line has been formed, and Helldivers around the world are holding out against improbable odds to rebuff the bots.
For those who don’t dive, the Automatons are one of the enemy factions in Helldivers 2; terrifying, Skynet-esque machines who played a central role in the big in-game conflict a year ago. The invasion wound up centering around Malevelon Creek, whose jungle environments and deadly hail of laser fire led to its nickname of “Robot Vietnam.” Helldivers 2 players fought hard, lost the planet, then liberated it in a harrowing turnaround.
The Creek became legend in the Helldivers community, with a cape commemorating the victory getting sent out to players. Now, a year later, the Automatons are back with more firepower and intent on re-taking the Creek. The Major Order went out: Defend Malevelon Creek, by any means necessary.
Helldivers 2 players started dropping into zones around the Sevrin Sector, the area of the galactic map where Malevelon Creek lies, to form a defensive line of planets. Four planets — Vandalon IV, Ingmar, Pöpli IX, and Dolph — created a barrier between the invading Automatons and the path to the Creek. And Pöpli IX has been hit hard.
“What did I miss?” asked one user in r/Helldivers, noting the sheer chaos erupting on Pöpli IX. As of this morning, the planet was at invasion level 40. The Automatons were dropping in both the Incineration Corps (special units using flame throwers and incendiary ammo) and the Jet Brigade (specialized Jump Pack models). Ammo from resupply pods was decreased to 50%, and then cryo-good transports were interrupted, reducing reinforcements (respawns) to three for all operations on Pöpli IX.
In short, Pöpli IX had everything thrown at it. As one player put it, “by protecting one legendary planet, we’ve created another one.” But that’s the fun part: Arrowhead is throwing everything but the kitchen sink at Pöpli IX, and players are loving it.
“I’ve been playing since launch, but something about the fight for Pöpli IX hits different,” one thread said. “Two bot subfactions clashing at once? Absolute chaos. There’s a real sense of stakes and attrition — like the front line is constantly shifting, but everything still feels desperate. It’s not just another mission, it actually feels like a war.”
The slow escalation of forces over time elicits an interesting dilemma for Helldivers, who find themselves backed further and further into a corner, holding out against the worst odds. Players have been responding, diving into the new battle lines to try and hold out.
Pöpli IX has also seen Arrowhead’s systems play well with player input. As the bots neared victory with an hour left, players managed to implement the DSS Eagle Storm. This gave Helldivers an opportunity; the bot frontline could not advance for 24 hours, giving players a chance to swing the planet back.
That swing, and the ensuing ammo and respawn restrictions, just built up more excitement around holding the line at Pöpli IX. Multiple sub-factions, limitations, and a high enemy invasion level has led to drops on Pöpli IX being intense. Oh, I forgot to mention: there are intense heat warnings and fire tornadoes.
It looked like Malevelon Creek was due for another legendary conflict, but instead, the focus has shifted, and a new moment has sprung up from this invasion.
“It was the community that made malevolen creek the legend that it is today,” one poster said. “And I believe Pöpli IX deserves similar status.” I’m personally inclined to agree with them.
There’s still, as of this writing, one day and just under 20 hours until the Major Order ends. The bots could still throw even more at the sector, trying to break through the player-built line and push towards the Creek. Either way, it feels like we’ve seen a new Helldivers legend form right in front of our eyes.
Eric is a freelance writer for IGN.
On today’s episode of Decoder, we’re talking about AI, art, and the controversial collision between the two — a debate that, to be honest, is an absolute mess. If you’ve been on the internet this past week, you undoubtedly know that controversy was just kicked […]
World NewsOn today’s episode of Decoder, we’re talking about AI, art, and the controversial collision between the two — a debate that, to be honest, is an absolute mess. If you’ve been on the internet this past week, you undoubtedly know that controversy was just kicked up a notch by the Studio Ghibli memes — pictures cribbing the style of the legendary Japanese film studio. These images, powered by OpenAI’s new image generator, are everywhere; OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has even been posting some examples to his personal X account. And they’ve widened an already pretty stark rift between AI boosters and critics.
Brian Merchant, a good friend of The Verge and author of the newsletter and book Blood in the Machine, wrote one of the best analyses of the Ghibli trend last week. So I invited him onto the show to discuss this particular situation and also to help me figure out the ongoing AI art debate more broadly as it continues to collide with legal frameworks like copyright.
Merchant and I tend to agree a lot more than we disagree when it comes to the technology industry. So I did my best to really take the other side here and push on these ideas as hard as I could. Technology and art have always been in a dance with each other; that’s part of the founding ethos of The Verge. So I think it’s important to put AI in that context — not least because we can see the obvious joy regular people find in using some of these tools to express themselves in ways they might not otherwise be able to.
But there’s expressing yourself, and then there’s churning out AI anime slop that is designed to evoke classics like Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro in a way that devalues and even outright steals from actual human artists. Add in the way the Trump administration jumped on the trend by “Ghibli-fying” a deportation photo, and it’s not hard to see why a lot of folks perceive this tool as utterly grotesque and offensive. Or “an insult to life itself,” as Ghibli cofounder Hayao Miyazaki once famously said of an AI demo he witnessed in 2016.
So you’ll hear Merchant and I really go back and forth, digging in on what this all means — for art and artists, and for a creative economy that has long since transitioned from the world of physical scarcity to one of limitless digital supply. And, most importantly, we spent a lot of time talking about how we should feel using these tools at all when they might pose very real threats to people’s livelihoods and the ongoing climate crisis.
I’ll warn you: there are no easy answers here, and I don’t think Merchant and I came to a single conclusion. I don’t even think we wanted to. But I think this conversation helped me consider more clearly how to think about AI and art. Let me know what you think.
If you’d like to read more on what we talked about in this episode, check out the links below:
OpenAI’s Studio Ghibli meme factory is an insult to art itself | Brian Merchant
Seattle engineer’s Ghibli-style image goes viral | Seattle Times
OpenAI just raised another $40 billion round from SoftBank | The Verge
ChatGPT “added one million users in the last hour.” | The Verge
ChatGPT’s Ghibli filter is political now, but it always was | The Verge
OpenAI, Google ask the government to let them train on content they don’t own | The Verge
Studio Ghibli in the age of A.I. reproduction | Max Read
OpenAI has a Studio Ghibli problem | Vergecast
AI slop is a brute force attack on the algorithms that control reality | 404 Media
The New Aesthetics of Fascism | New Socialist
Questions or comments about this episode? Hit us up at decoder@theverge.com. We really do read every email!
One of the games I had on my personal Nintendo Switch 2 bingo card was a new 3D Mario. We didnât get one at the Switch 2 hands-on, and at first, I thought it was odd that Nintendo would be launching its next big thing […]
World NewsOne of the games I had on my personal Nintendo Switch 2 bingo card was a new 3D Mario. We didnât get one at the Switch 2 hands-on, and at first, I thought it was odd that Nintendo would be launching its next big thing without a dedicated title for its number one guy. But after playing Donkey Kong Bananza, I realized that while weâre due for a new Mario game, Bananza is perfectly positioned to fill the plumber-shaped platforming hole.
Donkey Kong Bananza is my personal game of the show. In Bananza, the Kong Kingdom has been hit by a gold rush. Everyone is obsessed with digging in the ground to unearth precious metals and gems, including diamonds suspiciously shaped like bananas. They function like the power moons of Super Mario Odyssey, where Donkey Kong travels the world digging them up out of the ground or fighting monsters whoâve stolen them.
Donkey Kong has a new design that makes him way more expressive and fun to watch as he smashes, punches, and chucks rocks all over the place. I was also really impressed with the literal depth of Bananzaâs detailed world. Not only are you platforming above ground, but with DKâs smashing ability on certain surfaces, you can dig b …
Democrats are calling on Treasury Department and General Services Administration watchdogs to investigate a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) employee’s access to sensitive data. In a letter to Deputy Inspectors General Loren Sciurba and Robert Erickson, Reps. Lori Trahan (D-MA), Suzan DelBene (D-WA), and Shontel […]
World NewsDemocrats are calling on Treasury Department and General Services Administration watchdogs to investigate a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) employee’s access to sensitive data.
In a letter to Deputy Inspectors General Loren Sciurba and Robert Erickson, Reps. Lori Trahan (D-MA), Suzan DelBene (D-WA), and Shontel Brown (D-OH) say the probe should address DOGE staffer Marko Elez’s “unauthorized and potentially illegal disclosure” of a spreadsheet containing personal information while Elez was secretly rifling through sensitive government systems.
Earlier this year, reports emerged that the 25-year-old Elez was granted read and write access to Treasury Department payment systems. Court filings later revealed the extent of his access and claimed that Elez broke Treasury policy by sending an employee spreadsheet to members of the Trump administration. Elez resigned from his DOGE role in February after reporters found racist posts linked to his social media account; however, DOGE head Elon Musk announced Elez would be reinstated, and court filings suggest he now works at the Department of Labor.
In their letter, the representatives say Elez skirted security regulations and “likely” violated the Privacy Act of 1974, a law that prevents agencies from disclosing personal information to third parties without an individual’s consent. The letter adds that if Elez did violate the law and harmed the individuals listed on the spreadsheet, they “may have grounds to seek monetary damages from the government.”
Treasury Deputy Inspector General Sciurba has already opened an investigation into DOGE’s access to the agency’s payment systems, but this investigation would specifically focus on Elez’s actions.
Reps. Trahan, DelBene, and Brown are asking the deputy inspectors general to find out how many people had their personal information exposed on the spreadsheet, as well as whether Elez obtained written consent from each individual before sending it to Trump administration officials. They also want to know why Elez was granted access to Treasury Department systems while his security clearance process was still underway and how the Trump administration officials interacted with the spreadsheet they received.
As DOGE continues to slash and burn its way through government agencies, lawmakers are scrambling to put a stop to the chaos. Last week, a judge granted a preliminary injunction preventing the Trump administration from shutting down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, but it’s not clear how long it will last. A Politico report has also suggested that DOGE leader Musk will step down from his role, which Musk called “fake news.”
YouTube is adding new features to Shorts that aim to make it easier for creators to edit short-form videos. There are five new tools “coming this spring” according to YouTube’s announcement, including a revamped video editor that provides similar editing features to those already found […]
World NewsYouTube is adding new features to Shorts that aim to make it easier for creators to edit short-form videos. There are five new tools “coming this spring” according to YouTube’s announcement, including a revamped video editor that provides similar editing features to those already found on competing platforms like TikTok and Reels.
The new video editor allows adjustments like cutting and rearranging clips, zooming into footage, and overlaying text and music to be made from an editing timeline view. Creators can preview the edited short on this timeline view, which can be accessed by swiping up from the bottom of the Shorts editor. YouTube says these new capabilities are the “first of more improvements” lined up to help streamline the Shorts editing process.
YouTube is making it easier to add music to Shorts, allowing creators to pick a song and have their video clips automatically synchronize to the rhythm instead of manually aligning them to a beat. Effects like video filters and overlays will also be available in Shorts templates, making it quicker to jump on viral trends.
The ability to add image stickers from your gallery directly into Shorts will be available “later this spring” according to YouTube, alongside text-to-image AI-generated sticker creation. Users can describe the sticker they want to add to their video, giving creators more personalization options.
This isn’t the first batch of TikTok-style updates that have rolled out to YouTube Shorts, which has already introduced robotic voiceovers and started counting views from the point a video is played. While these new features aren’t available to Shorts creators yet, the timing of YouTube’s announcement probably isn’t a coincidence. The Saturday deadline for TikTok to find a US buyer or risk being banned in the country is fast approaching, and the new Shorts features will make it more familiar and appealing to creators who may soon be looking for a new platform.
The vibes at seven39 feel distinctly like the internet of the late ‘90s and early 2000s. | Image: The Verge For the past few weeks, every day at 7:38 PM ET, I get an email titled âseven39 is open again.â From 7:39PM, I have exactly […]
World NewsThe vibes at seven39 feel distinctly like the internet of the late ‘90s and early 2000s. | Image: The Verge
For the past few weeks, every day at 7:38 PM ET, I get an email titled âseven39 is open again.â From 7:39PM, I have exactly three hours to check out an experimental new social media site before it completely shuts down.
Itâs not an empty threat, either. If you visit seven39.com outside of that three-hour window, youâll be greeted by a red âcurrently closedâ sign. Youâll also get a brief explainer of its mission: âSocial media is better when we’re all online together. No endless scrolling. No FOMO. Just 3 hours of fun every evening.â
To my tired old bones, thatâs a compelling pitch. Iâve tried all the flavors of social media poison since the downfall of Twitter. In 2025, all social media has the same formula. The never-ending doomscroll keeps you on the platform. The longer you scroll and the more you engage with clickbait and the main character of the day, the more ads and affiliate links you can be fed. By bedtime, your attention span is shot, youâve been mildly entertained, and sometimes, you feel angry for no real reason.
With seven39, the scroll is finite. There are no ads â just a single chronological feed from users against a purple backdrop. It …