• Sam Altman lays out roadmap for OpenAIs long-awaited GPT-5 model
    arstechnica.com
    Huge language models Sam Altman lays out roadmap for OpenAIs long-awaited GPT-5 model GPT-4.5 will arrive in "weeks," then GPT-5 will meld conventional LLMs and reasoning models. Benj Edwards Feb 13, 2025 11:08 am | 8 Sam Altman during the AI Action Summit in Paris, France, on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images Sam Altman during the AI Action Summit in Paris, France, on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreOn Wednesday, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced a roadmap for how the company plans to release GPT-5, the long-awaited followup to 2023's GPT-4 AI language model that made huge waves in both tech and policy circles around the world. In a reply to a question on X, Altman said GPT-5 would be coming in "months," suggesting a release later in 2025.Initially, Altman explained in a long post on X, the company plans to ship GPT-4.5 (previously known as "Orion" internally) in a matter of "weeks" as OpenAI's last non-simulated reasoning model. Simulated reasoning (SR) models like o3 use a special technique to iteratively process problems posed by users more deeply, but they are slower than conventional large language models (LLMs) like GPT-4o and not ideal for every task.After that, GPT-5 will be a system that brings together features from across OpenAI's current AI model lineup, including conventional AI models, SR models, and specialized models that do tasks like web search and research. "In both ChatGPT and our API, we will release GPT-5 as a system that integrates a lot of our technology, including o3," he wrote. "We will no longer ship o3 as a standalone model."Altman also says that the free tier of ChatGPT users will get "unlimited chat access to GPT-5 at the standard intelligence setting" and that ChatGPT Plus subscribers will be able to "run GPT-5 at a higher level of intelligence, and Pro subscribers will be able to run GPT-5 at an even higher level of intelligence."Altman says these integrated AI models will be able to use many of OpenAI's extended ChatGPT features, he says, including Advanced Voice Mode, Canvas, Search, and Deep Research.Simplifying a confusing array of productsIn the past, Altman has commented about the arbitrary nature of a hypothetical future "GPT-5" label, suggesting that several of the company's AI models released last year could have been christened with that name.In March 2024, for example, Altman said in an interview with Lex Friedman that the company was preparing the launch of a major AI model that year (what likely became GPT-4o or "o1"), but the final name was still up in the air. "I think before we talk about a GPT-5-like model called that, or not called that, or a little bit worse or a little bit better than what youd expect from a GPT-5," Altman said to Friedman at the time, "I think we have a lot of other important things to release first."It would be tempting to say that OpenAI may feel a certain threshold of performance has been met to finally label one of its new AI models "GPT-5," but the move apparently comes out of necessity. As mentioned above, GPT-5 will primarily be a branding move that will consolidate many features into one unified interface."We want to do a better job of sharing our intended roadmap, and a much better job simplifying our product offerings," Altman wrote in a post on X. "We realize how complicated our model and product offerings have gotten."Currently, if a user logs in to ChatGPT with a Pro account, they can choose between an array of at least 10 AI models, including GPT-4o, GPT-4o with search, GPT-4o with deep research, GPT-4o with scheduled tasks, o1, o3-mini, o3-mini-high, o1 pro mode, GPT-4o mini, and GPT-4. There's also advanced voice mode. There are two classes of AI models: what you might call "conventional" LLMs (like GPT-4o) and simulated reasoning models (like o1 and o3-mini)."A top goal for us is to unify o-series models and GPT-series models by creating systems that can use all our tools, know when to think for a long time or not, and generally be useful for a very wide range of tasks," Altman wrote. Credit: Benj Edwards For an example of the confusion at play, consider that each model offered by OpenAI through this interface has its own strengths and weaknesses with various features attached (such as being able to process or generate images), and it's not immediately clear which one is best for any one type of task. Here's a brief rundown of which is which:GPT-4o: OpenAI's current "standard" and best conventional AI language model.GPT-4o with search: Adds special web search functionality to GPT-4o.GPT-4o with deep research: Uses a special architecture to allow GPT-4o to iteratively perform research on the web and build a report.GPT-4o with scheduled tasks: Allows GPT-4o to perform tasks periodically that include web search and to provide users with updates.o1: OpenAI's "standard" simulated reasoning (SR) model, which is trained to automatically "think through" problems with step-by-step "chain-of-thought" reasoning. Better than 4o for complex logical and mathematical problems but generally worse at writing and some other creative tasks.o3-mini: A smaller, faster version of OpenAI's currently unreleased "o3" SR model. It's the followup of o1 because the name "o2" was unavailable due to trademark issues.o3-mini-high: A version of o3-mini that "thinks things through" a bit more deeply than o3-mini, but it's slower.o1 pro mode: The slowest and currently "best" SR model that OpenAI offers, only available to Pro accounts.GPT-4o mini: A legacy model that was once the free, fast, and cheap version of GPT-4o. Kept around for people who might have prompts that work best with it.GPT-4: OpenAI's last version of the legacy GPT-4 model, first introduced in 2023.Advanced Voice Mode: A special version of GPT-4o designed to interact vocally.Expecting anyone who has not been paying close attention to OpenAI's model development to understand this array of options is probably not realistic, and Altman recognizes that. "We hate the model picker as much as you do and want to return to magic unified intelligence," he wrote in his post.Meanwhile, competitors like DeepSeek, Anthropic, Meta, and Google are hot on OpenAI's heels, each iterating its own AI models at a breakneck pace that never seems to slow down. We'll keep you updated as more news about firm release dates of GPT-4.5 and GPT-5 emerge.Benj EdwardsSenior AI ReporterBenj EdwardsSenior AI Reporter Benj Edwards is Ars Technica's Senior AI Reporter and founder of the site's dedicated AI beat in 2022. He's also a tech historian with almost two decades of experience. In his free time, he writes and records music, collects vintage computers, and enjoys nature. He lives in Raleigh, NC. 8 Comments
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  • Dating apps should fix their problems before saddling us with new ones
    www.newscientist.com
    Simone RotellaFrom lawsuits to fumbled advertising campaigns, are we falling out of love with online dating? Recent Ofcom data showed a decline in UK users, and Gen Z seems to increasingly hanker after in-person romantic spontaneity. More broadly, the rise of online dating has been accompanied by growing social isolation and loneliness, as well as polarisation of attitudes between younger men and women on topics like the value of feminism or ideals of healthy masculinity.To understand these changes, we need to recognise that dating apps have transformed how we connect in two ways: they make our search for intimacy
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  • Elon Musk's xAI has been working on a 'DeepSearch' feature, employees say, and it could compete with Google and OpenAI
    www.businessinsider.com
    Employees at xAI have been training the company's AI model to perform complex research tasks, four employees told BI.It's unclear what stage of development this project is in or whether the company will ultimately release something.OpenAI and Google have recently released tools for multistep research.Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup, xAI, has been working on a tool for complex research tasks, four current and former employees told Business Insider and it could compete with features from its rivals OpenAI and Google.Data annotators at xAI have been working on the tool, known internally as "DeepSearch," since at least late last year, two employees said. The project seeks to train Grok, the company's large language model, to perform multistep research projects in the same way a human might, the two workers said.Workers on the DeepSearch project use a tool to track their internet searches to teach the AI model their natural search and reasoning skills, according to the employees. While many tasks that these so-called AI tutors perform take three to 10 minutes, workers on the DeepSearch project are expected to take much longer to perform their tasks, two workers familiar with the project said.It's unclear what stage of development DeepSearch is in or whether xAI will ever roll it out to the public. Grok as publicly available today can do basic factual research, and it provides citation links to its sources.Spokespeople for xAI did not respond to requests for comment.The feature appears to be similar to tools developed by other AI companies.Google launched a "Deep Research" product for its Gemini Advanced subscribers in December. It acts as an AI research assistant and can create multistep research that mimics human research skills. It takes minutes to perform tasks that would take a human much longer, the company says.OpenAI's feature, similarly dubbed "deep research," launched on February 2 and gathers data from the internet to generate in-depth reports, typically for complex research and investigations. It's designed to follow humanlike reasoning patterns and includes citations; it can also ask follow-up questions. (Several xAI employees mentioned OpenAI's deep research product in conversations with BI.)A spokesperson for OpenAI, reached by email, referred BI to the company's deep research press release. Google declined to comment.XAI has been ramping up hiring in recent months and plans to hire thousands of AI tutors, including specialists in STEM and legal affairs, Business Insider previously reported.Since Grok was released in November 2023, the company has updated the chatbot with several new features, including image generation and link citations. The company also released a stand-alone Grok app in January.Musk said on Thursday that xAI is close to releasing the latest version of Grok, which "has very powerful reasoning capabilities" and is "outperforming anything that's been released that we're aware of."Do you work for xAI or have a tip? Reach out to the reporter via a nonwork email and device at gkay@businessinsider.com or via the secure-messaging app Signal at 248-894-6012.
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  • Axel Springer CEO talks trade, Trump, AI, and the future of media
    www.businessinsider.com
    Business Insider Editor-in-Chief Jamie Heller and Axel Springer CEO Mathias Dpfner discuss the intersections of trade, democracy, and the rise of artificial intelligence.Their conversation highlights challenges and opportunities for democratic nations in forming strategic trade alliances, the risks of economic dependence on authoritarian regimes, and the vulnerability of intellectual property in the AI era.Dpfner is the author of "Dealings With Dictators: A CEO's Guide to Defending Democracy."Show more
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  • Saturday Night Lives nostalgia is ruining the joke
    www.vox.com
    Editors note, February 13: NBC is set to air SNL50: The Anniversary Special on Sunday, February 16 at 8 pm. This article about SNLs 50th season was originally published on October 4, 2024.In April, Kristen Wiig hosted Saturday Night Live, an occasion that, under normal circumstances, would merit some excitement. But anyone familiar with the peculiar lore of SNL would know better: This was Wiigs fifth time hosting, and when someone hosts SNL five times, the opening monologue becomes absolutely unbearable.This is the fault of SNLs longtime schtick known as the Five Timers Club, where the conceit is once you host the show five times, you get a velvet smoking jacket and entrance into a mythical exclusive society full of other laureates like Steve Martin and Tina Fey and Justin Timberlake. It is also an excuse for the show to indulge its worst impulses: Packed with A-list guest appearances, Wiigs monologue saw Paul Rudd pitifully ask why he wasnt asked to be one of the celebrity cameos; Matt Damon, who has hosted only twice, wearing a Five Timers jacket because executive producer Lorne Michaels said he was so good that he deserved it; and Jon Hamm and Martin Short begging Michaels offstage for a chance to host again. In total, eight of the countrys most beloved actors joined together to fawn at the altar of SNL and, specifically, its creator. There are infinite ways for SNL to be unbearable: a sketch outstays its welcome, the rookie featured player keeps flubbing his lines, the writers forgo jokes altogether and instead force us to listen to a bizarre piano ballad in an attempt to say something earnest about politics. But by far the worst version of SNL is when the show becomes more interested in its own mythology than making people laugh. This year, the institutions 50th, promises to be full of such moments. In the season premiere, host Jean Smart recalled her younger self watching the very first episode of SNL, knowing shed one day host the show, while the SNL50 branding was everywhere, from interstitials to the top story on Weekend Update. The slate of hosts this fall are largely limited to repeat hosts, including John Mulaney and Michael Keaton, who will return for their sixth and fourth time hosting, respectively. The nostalgia tour extends beyond the show: On October 11, Saturday Night, a movie that dramatizes the story of SNLs 1975 debut, will premiere in theaters. In the meantime, Questlove is producing a documentary about SNL; filmmaker Morgan Neville of Wont You Be My Neighbor? is, somehow, producing five of them. The worst version of SNL is when the show becomes more interested in its own mythology than making people laugh. And on Valentines Day 2025, SNL will host a homecoming event at Radio City Music Hall, produced by Michaels and Mark Ronson, in addition to a live primetime reunion special with current and former cast members to air the following Sunday. The film Saturday Night, directed by Jason Reitman, received just-okay reviews, with many critics irked by its exorbitant flattery of both Michaels and SNL. Rolling Stone called it a gushing love letter: Saturday Night Live has long swooned over its own self-mythology, and Saturday Night is happy to add to that backpatting as the shows golden anniversary approaches, writes David Fear. Put more plainly, according to the New Republic, the film is little more than a cinematic circle jerk.To be fair, franchise nostalgia is a plague affecting more than just SNL. Pop culture is in a deeply self-referential, self-obsessed mood: Endless reboots that recycle previously successful intellectual property is a symptom of an entertainment industry that has strained under the weight of crushing corporate consolidation. The result is films about recognizable companies origin stories (Nike, Pop Tarts, BlackBerry, Flamin Hot Cheetos, to name a few), TV prologues (The Rings of Power, House of the Dragon), and constant sampling in pop music. Or take, for example, the sprawling Marvel Cinematic Universe, which sold movie tickets throughout the 2010s by promising hardcore fans that they might see their favorite character in a post-credits scene. Or the other blockbuster cultural product of the decade, Taylor Swift, who orchestrated the highest-grossing tour of all time by packaging and repackaging nostalgia for her fans. When SNL commits the sin of self-referentiality, it feels worse, not because its any more guilty than the rest, but because SNL is supposed to be funny. Theres nothing hilarious about watching rich and famous people congratulate themselves (thats what award shows are for!). Instead, it comes across as profoundly lazy. SNLs best moments have always been the ones where you havent a clue what kind of brain they could have come from. With few exceptions, its topical and political material is never as memorable as its quirky characters and absurd sketches recent standouts include last years silly Beavis and Butthead sketch and Lisa from Temecula. In other words, SNL works when it lets the young comedy nerds who staff the show do their thing without reminding us that were watching a show thats been on the air for 50 years. That, however, isnt usually what happens when an aging leader doesnt understand that the best use of their power is to hand it to someone else. Lorne Michaels is a show business icon who is also nearly 80 and can be forgiven for wanting to stick around long enough to enjoy a victory lap (50 years helming a network powerhouse is nothing to sneer at, after all). Despite Michaelss statements to press in 2020 that he was planning to retire after the 50th season a position repeated in 2023 when he hinted that his replacement could easily be Tina Fey he recently told multiple media outlets that he now plans to stay indefinitely. Im going to do it as long as I feel I can do it, he said to the Times, adding to the Hollywood Reporter, As long as its important and I can be useful, Ill stay.To say you watch (or even care about) SNL in 2024 is itself kind of embarrassing, though this has been the case for decades people who tuned in as children or teenagers tend to believe no cast could possibly live up to the one who introduced them to sketch comedy. You could say it sucks at any point in its history and youd at least be a little bit right, but its especially depressing to watch talented writers and performers spend their energy deifying and worshiping their own employer.Like too much of pop culture right now, SNL is relying on audiences pointing and saying, I get that reference! instead of creating work thats genuinely fresh or funny or compelling. After all the meta in-jokes, all the celebrity cameos, all the cutaways to the big boss looming offstage, theres hardly any room left for laughs. If the bland season premiere is any indication, dont expect many of those this year. See More:
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  • How to stop Trump’s power grab
    www.vox.com
    At this point, there is little doubt that President Donald Trump and Elon Musk are engaged in a fundamentally unlawful effort to rewrite the American constitutional order. Their efforts to redirect federal spending are attempts to seize Congresss power of the purse, a core element of its Article I constitutional power. They have attempted to shutter multiple federal agencies, like USAID, whose existence are expressly guaranteed by statute.Yet while the public is waking to the scope of the threat to democracy, many Americans are still feeling powerless. It can seem that Trumps control over the executive branch, together with congressional Republicans spinelessness, makes it hard for anyone to respond effectively.But nonetheless, there are ways to fight back to do more than is already being done. An effective strategy would revolve around three key points:First, Trump is weak. He has deputized Musk to grab power illegally because he doesnt have the votes to win it through legislation. The illegality of Trumps agenda means that there are lots of levers his opponents can pull to stop him. The most significant of these are lawsuits, many of which have already yielded injunctions against unlawful Trump-Musk orders. Second, delay means victory. The problem with the courts is that they are slow and reactive; Trump can do damage before they intervene that may prove impossible to repair. So democracys defenders need to think of their jobs as buying time for the courts blocking and delaying everything to prevent him from doing irrevocable harm to the constitutional order before he can be ordered to stop.Third, delaying strategies help prepare America for the worst. Trump might defy a court order, sparking a constitutional crisis. In that event, the only levers remaining are extra-legal popular resistance mass protests, strikes, and the like. The more ordinary citizens work to delay his policies now, the better prepared they will be to escalate in the event of an even deeper crisis.Of course, delaying a president is easier said than done. But luckily, Americans dont have to make it up as they go along.Ive spent nearly a decade as a journalist reporting on democratic decline around the world. Ive studied the fight for democracy where the threat has been as great or even greater than what the US faces now: places like Hungary, South Korea, India, Brazil, Israel, and Hong Kong. My recent book examines both why democracy is in crisis globally and what has worked to defend it.While Americans cant just directly copy any one foreign movement in any of those countries, they can learn a lot from their successes and failures. What follows is a playbook of sorts a top-level strategy paired with specific tactics that politicians, activists, and even ordinary citizens can start employing today. In these efforts, time is of the essence. Were not in a marathon, said one American expert on pro-democracy movements, who insisted on anonymity to avoid possible retaliation. Were in a sprint. Move fast and break democracyThe Trump strategy centers on the idea of creating new facts on the ground of changing things so rapidly and irreversibly that even a court order cant restore the status quo. There are two ways that Trump and Musk are trying to do this: one substantive and one more political.Substantively, its hard to fix government agencies once theyre wrecked or politicized. USAID is probably the best example.The Trump administration put much of USAIDs staff on administrative leave, suspended many of its operations, and broken contracts with humanitarian groups and foreign agencies. Crucial staff members will now look for different jobs. The third-party groups who implement USAID policies, both in the US and abroad, will go bankrupt. Projects that required long-term and consistent field deployments may be impossible to restart. Courts can declare that what Trump and Musk did was illegal, but they cant turn back time and un-bankrupt USAIDs partners. The longer USAID remains functionally shuttered, the harder it will be to repair.Politically, the idea is to change the political landscape such that what was once seen (correctly) as flagrantly illegal becomes yet another partisan dispute. This operates by leveraging fear and team loyalty to get key Republicans on board with the Trump line.Think about the January 6 protests. In the weeks following the attack on the Capitol, nearly everyone on both sides of the aisle condemned the rioters. But the more Trump stood his ground, the more Republicans rallied behind him. Former critics of the riot began arguing the Justice Department was the real villain. Gradually, the January 6ers turned into martyrs. When Trump issued a blanket pardon, he met basically no GOP resistance.Trump and Musk are now employing the same strategy to shield the power grab. Once they have acted to seize power, they are counting on reflexive partisanship to deflect criticism and potentially even bring conservative judges on board.President Donald Trump is joined by Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, and his son, X Musk, during an executive order signing in the Oval Office at the White House on February 11, 2025, in Washington, DC. Getty ImagesAll things considered, the facts on the ground strategy is a canny one given the constraints Trump faces. But its important to recognize that those constraints are powerful: that Trump is in many ways quite weak.If Trump were a traditionally strong president, he could pass whatever changes he wanted through the normal channels. He wouldnt need to unlawfully dismantle USAID; he would get Congress to pass a law abolishing it. He wouldnt need to assert impoundment power; he could get Congress to pass a budget that reflects his priorities.Thanks to the Republicans exceedingly narrow House and Senate majorities, he doesnt have those options. To wield the degree of power he wants, he needs to depend on flagrant lawbreaking on getting Musk and the DOGE crew to change the facts on the ground so dramatically that no one can unwind it.The weak link here is the need for speed. To execute a change everything before the courts get involved strategy, you need to make the most of the time you have. But if Musk and Trump can be slowed, the entire thing could fall apart.A four-point plan for stopping Trump and MuskSo if the essence of a resistance strategy is clear frustrate the power grab until the courts block them what does that look like in practice?The best lessons we can find come from other countries that have faced similar power grabs by an elected executive. And while these countries all differ from the United States and each other, some lessons that can be generalized to provide actionable advice for Democrats, ordinary citizens, civil society and philanthropists, and government employees. In tandem, these steps amount to a comprehensive strategy for obstructing the Trump-Musk power grab. If implemented swiftly, it would give America a shot at enough buying time for democracy to emerge with minimal damage. 1) Democrats can do more but people shouldnt expect them to leadMany writers have suggested Democrats use procedural mechanisms, like withholding unanimous consent in the Senate and putting holds on Trump nominees, that can make Trumps life more difficult. To this list, Id add trying to subpoena power to force Musk to testify. A recent effort in the House Oversight Committee came up one vote short, and there is a plausible Republican defector Rep. Mike Turner of Ohio, a purple-district legislator who was recently stripped of Intelligence committee leadership by his fellow Republicans. If Democrats can quietly persuade Turner (or someone like him) to join them, they could subpoena Musk which would both slow him down by forcing him to prepare for testimony and potentially get him to openly admit to lawbreaking under oath (or at least take the Fifth).But at the same time, people may be expecting Democrats to play a leading role for which theyre not well-equipped.Minority opposition parties do not have a great track record in spearheading movements against democratic backsliding. They tend to place too much faith in the system and trust that the normal rules constraining power will constrain a would-be authoritarian even as the authoritarian busts through them.What happens is that the demagogues popularity drops as the corruption mounts, and the opposition parties say, Oh my god, hes at 40 percent, theres no way we can lose, theres no way he can steal it. Then what do you know he steals it. And they never fully planned for the day after, the anonymous democracy expert explains.If that sounds a little like the Democratic Partys institutional attitude in the past few years well, youre not wrong. And it underscores that waiting for Democrats to set the tone, or focusing on demanding more from them, is a tactical mistake.2) Start showing up to protests Instead of looking to Democrats, Americans outside of government can take action on their own directly protesting or otherwise frustrating Trump administration actions and, in doing so, setting an aggressive tone that Democrats can amplify and support from the inside. Indeed, the best international evidence suggests that only a combination of citizen and institutional pressure can halt democratic erosion once its begun.There is a recent example of citizens effectively leading a strategy of delay against an authoritarian grab: Israel in 2023. That year, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu proposed legislation that would have effectively removed the last formal check on his authority court oversight. Almost immediately people took to the streets in protest. This bottom-up movement set the tone and direction, with the opposition parties joining as allies rather than being the driving force behind it.Demonstrators holding placards and Israeli flags gather for a rally to protest the Israeli governments judicial overhaul bill in Tel Aviv, Israel, on April 29, 2023. Anadolu Agency via Getty ImagesThe Israelis knew that Netanyahu had enough votes to ram through the bill if he kept his party together. The protests didnt aim to persuade so much as scare to signal that, if Netanyahu moved too quickly, he would risk massive social and economic disruption. And it worked: The protests caused fractures in the governing coalition that forced Netanyahu to abandon his plan to pass a major bill in one fell swoop.The prime minister still tried to pass the bill more slowly, breaking it up into little bits, but only managed to get a single small law through before events in the world the October 7 attacks and the Gaza war took the power grab off the agenda entirely. Months later, Israels Supreme Court quietly overturned what he managed to pass.In the first week of the Trump administration, it didnt look like Americans had enough energy to sustain such mobilization. And indeed, nothing at the scale of Israels protests is happening yet. Yet the sheer scope of the lawbreaking is starting to wake people up to the danger of what Trump and Musk are attempting, with protests breaking out across the country. The activist group Indivisible is starting to report levels of participation in local events akin to the resistance mobilization in 2017. The success of any delay strategy depends on this emergent trend accelerating as quickly as possible.3) Philanthropists and civil society need to facilitate better and faster popular mobilizationOf course, organizing effectively to get a protest movement off the ground is hard. That can be a fatal flaw at a moment where speed is everything.In 2010, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn swiftly enacted an even more ambitious version of the Trump-Musk power grab. During the crucial early days, his opponents could not come together quickly enough to mount resistance.The Hungarians never did a good collective organization, says Kim Lane Scheppele, an expert on Hungarian law and politics at Princeton University. Everybody went off and did their own little thing, as they normally do, and there was no united press.When I spoke with Orni Petruschka, an Israeli businessman who helped lead the 2023 protest movement, he proposed a way to avoid this problem: that civil society groups and philanthropists work together to rapidly stand up an emergency anti-power grab umbrella group.In Israel, they called this Protest HQ. Its function was not only coordination on overall strategy, but also distributing talent and resources around the country.We realized that there were many, many groups, and they needed specific services. Some of them needed logistical help, some of them needed legal help. Some of them needed PR and advertising; all of them would need resources, he says. You dont want to have philanthropists trying to sort out this maze of different organizations that will compete with each other for the same cause of stopping Trump.American civil society groups and the donors who fund them a far more extensive network than exists either in Israel or Hungary can start working on something like this immediately. 4) Federal workers need to have courageCollectively, citizens and civil society have tremendous power. But few Americans are in better positions individually to help delay Trump than the civil servants being asked to implement his power grabs. When asked to implement unlawful or antidemocratic orders, these workers can either openly refuse or feign incompetence to throw sand in the gears. They can look for bureaucratic chokepoints and man them. If Trump is going to treat them like the deep state, they can be the deep state.This doesnt depend on everyone in the federal government acting in unison immediately. Just a handful of defiant civil servants can spark something bigger.In a recent piece for Jacobin magazine, Rutgers professor Eric Blanc argues that a series of 2018 strikes by teachers in West Virginia, Arizona, and Oklahoma which successfully won concrete victories like higher pay show how individual American government employees can spark broader movements of noncompliance.Specifically, he argues that a handful of determined federal employees speaking out, paired with relatively easy actions designed to encourage others to join in, can create momentum that can translate into real disruption.Fearing retaliation from above, most teachers in 2018 were initially scared to make their voices heard. But a few bold colleagues broke the climate of intimidation by taking a public stand early on, he writes. Because so many workers were initially scared, the movements grew by taking easy actions that could involve the largest number of workers. One prominent build-up tactic was RedforEd days in which everybody both employees and community supporters wore the same color and posted selfies and group photos with messages about their cause.Of course, all of this depends on having civil servants of good conscience in government. And that means they must resist the pressure to resign.As miserable as it might be, people of good conscience working to slow things down on the inside are a necessary complement to civil activism. Every staffer that quits is one who can be replaced with a willing power grab accomplice.What if the institutions fail?The delay strategy is premised on a key assumption: that institutions, above all the courts, can eventually ride to the rescue. But there are at least two foreseeable ways in which this assumption could go badly wrong.First, the Supreme Court could simply authorize some of Trumps most egregious power grabs. This seems unlikely: Lower court judges, including Republican appointees, have uniformly ruled against Trump and Musk to date. Previous published opinions by Supreme Court justices, notably including John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh, have rejected some of the legal theories that underpin their most aggressive moves. But unlikely doesnt mean impossible: The Supreme Court shocked legal observers with its sweeping ruling giving Trump criminal immunity, and it could do so again.Second, and even more ominously, is that Trump chooses simply to ignore court orders and keep doing what hes doing. This may sound unthinkable, but there are some real signs that it might already be happening. Vice President JD Vance has publicly undermined the courts legitimacy and outright advocated that the president ignore them. This is the Achilles heel of a delay strategy. But there is an answer to it: a massive, society-wide mobilization. Millions-strong protests, government officials refusing to work en masse, threats of general strikes: These are the kinds of radical actions that become necessary when an executive declares that the law simply doesnt apply to it.RelatedCurrently, Americans are not mobilized in such a fashion. But there is reason to believe they could be roused.In December 2024, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared a state of emergency, imposing martial law with little pretext. Overnight, huge numbers of Koreans showed up to protest the decision. These protests helped create cover for legislators to sneak past soldiers guarding the legislative building and vote to end the emergency.This swift and overwhelming mobilization, Korean observers say, reflected the stunning nature of Yoons announcement.What mobilized people was this sense of shock, says Se-Woong Koo, a prominent Korean journalist and scholar. When he came out on TV and he made this statement, I talked to a lot of my friends who said, Is he crazy? Literally? Theres no room for what he proposed in a democracy.Movements around the world, from Israel to Hong Kong, show that the judiciary can be a focal point for such a movement. But gigantic protests dont spring up overnight. In each of the cases where protest made at least some difference, the ground had been prepared in the months and years prior.Thats why acting now is important even if you think the courts will fail. Delaying strategies both heighten the sense that what is happening isnt normal, and build the personal connections and organizational infrastructure necessary for effective mass resistance if and when the moment calls for it. The United States is in a democratic emergency that is only likely to deepen for the foreseeable future. Theres no time to waste.See More:
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  • Avowed review Annihilation meets Oblivion in a vast, intricate fantasy
    www.theguardian.com
    Every time I have to switch between fantasy realms I feel a little like the workers in Severance. Who am I again? What am I here to do? Who are all these people? Its been a golden time for fantasy lately and having inhaled Dragons Dogma 2, Metaphor: ReFantazio, both seasons of House of the Dragon and all of Rebecca Yarross Fourth Wing novels in less than a year, Im starting to blur the finer details of one kingdom with another.Avoweds fantasy universe comes ready-made, from developer Obsidians other Pillars of Eternity games. The lore is dense, the in-game text plentiful and characters verbose, but thankfully The Lands Between is fascinating to look at and the realm of Eora full of political tension and cool monsters. I remember precious few names or historical details, but I will remember several of my experiences in this game the view from the rickety path hugging the walls of an underground cavern big enough for a mad priest to have built as gigantic automaton inside, and the skin-crawling secret I discovered in the basement of a companions family home. The look is Annihilation-meets-Oblivion, with fungal and floral detail embroidering the structures and peoples you encounter, and and ever-present tension between the organic and the corruptive.The Lands Between is being ravaged by a disturbing plague that sends people mad, before they are consumed by mushroom-like growths. You, an envoy from a distant centre of empire, have been sent to investigate. You are a godlike, touched by the immortals, and you are guided through this strange place by a divine voice in your head and a range of native companions, whose chatter I found genuinely edifying. Theres a lot of choice and self-direction in Avowed, and its a game that always respects your intelligence. Characters are interestingly (if densely) written and there are plenty of ways to respond to them. Its a lot less patronising than the cringeworthily Whedon-esque good guy/bad guy/joker responses that other games force out of you.I expected a brisk 20-hour adventure in the vein of Obsidians sci-fi comedy The Outer Worlds, but reader, this is not that. This game is immense. I took my time in the opening area of Dawnshore, having a fine old time probing into spider-webbed caverns (there are lots of those, this is not a game for the arachnophobic) and combing through ornate, abandoned ruins and climbing lighthouses looking for loot. (This was partly because I stalled on the main quest, having forgotten a vital piece of information that popped up once in a text tutorial for about five seconds.) Only after 15 hours in this pleasant coastal land did I meet one of the central antagonists, an impressively frightening warlord in intricate armour and a mask with smouldering eyes. I then found myself in a dense and rotting jungle-swamp full of surprisingly cheerful necromancers, and it was even bigger than Dawnshore. When I arrived at a third new location after around 30 hours I realised that I very much did not have the measure of this world at all.Unfortunately Avowed would be better if it were 20 hours long. I always had fun striking out from town and getting lost, coming across interesting things to do exactly as you would in Skyrim or Fallout. But there are two sticky problems that suck the fun out of it over time. The first is common to a lot of open-world games: when you arrive in a new place, all the quests and fights are a little too hard. After a few hours questing, exploring and upgrading your weapons and armour, it hits a brief sweet spot where everything feels challenging but conquerable. Then you empower yourself to such an extent everything gets too easy, and it starts to feel like a box-ticking exercise. This pattern repeated itself over my time with the game, eroding my patience.The second issue is that Avoweds combat just isnt as fun as it thinks it is, and theres so much of it. There are an impressive number of weapons and techniques available to you grimoires and wands for spells, giant two-handed axes, bows and pistols, maces and shields. No matter what you choose, though, it feels imprecise and tedious, and your chances of success are determined by invisible numbers rather than skill. Try to take on enemies above your level and it will barely matter how well you dodge out of the path of a greatsword or how cleverly you combine your magic effects to freeze and shatter undead skeletons. What matters is the quality of your gear, which must be continually and laboriously upgraded with a warehouses worth of random materials that you find in every chest and lockbox. I got very sick of smashing R2 to fire magic projectiles or hack away at tree-monsters with my sword, chipping away determinedly at their hit points. My companions never felt especially helpful in battles, either.All the variety and texture that can be found in the fiction here is lacking in the combat and the loot. There are unique swords and trinkets at the ends of the most interesting quests, but the fun of exploring is tempered by the realisation that outside of the views and the characters, youll rarely find anything that interesting. If you come across a powerful enemy, you may well be underpowered for the fight. If you find a tantalising glowing chest in a cavern, theres a strong chance itll be full of pennies, chunks of iron and a few pelts.Avowed started out as Obsidians answer to Bethesdas Elder Scrolls series, and it did remind me a lot of Oblivion and Skyrim in the exciting moments where I stumbled across something unexpected in the wilds. But it also shares those games tendency towards repetition, and the weightless feel of their fighting. My first 15 or so hours in The Lands Between felt rich with potential, but I got fed up with it long before the end.skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Pushing ButtonsFree weekly newsletterKeza MacDonald's weekly look at the world of gamingPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionAvowed is released on 18 February; 59.99
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  • Avowed review: Obsidian simply does not miss with RPG that rivals Indiana Jones
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    Obsidian returns to the genre it cut its teeth with and Avowed is a fantastic entry that sticks out thanks to flexible combat, great writing, and a whole lot of colourTech14:25, 13 Feb 2025Avowed is one of the year's best surprises alreadyObsidian Entertainment has become one of Microsoft's most bankable studios. While Halo has stuttered and Gears has gone quiet, the California-based team once responsible for Knights of the Old Republic II and Alpha Protocol has churned out The Outer Worlds, Grounded, and Pentiment in recent years.Such a run is impressive not just for its consitency in quality but also its inconsistency in genre, but Avowed sees the studio return to its RPG roots. And, while the studio hasn't quite eclipsed stablemates Bethesda when it comes to first-person, fantasy RPG scope, it joins Indiana Jones and the Golden Circle as one of the best Xbox games around.Avowed's world is beautiful and dangerousTo clear up a common question no, despite being set in the same world as the developer's Pillars of Eternity franchise, you don't need to have played those to jump right in.The plot setup is simple enough for anyone to get their head around, as players step into the boots of a customisable 'Godlike' character tasked with investigating a mysterious 'Dream Scourge', a plague infesting living things and bringing dead things back with violent results.I admit it's not the most original setup, but Avowed is elevated by some solid writing and conversation options that lean into the role-playing fantasy. Baldur's Gate 3 it ain't, though, and while some choices have longer-reaching consequences, many of them add flavour to well-written scenes but feel like flourishes rather than adding new directions to explore.And, despite being relatively by-the-numbers in terms of setup, there were multiple points where I found myself surprised by the direction of Avowed's story. Every now and then it zagged where I expected a zig, and by the time I was half a dozen hours in I was hooked as a result. It's also worth mentioning that it doesn't take long for the initial plot thread to be scattered to the wind, opening things up considerably.It doesn't take long to amass companions to fight by your sideIt's a little more po-faced than The Outer Worlds, leaning less on gags and quips and more into more existential matters, but there's still plenty of levity just don't expect to find the same laugh-out-loud commentary on capitalism and consumerism that the likes of Outer Worlds offered.Avowed is a very colourful adventureOne of the biggest questions I had about Avowed (aside from the tone being immediately different to its 2021 reveal) was about its scale.With Obsidian rolling out multiple games in recent years, I feared Avowed would suffer from a lack of focus and I was wrong to do so. Early on, you'll visit the pirate settlement-like Paradis, a place full of lawlessness reckoning with itself by employing a heavy-handed militia.It's here that I spent almost an hour roaming the streets, walking through buildings and taking in the sights. I mention this because it's only once you leave Paradis, and you check the map, that you see just how large Avowed is.Avowed gives the Series X a workoutParadis and its surrounding areas feel much larger than hubs in The Outer Worlds, but are no less stacked with detail. Sure, you can make a beeline through each area, but doing so means you'll skip optional areas, bosses, and even sizeable dungeons with their own rewards.It's a world begging to be explored, and while it's not as open-ended or massive as the likes of an Elder Scrolls game, the mix of colour and lighting mean it beckons you in more than the frigid colds of Skyrim's mountains or the flat plains of Cyrodil.That brings us nicely to the visuals and playing on Xbox Series X, I felt as though Avowed frequently surprised me with its vistas as rays of sunlight burst from behind cloud and sparks flew as my spells connected.Combat is so fun I relished walking into these lizard-folkI've done by best to avoid mentioning combat in this review so far, not because it's not good, but because of the opposite combat in Avowed is flashy, malleable, and occasionally pretty tricky, too.For all of the great examples of first-person RPGs, you can count on one hand the number of them that offer combat that could be described as anything more than serviceable, but Avowed has so many tricks up its sleeve that it's hard not to find some way of playing that you enjoy.With a little tweaking you really can create any build you fancyWhether you're swinging a sword or axe, blocking with a shield, or casting spells with a wander, there's plenty of variety in the way you can tackle foes. Using a Grimoire (essentially a spellbook) gives you access to multiple spells at once, and with the option to set up two loadouts that are easy to switch between, you can play as a melee class and switch to a spellcaster whenever you feel like it.While there are character stats and backstories to choose from, no ability is off limits for any of them, meaning you can roleplay solely as a sorcerer if you'd prefer, or just be a strength-focused melee specialist.Tying all of this together is a nifty dash function that can help you close the distance to opponents, move sideways, or fire yourself backward to unleash a fireball or well-placed arrow.Put simply, Avowed's combat is what I wanted from Skyrim the first time I played it, and it's one of the brighter spots in the genre.It ties in nicely with your in-game companions, too. The aforementioned Kai can use elemental ranged attacks, but he's just as capable getting in close, while Marius has an arsenal of traps. These can be triggered within combat, and making use of them will not only help wear down bosses but also open up additional areas of exploration.That can help you find fresh loot and useful items for upgrades, and while it feels great to find new gear, I found ingredients for improving existing ones were hard to come by at times. Avowed will be a game that I'd imagine many players will experience differently, but finding those materials came at a slow pace for me.Ever fallen in love with a fish man? You mightAlso, a quick shout out for Kai's voice actor. Brandon Keener's velvety voice is basically pulled straight from his portrayal of Garrus Vakarian in Mass Effect, and you won't get a single complaint from me.Article continues belowAvowed is one of Obsidian's best games in a library swimming in excellence. It's a fun RPG that doesn't stray too far from a well-worn formula, instead choosing to refine it and adding in some absolutely fantastic first-person combat.Reviewed on Xbox Series X. Review code provided by the publisher.
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  • The Twisted Metal Season 2 Trailer Is Finally Here
    gizmodo.com
    Here it is by far the best thing youll see Anthony Mackie in this weekend. Its the first teaser for Twisted Metal season two, which is coming to Peacock later this summer. Based on the video game franchise of the same name, Twisted Metal debuted on Peacock in 2023 and was way better than it had any right being. Video game adaptations continue to have an up-and-down success rate, but Twisted, from showrunner Michael Jonathan Smith (Cobra Kai) and executive producers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick (Deadpool), Will Arnett, Mackie, and others did the unthinkable. It took the basic, fun premise of the gamefighting with carsand expanded it out into a whole world with mythology, fun characters, and more. In season two though, now that the world and its characters have been established, its the moment weve all been waiting for. The actual Twisted Metal tournament. And you get your first glimpse of it here in this teaser. Check it out. The stakes couldnt be higher as John Doe (Anthony Mackie) and Quiet (Stephanie Beatriz) risk their lives to compete in a dangerous demolition derby tournament, Smith said in a press release. The prize? A single wish, their greatest hearts desire, granted. The only problem is sixteen other drivers have wishes of their own. Anthony Mackie and Stephanie Beatriz lead a stellar cast, including Will Arnett & Joe Seanoa (aka Samoa Joe) as fan favorite Sweet Tooth, and Anthony Carrigan as the iconic tournament host Calypso, in a fast-paced, hysterical, thrilling season with unforgettable characters. Its too bad not all of them will survive.Well, except John and Quiet, right? Right? Well find out this summer. Heres the official description for season two of Twisted Metal. Tell us your thoughts below. Following the revelations in the season one finale, John and Quiet find themselves entering the deadly TWISTED METAL tournament, a sinister demolition derby hosted by a mysterious man known as Calypso. As they try to survive an onslaught of dangerous new foes and familiar faces alike, including the murderous clown Sweet Tooth, things get complicated for John when he reunites with his long-lost sister, the vigilante Dollface. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, whats next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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  • A Fire TV for Under $80? Insignia Smart TV With Alexa Voice Remote Hits Its Lowest Price
    gizmodo.com
    Looking for a budget-friendly smart TV that doesnt skimp on features? The Insignia 32-inch F20 Series Fire TV brings streaming entertainment and smart home functionality to any room without breaking the bank. Perfect for bedrooms, home offices, or smaller living spaces, this compact TV packs the power of Amazons Fire TV platform into an affordable package that might surprise you with its capabilities.Amazons currently offering this smart TV for just $80, slashing $50 off its regular $130 price tag thats a substantial 38% discount on an already wallet-friendly TV.See at AmazonSmall price, a huge set of featuresThe 720p HD display delivers crisp, clear visuals on its 32-inch screen, making it ideal for everyday viewing at closer distances. While it may not compete with premium 4K sets, the LED panel provides bright, vivid colors and good contrast for its price point, especially for streaming content and casual gaming.Voice control stands out as a premium feature at this price level. The included Alexa voice remote lets you search for shows, launch apps, and control smart home devices without lifting a finger. Its surprisingly responsive and handles complex commands well, from play Stranger Things on Netflix to switch to HDMI 1 and lower the volume.The Insignia Fire TV platform gives you access to over a million streaming options, including all major services like Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, and Amazon Prime Video. The interface is intuitive and snappy, with personalized recommendations that actually make sense. Regular updates keep adding new features and security improvements, making this TV more capable over time.Connectivity options punch above the TVs weight class. AirPlay support means Apple users can easily share content from their devices, while HDMI ARC simplifies soundbar connections for better audio. The built-in Wi-Fi is reliable, maintaining stable streams even at moderate distances from your router.At $80, this Insignia TV offers exceptional value for anyone needing a smart TV for a smaller space. Whether youre setting up a guest room, upgrading a kitchen TV, or looking for a reliable secondary screen, it delivers the essential features of more expensive smart TVs at a fraction of the cost. The combination of Fire TV functionality, voice control, and broad streaming support makes it an excellent choice for budget-conscious buyers who still want modern smart TV features.This is your rare chance to get a smart TV for less than $100, so if youre interested at all, its time to hop on this deal right now.See at Amazon
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