• I became a mom during a nationwide economic collapse. It gave me low expectations for adulthood.
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    2025-03-14T12:19:02Z Read in app The author had her first child in 2008, right out of college. Courtesy of the author This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? In 2008 I had my first child, exactly a week after graduating from college. My husband still had a year to go, so I would work nights while he stayed with our baby. We've had low expectations about adulthood since, and don't expect anything from older generations.With a sinking feeling in my stomach, I realized I was completely stuck in the snow, in pitch darkness.It was around 5 a.m., I was six months pregnant and freshly married, on my way to the hospital to complete my nursing school shift rotation. The nursing program had a zero-tolerance policy for absences, and I had zero knowledge or money to fix the tire that had just blown out in front of a complete stranger's driveway.Fortunately for me, that same stranger helped me get a spare on, and I waddled my way through my shift. But my husband and I, both still college students at the time, had precisely no money to pay for a new tire. I couldn't believe my luck when, the very next day, a check arrived in the mail for $500, proclaiming me the winner of a scholarship I didn't even remember applying for.The year was 2008, and that surprise flat tire and ensuing check feel symbolic of what that time felt like complete chaos, no money, and making it through in ways that sometimes felt totally random.I graduated from college and a week later gave birthIn 2008, I graduated from college with my Bachelor's degree on May 10 and delivered my daughter exactly a week later. My husband still had a year of school left, so I became the sole supporter of our new little family. I'll be honest with you: neither of us had any idea that the US was in the midst of what would later be called "The Great Recession."We had become adults and parents in the midst of a nationwide economic disaster, but for us, it was just normal life. Because we had gone straight from being broke college students to broke parents at the age of barely 22, the recession didn't even really impact us. We rented our housing and spent no money on entertainment, eating out, or even clothing. We used rabbit ears on the TV and lived very simply. I worked the night shift while my husband was home with our daughter, and then we switched during the day while he went to school.In 2010, we welcomed a second daughter and bought our first home. Back then, because of the recession, there were several incentives for first-time homeowners. For instance, we qualified for a loan that required 0% down, and we received an $8,000 tax credit the following year on our tax return. The cost of our mortgage was nearly the same as renting, and the house was near our jobs, so it made sense. And, of course, there's the fact that the purchase price of homes was ridiculously low, especially compared to now.We learned not to expect anythingThings weren't all peachy keen, though my husband had graduated with a teaching degree, and although it's hard to imagine, teaching was an incredibly in-demand job because of the recession. Every position he applied for had hundreds of applicants, and he was laid off constantly. We saw more pink slips in our first years of marriage than some people will see in a lifetime.We also learned very quickly not to expect anything that older generations might have had. A secure job? Nah, pink slips keep you on your toes. Retirement? Nope we opened our own account as soon as possible, even though I could only afford to put in $25 a month. Childcare? Opposite shifts for life, thanks. Maternity leave or any type of parental support whatsoever? Never heard of it.Our privileges, such as being white, able-bodied, and having access to college in the first place, afforded us huge advantages to enter adulthood and parenthood during a recession. But the realities of entering adulthood at that time, in many ways, also set us up for a lifetime of low expectations. Truthfully, I've realized how low my expectations are, especially in the last year or so. We have expected nothing from childcare to healthcare to even basic work-life balance.We are cutting our spending againI'm almost 39 with a kid about to graduate from high school (yes, the one I was pregnant with in 2008), and just recently, I canceled some of our streaming services because we can't afford them. I canceled my gym membership, and I'm looking at what else we can cut back on because we simply aren't able to pay our bills right now. It's a lot harder in a way because I'm "stuck" in things like our house, with rising costs I can't control, like property taxes, insurance, and repairs.But when I look back on that time, it does help me now because I realize how much of my life has always felt like waiting for the other foot to drop. So, a big part of me is just inclined to roll with it. Maybe entering adulthood amid the recession scarred me maybe I should be fighting for more or expecting better. But truthfully, if I can figure it out on my own, it feels like a win, especially compared to where we started.
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  • BMW's China problem isn't going away — and Trump's trade war may make things worse
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    2025-03-14T11:46:57Z Read in app BMW's sales in China fell by 13% last year. PEDRO PARDO/AFP via Getty Images This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? BMW is getting crushed in China as rivals like BYD squeeze out foreign carmakers.The German giant is fighting to turn things around, but now has a brewing trade war to contend with.The CEO said the trade conflict sparked by President Donald Trump could cost BMW up to $1 billion this year.BMW is still getting crushed in China and now has a brewing trade war to worry about too.The German carmaker reported on Friday that net profits had collapsed by more than a third last year, and warned that 2025 is likely to be challenging thanks to the ongoing tariff face-off between the US, China, and Europe.BMW stock fell as much as 4.5% on Friday. As with many of its European rivals, the main source of the automaker's woes is China.Despite BMW Group's sales rising slightly in the US and Europe, they collapsed 13.4% in the world's largest car market last year.BMW has found itself increasingly squeezed by China's insurgent local EV makers, who are taking market share from their foreign competitors with their high-tech, affordable electric vehicles.Fellow German carmakers VW and Porsche have also reported double-digit sales drops in China, even as the likes of BYD and Xiaomi enjoy a sales surge.BMW plans to roll out a new lineup of next-generation EVs, dubbed the "Neue Klasse," starting later this year in an attempt to boost sales.It faces the additional headwinds of a brewing global trade war sparked by America's on-again-off-again tariffs on Canada and Mexico.BMW CEO Oliver Zipse told Bloomberg the automaker expects trade conflicts between the US, China, and Europe to cost it about 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) this year. However, he expects much of the disruption to be short-lived. "We don't think that all these tariffs will last very long, though some of them might last longer," Zipse said.Other European automakers are also sounding the alarm about President Donald Trump's tariff barrage. The boss of VW brand Skoda warned on Friday that US tariffs would raise costs, and could push Chinese carmakers to accelerate their expansion into Europe.BMW did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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  • Chinas new AI agent Manus calls its own shots
    www.vox.com
    Modern large language models are really good at a lot of tasks, like coding, essay writing, translation, and research. But there are still a lot of basic tasks, especially in the personal assistant realm, that the most highly trained AIs in the world remain hopeless at. You cant ask ChatGPT or Claude order me a burrito from Chipotle and get one, let alone book me a train from New York to Philadelphia. OpenAI and Anthropic both offer AIs that can view your screen, move your cursor, and do some things on your computer as if they were a person (through their Operator and Computer Use functions, respectively).This story was first featured in the Future Perfect newsletter.Sign up here to explore the big, complicated problems the world faces and the most efficient ways to solve them. Sent twice a week.That such AI agents sometimes work, sort of, is about the strongest thing you can say for them right now. (Disclosure: Vox Media is one of several publishers that has signed partnership agreements with OpenAI. One of Anthropics early investors is James McClave, whose BEMC Foundation helps fund Future Perfect. Our reporting remains editorially independent.)This week, China launched a competitor: the AI agent Manus. It produced a blizzard of glowing posts and testimonials from highly selected influencers, along with some impressive website demos.Here is Manus building an excellent personal website with almost no prompting. Here is Manus creating a detailed personal itinerary for a trip. Manus creating animations and a lesson plan for a middle school science class. Manus is invite-only (and while I submitted a request for the tool, it hasnt been granted), so its hard to tell from the outside how representative these highly selected examples are. After a few days of Manus fervor, though, the bubble popped a little and some more moderate reviews started coming out. Manus, the growing consensus holds, is worse than OpenAIs DeepResearch at research tasks; but better than Operator or Computer Use at personal assistant tasks. Its a step forward toward something important AIs that can take action beyond the chatbot window but its not a shocking out-of-nowhere advance.Perhaps most importantly, Manuss usefulness for you will be sharply limited if you dont trust a Chinese company youve never heard of with your payment information so it can book things on your behalf. And you probably shouldnt. The agents are arrivingWhen I first wrote about the risks of powerful AI systems displacing or destroying humanity, one very reasonable question was this: How could an AI act against humanity, when they really dont act at all? This reasoning is right, as far as current technology goes. Claude or ChatGPT, which just respond to user prompts and dont act independently in the world, cant execute on a long-term plan; everything they do is in response to a prompt, and almost all that action takes place within the chat window.But AI was never going to remain as a purely responsive tool simply because there is so much potential for profit in agents. People have been trying for years to create AIs that are built out of language models, but which make decisions independently, so that people can relate to them more like an employee or an assistant than like a chatbot. Generally, this works by creating a small internal hierarchy of language models, like a little AI company. One of the models is carefully prompted and in some cases fine-tuned to do large-scale planning. It comes up with a long-term plan, which it delegates to other language models. Various sub-agents check their results and change approaches when one sub-agent fails or reports problems.The concept is simple, and Manus is far from the first to try it. You may remember that last year we had Devin, which was marketed as a junior software engineering employee. It was an AI agent that you interacted with via Slack to give tasks, and which it would then work on achieving without further human input except, ideally, of the kind a human employee might occasionally need. The economic incentives to build something like Manus or Devin are overwhelming. Tech companies pay junior software engineers as much as $100,000 a year or more. An AI that could actually provide that value would be stunningly profitable. Travel agents, curriculum developers, personal assistants these are all fairly well-paid jobs, and an AI agent could in principle be able to do the work at a fraction of the cost, without needing breaks, benefits or vacations. But Devin turned out to be overhyped, and didnt work well enough for the market it was aiming at. Its too soon to say whether Manus represents enough of an advance to have real commercial staying power, or whether, like Devin, its reach will exceed its grasp.Ill say that it appears Manus works better than anything that has come before. But just working better isnt enough to trust an AI to spend your money or plan your vacation, youll need extremely high reliability. As long as Manus remains tightly limited in availability, its hard to say if it will be able to offer that. My best guess is that AI agents that seamlessly work are still a year or two away but only a year or two.The China angleManus isnt just the latest and greatest attempt at an AI agent.It is also the product of a Chinese company, and much of the coverage has dwelled on the Chinese angle. Manus is clearly proof that Chinese companies arent just imitating whats being built here in America, as theyve often been accused of doing, but improving on it.That conclusion shouldnt be shocking to anyone who is aware of Chinas intense interest in AI. It also raises questions about whether we will be thoughtful about exporting all of our personal and financial data to Chinese companies that are not meaningfully accountable to US regulators or US law. Installing Manus on your computer gives it a lot of access to your computer its hard for me to figure out the exact limits on its access or the security of its sandbox when I cant install it myself. One thing weve learned in digital privacy debates is that a lot of people will do this without thinking about the implications if they feel Manus offers them enough convenience. And as the TikTok fight made clear, once millions of Americans love an app, the government will face a steep uphill battle in trying to restrict it or oblige it to follow data privacy rules. But there are also clear reasons Manus came out of a Chinese company and not out of, say, Meta and theyre the very reasons we might prefer to use AI agents from Meta. Meta is subject to US liability law. If its agent makes a mistake and spends all your money on website hosting, or if it steals your Bitcoin or uploads your private photos, Meta will probably be liable. For all of these reasons, Meta (and its US competitors) are being cautious in this realm.I think caution is appropriate, even as it may be insufficient. Building agents that act independently on the internet is a big deal, one that poses major safety questions, and Id like us to have a robust legal framework about what they can do and who is ultimately accountable. But the worst of all possible worlds is a state of uncertainty that punishes caution and encourages everyone to run agents that have no accountability at all. We have a year or two to figure out how to do better. Lets hope Manus prompts us to get to work on not just building those agents, but building the legal framework that will keep them safe.A version of this story originally appeared in the Future Perfect newsletter. Sign up here!Youve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:
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  • Less than 20 red wolves remain in the wild. We had a plan to save them.
    www.vox.com
    Few individual animals have ever been more important to their species than 2323M a red wolf, dubbed Airplane Ears by advocates for his prominent extremities, who spent his brief but fruitful life on North Carolinas Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge.Red wolves, smaller, rust-tinged cousins to gray wolves, are among the worlds rarest mammals, pushed to the brink of extinction by threats such as habitat loss, indiscriminate killing, and road collisions. By 2019 fewer than 15 were known to survive in the wild. Against that grim backdrop, 2323M offered hope.Born at a federal site in Florida, he was released in 2021 onto the Alligator River refuge, a swath of coastal plain on North Carolinas eastern shore. Over the next two years, he and a female known as 2225F raised 11 pups.Alas, in September 2023, Airplane Ears was killed by a car on US 64, the highway that runs through the refuge. One of the worlds rarest species had lost its most prolific member.Airplane Ears was an extraordinary animal who suffered a common fate. Around one-fifth of red wolves meet their end on a bumper, many on US 64, a primary route that vacationers take to the Outer Banks, the picturesque chain of barrier islands that line North Carolinas seaboard. Black bears and white-tailed deer, and even alligators fall victim to collisions that kill animals and result in significant harm to humans and vehicles, according to the North Carolina Department of Transportation. Even the occasional alligator blunders onto the highway. While US 64s roadkill rates are exceptional, its far from the only perilous highway in the United States, where animal crashes annually cost society more than $10 billion in hospital bills, vehicle repairs, and other expenses. For species from Florida panthers to California tiger salamanders to North Carolinas red wolves, collisions pose an extinction-level threat. After 2323M perished, a coalition of conservation groups began pushing the North Carolina Department of Transportation to retrofit the highway with fences and underpasses essentially spacious tunnels that would allow red wolves and other animals to slink safely beneath US 64. We knew that something had to be done, quick, says Ron Sutherland, chief scientist at the Wildlands Network, a conservation group that focuses on habitat connectivity throughout North America. Otherwise, wild red wolves could be lost. Red wolves are seen at a refuge event in Durham, North Carolina. Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty ImagesDrumming up millions of dollars for wildlife crossings has always been a tall order. In December, however, North Carolina received $25 million from the US Department of Transportation to build underpasses on Highway 64. Combined with $4 million that Wildlands Network and the Center for Biological Diversity raised in donations, as well as state funds, it was enough to make a stretch of Highway 64 safe for wolves. It felt really good to know that something had gone right for the red wolf, for once, Sutherland says. That the transportation department invested in animal underpasses may come as a surprise its primary mission, after all, is to facilitate human movements, not the peregrinations of wolves and deer. The 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), however, contained an initiative called the Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program, which allotted $350 million in competitive grants for animal passage, the largest pot of federal funding ever earmarked for the cause. In addition to North Carolinas red-wolf crossings, the program has awarded grants for nearly three dozen projects some of which will aid imperiled species such as ocelots and desert tortoises, many more that will seek to avert dangerous crashes with large mammals like deer, elk, and moose.This is not ornamental, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Bidens transportation secretary, told Vox of the wildlife crossings program in an interview earlier this year. This is something that ties into the very core of our mission, which is to secure the safety of the American traveling public. Unfortunately for the red wolf and many other species, President Donald Trumps administration may not agree. The future of the wildlife crossings program, and many similar initiatives that the BIL supports, is uncertain. Shortly after taking office, Trump suspended the disbursement of BIL funds, leaving hundreds of Biden-era initiatives twisting in the political wind. Will animal passages, traditionally an overwhelmingly nonpartisan solution, endure? Or will the Trump administration stymie crossings, and a plethora of other BIL projects, before they ever truly get off the ground perhaps dooming red wolves, and many other animals, in the process? A tenuous renaissance for wildlife-friendly infrastructureThe Pueblo of Santa Ana is an approximately 79,000-acre shard of New Mexican desert thats criss-crossed by roads. Highway 550 plows below the southwestern edge of the Pueblo, known to its Native inhabitants as Tamaya; to the east and south, I-25 barrels along from Albuquerque to Santa Fe, impeding the movements of elk, pronghorn antelope, mountain lions, and other species. As in North Carolina, constructing wildlife crossings and fences along these highways, says Myron Armijo, the Pueblos governor, will save the lives of both drivers and wild creatures. These animals are part of our culture and tradition, and we have very high respect for them, he said. Its thus only fitting that the Pueblo is where Buttigieg chose to launch the wildlife crossings program. On a windy day in April 2023, Buttigieg spoke with tribal leaders, made a brief speech backdropped by one of the Southwests busiest interstates, I-25, and toured a concrete underpass, its walls scrawled with graffiti, through which animals already cross the interstate.You couldnt help but be struck by the deep connection that these tribal communities have with wildlife and the natural environment, Buttigieg said. And at the same time, this is not just a spiritual concern, because theyve also tallied up the car crashes that are caused by these wildlife-vehicle collisions that we can prevent with better roadway design.Over two rounds of grants since, the wildlife crossings program has awarded an eclectic array of crossings. Western states, where animals often move along clearly defined migration routes, have historically built more passages than Eastern ones, and the wildlife crossings program has duly channeled money to states like Colorado, for a major overpass on I-25 south of Denver, and Utah, for underpasses on Highway 89. Two elk stand by the road as traffic moves over a large underground crossing structure that allows animals to pass under US 285, just south of Buena Vista, Colorado. Photo by Matthew Staver/For the Washington Post via Getty ImagesBut the program has also funneled money eastward. Maryland, New York, and Georgia are among the states that received relatively modest planning grants in December, and Maine earned $9.3 million to build a passage for moose and deer. If you look at a map that overlays the projects from the first two rounds of funding, you will see coast-to-coast diversity, said Renee Callahan, executive director of ARC Solutions, a group that studies and supports animal passages.In todays politics, wildlife crossings may seem like a flight of fancy, but in reality, theyre critical safety infrastructure. Deer collisions alone kill an average of 440 drivers annually, making white-tailed deer deadlier than bears, alligators, and sharks combined. One study found that underpasses in Wyoming prevented so many perilous, expensive crashes that the state was on pace to recoup their costs in just five years.If the program has a shortcoming, its that it doesnt go far enough. In 2024 alone, applicants requested $585 million in federal funding, nearly five times more than the transportation department made available that round. That left lots of worthy crossings unbuilt, like passages on Highway 191 south of Bozeman, Montana, that would have spared elk, deer, and grizzly bears.Callahan, like many conservationists, hopes that the pilot program will eventually be made permanent, ideally at a minimum of $1 billion over five years. There are thousands of projects where today, based on a flat-out cost-benefit analysis, were going to save money in the long term by investing in this infrastructure, Callahan said. In Callahans view, the pilot program has another flaw: The states and other entities that apply are required to bring up to 20 percent of their projects costs to the table, a serious obstacle to Native tribes, which, in Callahans view, shouldnt be subject to the matching-funds obligation. That didnt dissuade the Santa Ana Pueblo, who drummed up their share through a separate state grant. In December, the Pueblo learned that it had received close to $6.4 million to design passages on the highways bordering their lands. I was totally elated, Armijo said. No longer would the Pueblo be an ecological island in an ocean of asphalt. What will Trump mean for infrastructure? As John Oliver once observed, rarely is infrastructure sexy and neither is retrofitting it for nature. Consider the National Culvert Removal, Replacement, and Restoration Grant Program, which allocated $1 billion over five years to fix decrepit culverts, the unglamorous pipes that funnel water beneath roadways. Derelict culverts both threaten the integrity of roads and block fish migrations; on one stream in western Washington, for example, a series of too-narrow, impassable culverts prevent salmon from reaching their spawning grounds, violating the fishing rights of the Jamestown SKlallam Tribe. When the first round of culvert funding was announced in August 2023, the Jamestown SKlallam received $4.2 million to replace a pair of outdated culverts and thus restore nearly four miles of salmon habitat. It doubles as two things it opens up blocked fish passage, and were repairing road infrastructure, said LaTrisha Suggs, the Jamestown SKlallams restoration planner. Now, however, such initiatives are in jeopardy. In his first month in office, Trump has proposed slashing budgets, environmental protections, and the federal workforce alike. Among his first acts was to sign an executive order, titled Unleashing American Energy, that instructed agencies to immediately pause the disbursement of funds authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, pending review within 90 days. How Trumps policies imperil wildlifeThough Trump has only been in office for a few months, already his executive actions are putting more vulnerable animals and ecosystems at risk. Read these recent Vox stories to learn more:This animal is on the edge of extinction. Trump just fired the people trying to save it.The tiny lizard that will test Trumps drill, baby, drill agendaScoop: Leaked emails show the nations leading wildlife agency has halted critical funding for conservationA wholesale decimation of expertise threatens the natural resources we all rely onAccording to a January 29 memo from new Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, that executive order has led the agency to evaluate and potentially revoke many of its existing funding agreements, including any that mention climate change or environmental justice. The order could violate the 1974 Impoundment Control Act, which prevents presidents from withholding congressionally authorized funds. On February 13, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro sued the Trump administration, arguing that its funding freeze broke the federal governments contract to provide billions of dollars in congressionally approved funding, and in late February the administration restored more than $2 billion to the state.The wildlife crossings program is among the many confronting uncertainty. According to Erin Sito, US public policy director for the Wildlands Network, a number of states have been told by the Federal Highway Administration (FAA) that their grants are on hold, without any clear next steps. (The agency did not respond to a request for comment.) Its definitely caught up with all the transportation projects that are not getting funded or administered at the moment, Sito said. The Santa Ana Pueblo is among the affected recipients: Glenn Harper, the Pueblos wildlife biologist, said that the FAA informed the tribe that its grant was on pause, though Harper remains optimistic that the Santa Anas crossings will eventually move forward.Delays notwithstanding, conservationists still have ample reason to hope that the program will ultimately endure. As Deb Kmon Davidson, chief strategy officer for the nonprofit Center for Large Landscape Conservation, puts it, wildlife crossings tend to be super bipartisan.The preservation of migration routes enjoys broad support in red-swinging Nevada and in blue Oregon, and in conservative states like Wyoming, hunters are among the issues staunchest champions. Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) included a forerunner to the wildlife crossings program in a 2019 highway bill, and US Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana, who served as interior secretary during Trumps first term, implemented a secretarial order directing Western states to protect big-game habitat and migration pathways. With Reps. Don Beyer (D-VA) and Alex Padilla (D-CA), Zinke is also cosponsor of the Wildlife Movement Through Partnerships Act, a bill that would help states, tribes, and federal agencies study and protect animal corridors, which was reintroduced to Congress in January. Animal passages may be that most endangered of Washington species: a relatively nonpartisan issue.Frankly, when we launched this program, I was ready for folks from the other side of the aisle to pounce and say, Oh, youre building highways for bunny rabbits, when actually some of the strongest and most enthusiastic responses we got were from Republican legislators from states that have confronted wildlife-vehicle collisions on a daily basis, Buttigieg told Vox. My hope is that this will be a proverbial bridge-building exercise that enjoys support, whoevers in charge.In the meantime, many states are just hoping they receive the funding theyre due. In North Carolina, the states transportation department is still figuring out precisely what its red-wolf crossings will look like and how many to build. (Although its grant application included a conceptual map with potential passage locations, a spokesperson from the agency said that no additional analysis has since been conducted.) But that planning and implementation cant take place until the federal government releases money to the state. NCDOT has yet to receive any guidance on the status of the Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program, the spokesperson told Vox in an email. The fate of that funding could mean the difference between life and death, both for red wolves and the many other species that call the Alligator River refuge home. In August 2024, Wildlands Network launched daily roadkill surveys along US 64, cruising the highway and counting dead deer, bears, snakes, turtles, otters, bobcats, and other critters. In February the researchers counted their 3,000th animal and though the survey hasnt yet documented a dead red wolf, it seems only a matter of time. In an email, Sutherland said that federal turmoil was likely to induce some delays in building crossings, which is sad for the wolves and other wildlife.Delays are the one thing red wolves cant afford. See More:
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  • Parents should stop children gaming on Roblox if they are worried, says CEO
    www.theguardian.com
    Parents who are worried about their children gaming on Roblox should not let them use it, the platforms chief executive has said.There have been reports of bullying and grooming, and fears that children are being exposed to explicit or harmful content, on the site, which is the most popular platform in the UK among gamers aged eight to 12.Robloxs co-founder and chief executive, David Baszucki, told BBC News the platform was vigilant in protecting its users, and said tens of millions of people had amazing experiences on the site.But he added: My first message would be: if youre not comfortable, dont let your kids be on Roblox. That sounds a little counterintuitive, but I would always trust parents to make their own decisions.We do in the company take the attitude that any bad, even one bad, incident is one too many. We watch for bullying, we watch for harassment, we filter all of those kinds of things, and I would say behind the scenes, the analysis goes on all the way to, if necessary, reaching out to law enforcement.Justine Roberts, the head of Mumsnet, told the BBCs Today programme that parents could not watch everything their child was doing 24/7, even if all the parental controls were set and especially if they had several children. She said parents on the forum had spoken of how they struggled to manage their childrens use of Roblox.The US-based company is one of the worlds largest games platforms, with more monthly users than Nintendo Switch and Sony PlayStation combined. In 2024 the site averaged more than 80 million players a day, and roughly 40% of those were under 13.Players who behave badly can face temporary time-outs and longer bans, and Roblox claims to analyse all communications that pass between members on the platform. The company is increasingly using more advanced AI systems to flag certain behaviour for investigation.In November last year, under 13s were banned from sending direct messages and also from playing in hangout experiences, spaces that feature chat between players.Baszucki said: We dont condone any type of image-sharing on our own platform, and youll see us getting more and more, I think, way beyond where the law is on this type of behaviour.He added that Roblox used rigorous guidelines and had a consistent policy on age ratings, based on the content as well the titles of the games.skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Headlines UKFree newsletterGet the days headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morningPrivacy 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 promotionBaszucki founded the platform with Erik Cassel in 2004 and released it to the public in 2006. The pairs first company was an education software provider called Knowledge Revolution, but they quickly noticed that children were using the platform to do activities other than homework.Baszucki said: They wanted to play and build stuff. They were making houses or ships or scenery, and they wanted to jump in, and all of that learning was the germination of Roblox.As the platforms popularity grew, the founders noticed players starting to act out, prompting them to appoint four people as safety moderators.Despite attracting decent numbers of gamers, it was only when the company launched its digital currency, Robux, a year later that it really started to make money Roblox is now worth $41bn (32bn).Players use Robux to buy accessories and unlock content. Content creators now receive 70% of the fee and the store operates on dynamic pricing, meaning popular items cost more.Baszucki said he believed Roblox was the future of communication and was now focused on its evolution into a metaverse-style experience where people go about their daily lives in a virtual world, in avatar form, and hoped eventually to attract 10% of the worlds gamers.
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  • Pokmon Go maker to sell games to Saudi-owned company for $3.5bn
    www.theguardian.com
    Niantic Labs said it would sell its video game division to Saudi Arabia-owned Scopely for $3.5bn, as the US augmented reality firm shifts focus to geospatial technology after failing to recreate the success of its 2016 smash hit Pokmon Go.The deal, announced on Wednesday, also advances Saudi Arabias ambitions to become the ultimate global hub for gaming. The kingdoms sovereign wealth fund, via Savvy Games, bought Scopely for $4.9bn in 2023 as part of a broader push by the country to diversify beyond fossil fuels.Niantic said it would distribute an extra $350m to its equity holders under the deal. It will also spin off its geospatial artificial intelligence (AI) business into a new firm called Niantic Spatial, which will be led by the Niantic founder and CEO, John Hanke.skip past newsletter promotionSign up to TechScapeFree weekly newsletterA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesPrivacy 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 promotionNiantic Spatial will be funded with $250m of capital $200m from Niantics balance sheet and $50m from Scopely. All of Niantics original investors will also continue to be shareholders of Niantic Spatial.The move follows several tough years for Niantic. After Pokmon Go became one of the successful mobile games, the company struggled to replicate its success and had to lay off employees in 2022 and 2023. It also axed the Harry Potter: Wizards Unite video game in 2022.For Saudi, already a growing hub for gaming and home to the Esports World Cup, the deal builds on a plan to invest nearly $38bn in initiatives related to the industry through its Savvy Games Group.Savvy Games is a major investor in global video game companies including Nintendo, in which it has a stake of around 7.54% after a small cut in its interest last year.
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  • Rainbow Six Siege is free to play with X update but theres a catch
    metro.co.uk
    A big birthday for Siege (Ubisoft)Ubisoft has revealed what to expect from its big Rainbow Six Siege X update, which is available to play now in a limited time beta.Given all its failed live service experiments, including the likes of Hyper Scape and XDefiant, its easy to forget Ubisoft managed to land one of the models earliest hits, in Rainbow Six Siege.The shooter is celebrating its tenth anniversary in 2025 and continues to be very popular, with the game breaking its all-time peak player record on Steam last year.Ubisoft is now hoping to set the game up for another decade, through the Rainbow Six Siege X update, which more or less makes the experience free-to-play.After it teased an evolution for Rainbow Six Siege last month, Ubisoft has revealed that Rainbow Six Siege X is a widespread revamp, for the visuals, audio, maps, and the rappel mechanic with one key new addition.Theres now a new permanent mode called Dual Front, a 6v6 mode where you are tasked with capturing sectors of the enemy base while defending your own. This mode will launch with a new map called District, and with a smaller pool of 35 operators.While this is being added to the main game when Rainbow Six Siege X launches on June 10, new players can access the mode for free from this date too.In this new version of the game, which Ubisoft describes as free access, players can play Dual Front, Quick Match, Onboarding, Events, and Unranked with up to 26 operators for free. The more competitive Ranked and Siege Cup modes, along with more operators, will be locked behind the paid-for premium versions.One of the big changes for veterans will be the revamped maps, with Clubhouse, Chalet, Bank, Kafe, and Border all set to be overhauled with new visuals, readability, and gameplay flow. Ubisoft states each new season moving forward will see three new reworked maps.How to access the Rainbow Six Siege X betaIf you fancy trying out Dual Front before it launches in June, Ubisoft is holding a closed beta from Wednesday, March 13 to Wednesday, March 19 at 7pm UK time across PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S and PC.More TrendingTo access the beta, you have to receive a code by watching certain streamers on Twitch, which have closed beta Twitch drops enabled. You can find participating streamers on the Rainbow Six Siege Twitch channel, with most advertising it in the title.To claim your drop, you have to link your Twitch and Ubisoft accounts (there is more information on how to do so here). Those on PC will have their beta access added to the Ubisoft Connect Library, while those on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S will receive a platform-specific key they can redeem in the respective store.This revamp of Rainbow Six Siege comes at a concerning time for Ubisoft, as the company looks to Assassins Creed Shadows for aid against its financial woes and potential buyouts. Dual Front is the big new addition (Ubisoft)Emailgamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below,follow us on Twitter, andsign-up to our newsletter.To submit Inbox letters and Readers Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use ourSubmit Stuff page here.For more stories like this,check our Gaming page.GameCentralSign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content.This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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  • Silent Hill f looks just as good as Silent Hill 2 remake in creepy new trailer
    metro.co.uk
    Silent Hill f looks just as good as Silent Hill 2 remake in creepy new trailerAdam StarkeyPublished March 14, 2025 11:06amUpdated March 14, 2025 11:06am The pipe is back (Konami)Konami has released more details about the next mainline Silent Hill game, along with a promising trailer which leans into Japanese horror.After being left dormant for nearly a decade, Konami has doubled down on Silent Hill with a wave of projects over the past couple of years.Several of them so far have been very underwhelming, including Silent Hill: Ascension and Silent Hill: The Short Message, but last years Silent Hill 2 remake turned out far better than anyone expected, putting the series back on the map to some degree.Konami is hoping to capitalise on this positive momentum with Silent Hill f, which is the first mainline entry since 2012s Silent Hill: Downpour and always looked the most promising of the new games. It was first announced in October 2022, but a new Silent Hill Transmission broadcast has shed more light on what to expect.Silent Hill f is developed by Taiwanese studio NeoBards Entertainment, who have worked on several games as a support studio but are otherwise known only for unloved Resident Evil multiplayer spin-offs, Resident Evil: ReVerse and Resident Evil: Resistance.As shown in the new trailer, the game is set in Japan and not in Silent Hill itself, which is usually portrayed as being in Maine, US. Although youd never guess from the visuals or dialogue, The Short Message was set in Germany, so this may suggest that future Silent Hill games will be set in a variety of worldwide locations.Either way, everything else hits the Silent Hill beats youd expect, with overlapping worlds, plenty of fog, creepy monsters, and most importantly, combat with a steel pipe. Although the weird, vein like plants are definitely something new.The games protagonist is teenager Shimizu Hanako, who finds her town of Ebisugaoka (based on a real location called Kanayama in Japan) suddenly covered in fog. A synopsis reads: Shimizu Hinako was living her life as an ordinary teenager. That is, until her town is suddenly shrouded in fog and begins to change in a horrific way.Now, she must explore a town she no longer recognises while solving puzzles, fighting strange enemies, and doing everything she can to survive in order to face the ultimate decision that she must make. This is a tale about a beautiful yet terrifying choice.Its unclear what this choice is, but Silent Hill series producer Motoi Okamoto described the main concept behind Silent Hill f as find the beauty in terror. Its a standalone story, but Okamoto said there will be Easter eggs to past games along the way.On the games official website, a content warning gives an indication of what Silent Hill f will cover. This game contains depictions of gender discrimination, child abuse, bullying, drug-induced hallucinations, torture, and graphic violence, it reads.The game is set in Japan in the 1960s and contains depictions based on the customs and culture of that time. These depictions do not reflect the opinions or values of the developers or any individuals involved. Silent Hill f is a story about the beauty in terror (Konami)Silent Hill f is written by Ryukishi07, who is known for the When They Cry visual novel games, most notably Higurashi When They Cry, a Japanese horror mystery which has been adapted into a manga and live action films.Speaking about Silent Hill f during the presentation, Ryukishi07 said: This game was both a return to Silent Hills origins as well as a series of new challenges. An easy example of a challenge we faced is whether we can still make Silent Hill work while departing from the titular town.Naturally, from a creators standpoint, I feel I can confidently say that what weve made is a Silent Hill game. However, were interested in seeing how long-time fans of the series feel after playing, and if they agree.More TrendingSilent Hill 2 composer Akira Yamaoka will return to compose the music for the fog world in Silent Hill f, while the overworld music is by Kensuke Inage.Overall, it looks pretty promising, although it remains to be seen if it will come together under a developer which hasnt released a major original game before.There is no release date yet for Silent Hill f, so it might some time away, but its set to be released on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC.As for other Silent Hill games, Konami is also developing a spin-off game called Silent Hill: Townfall, which is part of a planned anthology series. Shimizu Hanako is the new protagonist (Konami)Emailgamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below,follow us on Twitter, andsign-up to our newsletter.To submit Inbox letters and Readers Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use ourSubmit Stuff page here.For more stories like this,check our Gaming page.GameCentralSign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content.This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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  • DJI Power 1000 Portable Power Station Is at Its Lowest Price on Amazon for a Limited Time
    gizmodo.com
    A portable power station is such a handy thing to have. Its a useful gadget to just keep in your car in the event of an emergency like if you find yourself out of gas on the side of the road. Or just having a power outage at home where you can just grab it from the car or garage to make sure everyones phones are staying charged while you wait it out. Let me direct your eyes to the DJI Power 1000 a portable power station currently part of a limited time deal at Amazon. Typically, this miniature generator goes for $999, but right now its price has been slashed by 58% bringing it down to just $419. Thats $480 youre saving.See at AmazonOutdoor Activities or Emergency SituationsDuring a blackout, youll want to be able to power some of the essentials in your home. It sucks to need to dump out an entire fridge worth of food because it all spoiled when it lost power. The DJI Power 1000 can work as a household standby battery for exactly these situations. You can keep a standard refrigerator running for about 45 hours when plugged into this power station. Additionally, you can get Wi-Fi back, powering your router for nearly 80 hours.Its silent when it works too. Operating at a low level of just 23 dB, it can charge your devices quieter than a whisper. The DJI power station has been certified by five SGS noise tests to guarantee no disturbance, allowing for peace and quiet on your next serene camping trip.The DJI Power 1000 is safe, reliable, and designed to last. It can support up to 4,000 cycles which roughly works out to a service life of 10 years.Go ahead and prepare yourself for either your next big trip or surprise emergency. The DJI Power 1000 power station is down to just $419 from its original price of $999. Thats a savings of $480 for a limited time.See at Amazon
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  • How Trumps Trade War Will Make Your Groceries Even More Expensive
    gizmodo.com
    Ayurella Horn-Muller, Grist Published March 14, 2025 | Comments (1) | Shopping for groceries during times of inflation. Ashley Grise/Shutterstock Life these days is expensive. The lingering effects of the pandemic, Russias invasion of Ukraine, higher fuel and energy prices, and extreme weather shocks throttling the supply chain have conspired to make many everyday necessities much less affordable. Rising food costs in particular have become a source of financial stress for millions of U.S. households. Though overall inflation has cooled from a record peak in 2022, food prices increased nearly a quarter over the last four years and are expected to continue to climb. So far this year, Americans have faced a nationwide bird flu outbreak, propelling the cost of eggs to record levels, while rising temperatures and erratic rainfall across Western Africa are escalating chocolate prices to new highs. Years of drought in the U.S. have also contributed to historically low levels of cattle inventories, hiking up beef prices. The result is skyrocketing supermarket bills, tighter household budgets, and dwindling access to food. President Donald Trumps latest trade decisions arent likely to help the situation. Amid a flood of announcements about federal funding freezes, food program terminations, and mass government layoffs, the president has been issuing on-again, off-again sanctions aimed at the United States biggest trading partners. In the span of a single week, he enacted blanket tariffs against goods from Mexico, Canada, and China, exempted some products under the United States-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, and then doubled tariffs on China before threatening a new set of taxes on Canadian products. On Tuesday, he ordered his administration to double duties on Canadian steel and aluminum imports, which he subsequently walked back to 25 percent before those snapped into effect Wednesday morning, prompting immediate retaliation levies from Canada and the European Union. The pendulum-like nature of Trumps trade policies, economists told Grist, almost certainly means higher grocery store prices. It has already spooked financial markets and prompted major retailers like Targets CEO Brian Cornell to warn that if some of the promised tariffs go into effect, customers could see sticker shock for fresh produce within days. When it comes to extreme weather shocks, which are destroying our supply chains, climate change is increasing prices and creating food inflation, said Seungki Lee, an agricultural economist at Ohio State University. If policymakers dont fully account for that by adjusting trade policies, he said, then to some degree, we will see the compounding impacts of tariffs and climate change-related shocks on the supply chain.Tariffs, or taxes charged on goods imported from other countries, are typically a negotiation tactic waged by governments in a game of international trade, with consumers and producers caught in the crosshairs. When goods enter a country, tariffs are calculated as a percentage of their value and paid by the importer. The importer may then choose to pass on the cost to consumers, which, in the case of something like fresh fruit grown in Mexico, often ends up being everyday people. Given the extent of the United States dependence on Canada, Mexico, and China for agricultural trade, farmers, analysts, business leaders, policymakers, and the general public have all raised concerns over the effect of tariffs on grocery store prices and the possibility of trade wars slowing economic growth. During the first Trump term, levies on China triggered retaliatory tariffs that decimated agricultural exports and commodity prices, costing the U.S. agricultural industry more than $27 billion, which the government then had to cover with subsidy payouts. To date, the U.S. has not fully recovered its loss in market share of soybean exports to China, its biggest agricultural export market. An analysis by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit organization, found that the 2018 trade war with China was largely passed through as increases in U.S. prices, reducing consumers income by about $1.4 billion per month. Rural agricultural sectors in the Midwest and the mountain west were hit harder by Chinas retaliatory tariffs than most others, the analysis found.This time around, Trump appears to have doubled down on the tactic, though the demands and messaging of his tariff policy have remained wildly unpredictable, with economists dubbing the president an agent of chaos and confusion. All told, China, Canada, and Mexico supplied roughly 40 percent of the goods the U.S. imported last year. In 2023, Mexico alone was the source of about two-thirds of vegetables imported to the U.S., nearly half fruit and nut imports, and about 90 percent of avocados consumed nationwide. Without factoring in any retaliatory tariffs, estimates suggest that the levies imposed by Trump last week could amount to an average tax increase of anywhere between $830 a year and $1,072 per U.S. household. Im a little nervous about the increase in tension, said Lee. It could lead to an immediate shock in supermarket prices. Canada and China have since responded with tariffs of their own. Canadas tariffs imposed last week amounted to nearly $21 billion on U.S. goods, including orange juice, peanut butter, and coffee. China imposed 15 percent levies on wheat, corn, and chicken produced by U.S. farmers, in addition to 10 percent tariffs on products including soybeans, pork, beef, and fruitthat went into effect on Monday. Meanwhile, Mexico planned to announce retaliatory tariffs but instead celebrated Trumps decision to postpone. On Wednesday, in response to Trumps steel and aluminum tariff hike, Canadian officials announced a second $20.7 billion wave of duties and the European Union declared it would begin retaliatory trade action next month for a range of U.S. industrial and farm goods that includes sugar, beef, eggs, poultry, peanut butter, and bourbon.With Trumps planned tariffs, Americans can expect to see fresh produce shipped from Mexico such as tomatoes, strawberries, avocados, limes, mangos, and papayas, as well as types of tequila and beer become more expensive. Other agricultural products sourced from Canada, including fertilizer, chocolate, canola oil, maple syrup, and pork are also likely to see cost hikes. New duties on potash, a key ingredient in fertilizer, and steel used in agricultural machinery coming from Canada could also indirectly elevate food prices. Many of these products, such as avocados, vegetable oils, cocoa, and mangoes, are already seeing surging price tags in part because of rising temperatures. Though theres no shortage of questions surrounding Trumps tariff policy right now, James Sayre, an agricultural economist at the University of California, Davis, said that even this current state of international trade uncertainty will lead to a higher grocery cost burden for consumers.All of this uncertainty is really bad for businesses hoping to import, or establish new supply chains abroad, or for any large-scale investment, said Sayre. Just this degree of uncertainty will increase prices for consumers and reduce consumer choice at the supermarket even more than tariffs themselves. All the while, climate change continues to fuel food inflation, leaving American consumers to foot the bill of a warming world and the cascading effects of an administration seemingly set on upending global trade relations. It is actually a little bit hard to anticipate what we can expect from the current administration when we are seeing the burden of food inflation by tariffs or trade, and also at the same time, we have climate-related shocks on the supply chain, said Lee. Hopefully we will not see an unexpected compounding effect by these two very different animals.This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/food-and-agriculture/what-trumps-escalating-trade-wars-mean-for-your-grocery-bill/.Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org. Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By AJ Dellinger Published March 12, 2025 By AJ Dellinger Published March 11, 2025 By AJ Dellinger Published March 5, 2025 By AJ Dellinger Published March 5, 2025 By Thomas Maxwell Published March 3, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published February 28, 2025
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