Monday, 4 May 2026

Exclusive-Meta targets May 20 for first wave of layoffs

 

Exclusive-Meta targets May 20 for first wave of layoffs; additional cuts later in 2026

By Katie Paul and Jeff Horwitz

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO, April 17 (Reuters) - Meta intends to conduct a first wave of sweeping layoffs planned for this year on May 20, with more coming later, three sources ‌familiar with the plans told Reuters.

The Facebook and Instagram owner will lay off about 10% of its global ‌workforce, or close to 8,000 employees, in that initial round, one of the sources said.

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The company is planning further layoffs in the second half of ​the year, the three sources said, although details of those cuts, including date and size, were not yet settled. Executives may adjust their plans as they observe developments in artificial intelligence capabilities, the sources added.

Reuters reported last month that the company was planning to lay off 20% or more of its global workforce.

Meta declined to comment on the timing or scope of planned cuts.

CEO Mark ‌Zuckerberg is pumping hundreds of billions of ⁠dollars into AI as he seeks to dramatically reshape his company’s inner workings around the technology, reflecting a broader pattern among major U.S. companies this year, particularly in the tech sector.

Amazon.com similarly ⁠has trimmed 30,000 corporate employees in recent months, representing nearly 10% of its white-collar workers, while in February the fintech company Block chopped nearly half of its staff.

In both of those cases, executives tied the cuts to efficiency gains from artificial intelligence.

Layoffs.fyi, a website tracking ​tech ​job cuts around the world, reported that 73,212 employees have lost their ​jobs so far this year. For all of 2024, ‌the figure was 153,000.

Meta's layoffs this year will be the social media giant's most significant since a restructuring in late 2022 and early 2023 that it dubbed the "year of efficiency," when it eliminated about 21,000 jobs. At that time, Meta's stock was in freefall and the company was struggling to correct for COVID-era growth assumptions that ultimately proved unsustainable.

The company is in a more comfortable financial position this time, but executives envision a future of fewer management layers and greater efficiency brought ‌about by AI-assisted workers.

Meta's shares are up 3.68% since the start of ​the year, although they are down from a record high achieved last ​summer. Last year, it generated more than $200 billion of ​revenue and achieved a $60 billion profit despite outsized spending on artificial intelligence.

Menlo Park, California-based Meta employed nearly ‌79,000 people as of December 31, according to ​its latest filing.

Sunday, 3 May 2026

TSMC first-quarter profit rises 58%,

TSMC first-quarter profit rises 58%, beats estimates as AI demand fuels record run
Published Thu, Apr 16 20261:52 AM EDTUpdated 4 Hours Ago

Dylan Butts@in/dylan-b-7a451a107
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Key Points
TSMC posted a 58% profit jump, driven by strong AI chip demand.
Revenue beat forecasts, marking a fourth straight quarterly record.
TSMC said advanced chips accounted for about 75% of total wafer revenue in the quarter.


Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s logo is seen in the background beside a printed circuit board.
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images


Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company on Thursday reported a 58% increase in first-quarter profit, beating estimates and hitting a fresh record as demand for artificial intelligence chips stayed strong.

Here are the company’s results versus LSEG SmartEstimates, which are weighted toward forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate:Revenue: 1.134 trillion new Taiwan dollars ($35 billion), vs. NT$1.127 trillion expected
Net income: NT$572.48 billion, vs. NT$543.32 billion


TSMC’s net income of NT$572.48 billion for the three months ended in March represented a fourth consecutive quarter of record profits.

Revenue rose to NT$1.134 trillion, beating estimates. The chipmaker had first reported the 35% year-on-year rise in first-quarter revenue last week.

TSMC, Asia’s largest technology company by market capitalization, manufactures chips used in products ranging from consumer electronics to data centers.

The contract chip maker has maintained strong demand for advanced semiconductors from its key customers, such as Apple. It has also benefited greatly from the proliferation of AI, producing advanced processors designed by the likes of Nvidia — now the company’s largest customer.

“AI-related demand continues to be extremely robust,” President and CEO of TSMC C.C. Wei said in an earnings call Thursday. He added that advances in AI are driving increased computation and, thus, demand.


Wei noted that TSMC has received strong signals and a positive outlook from customers, reinforcing its conviction in a multi-year AI growth trend.

TSMC forecast full-year 2026 revenue growth of more than 30% year over year in U.S. dollar terms. Meanwhile, it projected second-quarter revenue of $39 billion to $40.2 billion, representing a 10% sequential increase.

This comes as the company faces concerns about supply chain disruptions linked to the Middle East conflict, including disruptions to energy supplies and key manufacturing materials such as helium and hydrogen.

In the earnings call, TSMC executives said the chipmaker does not expect any near-term impact on its operations from recent energy and supply chain disruptions from the conflict in the Middle East.

The company added that it sources specialty chemicals and gases, including helium and hydrogen, from multiple sources and has a safety inventory.
Growing advanced chip capacity


TSMC’s high-performance computing division, which includes AI and 5G applications, accounted for the majority of sales in the first quarter, rising to 61% of revenue.

Meanwhile, the company said advanced chips, defined as 7-nanometer or smaller, made up about 74% of TSMC’s total wafer revenue in the quarter. Shipments of advanced chips under 3-nanometers accounted for 25%.

In semiconductor technology, smaller nanometer sizes signify more compact transistor designs, which lead to greater processing power and efficiency.

During the Thursday earnings call, executives said the company was adding an advanced chip fabrication plant in Tainan, Taiwan, as part of its global capacity expansion efforts.

William Li, senior analyst at Counterpoint Research, told CNBC that AI chip demand has pushed TSMC’s manufacturing capacity to its limits.

“The narrative for 2026 is as much about resource constraints as it is about growth. Demand still significantly outpaces supply and isn’t showing any major sign of slowing down,” Li said.

“We expect this sold-out environment to remain a defining characteristic of the semiconductor industry throughout 2026, as semiconductor companies simply can’t keep products on their shelves,” he added.

At its last earnings call in ​January, the company said it expected capital spending this year to rise as much as 37% to between $52 billion and $56 billion, reflecting its expansion efforts and an expectation that demand will remain strong. The company said Thursday it now expects capex to be at the high end of that range.

Saturday, 2 May 2026

Anthropic’s latest AI model strikes fear into banks

 Anthropic’s latest AI model strikes fear into banks

Close crop of a 100 dollar bill disintegrating into pixels, with Ben Franklin's face obscured a bit so his eyes are visible.

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An impromptu meeting of bank CEOs and federal officials was held in the nation’s capital this week because of the destructive capabilities of Anthropic’s latest AI model, Claude Mythos, which can detect cybersecurity flaws in operating systems and web browsers with exponentially greater efficiency than human hackers.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent gathered the heads of Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo on Tuesday after the limited rollout of Mythos, per Bloomberg. The emergency meeting is a sign that the Trump administration thinks that, while Mythos is intended to protect companies from hackers, it could be used to attack the foundation of the US financial system by targeting the world’s biggest banks.

What’s so scary?

Anthropic distributed Mythos to only ~40 organizations, which include major banks, according to Bloomberg, because the company said it’s too powerful for a full release to the public. CNBC reported that the company also briefed government officials on its capabilities before the release. So, how dangerous is it?

  • Officials believe Mythos can debilitate Fortune 100 companies, infiltrate national defense systems, and take down huge chunks of the internet, according to Axios.
  • A security expert told Business Insider that a team of humans can discover about 100 critical flaws with no immediate fixes per year (not including what happens on bad first dates), but Mythos can find “thousands.”

Offense vs. defense: Mythos is equally capable of identifying and exploiting weaknesses in a system. Experts told BI that this gives hackers an advantage in the short term. But as widespread adoption occurs, the edge shifts back to those defending themselves.

Safety net: Regulators require banks to hold capital in reserve to cover unexpected losses from events such as data breaches and cyberattacks. But banks have complained that they require too much, and a proposal from the Fed last month, if approved, would ease some of those requirements.

Zoom out: The concerns over Mythos come as Anthropic is fighting the Trump administration over being designated a supply chain risk by the Pentagon after limiting the use of its AI tech in war.

Friday, 1 May 2026

Netflix wants you scrolling clips on your phone

  Netflix wants you scrolling clips on your phone

Netflix

Nick Iluzada

Netflix is finally acknowledging that most people looking to kill time while waiting for the bus would rather scroll 30-second videos than watch The Irishman. The streaming service launched a short-form vertical video feed called Clips as part of an app revamp unveiled in the US and eight other countries yesterday.

While it sounds like Netflix is entering TikTok’s turf, the streamer insists that Clips won’t be the place to witness a day in the life of a 28-year-old who works in private equity in New York. Instead, Netflix’s algorithmic feed serves clips from the shows and movies in its content library to help viewers discover new titles:

  • Eventually, it’ll also feature clips from podcasts, a content genre Netflix has invested heavily into in recent months, as well as live events.
  • The streamer will soon let users choose collections of video genres they want to watch, like romance and reality TV.

Big picture: Netflix says Clips is meant to meet people where they’re at—namely, on their phones—to command their eyeballs when they’re not in front of a TV. Netflix’s streaming rivals Peacock and Disney+ also recently launched vertical video feeds.

Ottawa announces multinational defence bank to be headquartered in Canada

Ottawa announces multinational defence bank to be headquartered in Canada
By Staff The Canadian Press
Posted April 30, 2026 6:14 am
Updated April 30, 2026 3:06 pm
2 min read




WATCH: NATO's 1st-of-its-kind multinational defence bank to be headquartered in Canada
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Canada has been selected to host a multinational bank to provide “long-term, low-cost financing” for defence projects by NATO members and allies, the federal government said Wednesday.

The Globe and Mail newspaper first reported the decision following the end of multinational negotiations earlier Wednesday that were hosted in Montreal.

A news release issued late Wednesday says the defence bank will allow member countries, including Canada, to leverage shared resources to “meet today’s defence challenges.”

National Defence Minister David McGuinty, in the release, called it a “resilient and responsive defence industrial base — for Canada and our allies.”

A source with direct knowledge told The Canadian Press there’s still a lot to discuss and sort through — and cautioned there’s still a world in which it doesn’t happen.

Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver and Montreal are all competing to have the Defence, Security and Resilience Bank located in their jurisdictions.


12:45NATO ‘should not get involved’ in Iran: former Canadian NATO Ambassador

Canada’s Big Six banks have all put their support behind the proposed international defence financing vehicle, which would be aimed at lowering borrowing costs for military spending.
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The Canadian Chamber of Commerce applauded the news, saying the defence industry is a major economic driver and will become a growing force as it attracts more investment.

Accuracy of Google’s AI Overviews

 Accuracy of Google’s AI Overviews

The More You Know ilustration with Gemini logo

Morning Brew Design

When you Google “do dogs know math?” and other important questions as you lie in bed at night, Google’s AI Overviews will provide an accurate response about 90% of the time, according to new research from the AI startup Oumi. While that seems pretty good, there are caveats:

  • Since Google processes trillions of searches per year, 90% accuracy still equates to tens of millions of inaccuracies per hour (or hundreds of thousands per minute), the New York Times noted.
  • More than half of accurate responses linked to sources that did not actually support the information.
  • The second- and fourth-most-cited sources were...Facebook and Reddit.

Google concedes that AI Overviews aren’t always accurate and encourages users to double check the info. And, for the record, dogs do possess a rudimentary understanding of math (I learned that from Google’s AI Overview).

Thursday, 30 April 2026

The fight against data centers is escalating

 The fight against data centers is escalating

Growing movement to ban data centers

Jim West/Getty Images

Yesterday, 13 bullets were fired at the home of an Indianapolis city councilor who recently supported the construction of a data center in his district, the latest chapter in the growing backlash against the controversial buildings that power AI.

The elected official, Ron Gibson, said that a note left at the scene (where no one was physically harmed) read “No Data Centers.” The attack came days after he voted in favor of a data center project in an Indianapolis neighborhood where many locals had fought against it.

Maine and other states are pushing back

The state known for lobster and “oh, you mean that Portland” is expected to pass legislation this spring that would place a moratorium on data centers that consume more than 20 megawatts—a rebuke of the swelling energy costs that come with these computing factories. Other states are considering similar measures:

  • Statewide bans are on the table in nine states; Pennsylvania would make 10 if it proposes one of its own, which is expected.
  • Activists in Ohio are collecting signatures to get a statewide ban on the ballot in November.
  • Two states—South Dakota and Wisconsin—have rejected proposed bans on new data centers.

And that’s not all. Residents in Port Washington, WI, voted yesterday on a measure that would stop future data center development in the town of ~12,000 people. There are at least three other municipalities around the country that will consider something similar this year.

Big picture: While evidence shows that data centers can be environmental hazards (a new study says that they create heat islands within a 6-mile radius that can cause pollution and deaths), they are also job creators. The response to the bill in Maine, where a Senate seat is up for grabs in November, could serve as a “canary in the coal mine” for officials in other locales, according to a construction trade group that spoke to the Wall Street Journal.

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Income taxes are highest in these states

 

Tuesday, 28 April 2026

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Anonymous Sources Detail Sam Altman’s Alleged Untrustworthiness in New Report

Anonymous Sources Detail Sam Altman’s Alleged Untrustworthiness in New Report

Anonymous Sources Detail Sam Altman’s Alleged Untrustworthiness in New Report
"I think there's a small but real chance he's eventually remembered as a Bernie Madoff- or Sam Bankman-Fried-level scammer."
BY ECE YILDIRIMPUBLISHED APRIL 6, 2026, 7:00 PM ET

READING TIME 5 MINUTES

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at the Blackrock Infrastructure Summit held In Washington, Dc © Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
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On Monday, The New Yorker published a lengthy investigation detailing the days leading up to and following Sam Altman’s brief ousting as OpenAI’s CEO.

Back in late 2023, OpenAI’s board of directors shocked Silicon Valley by firing Sam Altman seemingly out of the blue. Following a five-day media blitz by Altman and his supporters and a public letter demanding his return, Altman came back to the company as CEO. The board members who had orchestrated the coup were ousted and replaced with Altman allies such as economist Larry Summers and former Facebook CTO Bret Taylor, who is currently the chairman of the board at OpenAI.


When Altman was reinstated as CEO, OpenAI employees began referring to the turbulent few days as “the Blip,” in reference to the blip in the Marvel Cinematic Universe when the supervillain Thanos made half the world’s population disappear for five years.

According to the New Yorker report, citing interviews with dozens of people in the know, including Altman himself, the OpenAI executive was ousted because his own board members did not find him trustworthy enough to “have his finger on the button” of artificial superintelligence, a theoretical and highly contested super-powered future AI system that could outperform human intelligence on all fronts. The term is sometimes used interchangeably with artificial general intelligence (AGI), although it describes a step even beyond that.

Following secret memos sent to fellow board members by OpenAI’s then-chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, the board reportedly compiled a roughly seventy-page document evidencing Altman’s “consistent pattern” of lying, including about internal safety protocols.

The report says that Altman’s alleged history of lying extends to a time before OpenAI as well. According to the investigation, senior employees at Altman’s previous startup, a now-defunct location-sharing service called Loopt, asked the board to fire him as CEO due to concerns with his lack of transparency.

The accusations followed him to startup accelerator Y Combinator, which Altman led for five years until he was removed due to mistrust, according to the sources cited in the article. Y Combinator leadership has said that he wasn’t fired but was only asked to choose between the startup accelerator and OpenAI. The late hacktivist and former Reddit co-owner Aaron Swartz, who was in Altman’s cohort when he first joined Y Combinator as an entrepreneur with Loopt, allegedly described him as “a sociopath” who could “never be trusted.”

At OpenAI, Altman was accused of lying to executives and even to government officials. The report details an instance in which Altman told U.S. intelligence officials that China had launched a major AGI development project and asked for government funding to launch a counteroffensive, but then failed to show any evidence when asked.

The report also details instances of Altman allegedly gaslighting Anthropic co-founder and then-OpenAI employee Dario Amodei regarding a provision in the billion-dollar Microsoft deal OpenAI signed in 2019 that would override the altruistic clauses Amodei had included in the charter for the company. The clause in question was about AGI, and posited that if another company found a way to build it safely, then OpenAI would “stop competing with and start assisting this project,” as a non-profit with a safety-first objective. OpenAI has since changed its structure to become a for-profit corporation.

Even some Microsoft senior executives, with whom OpenAI has had a long partnership since the 2019 deal, described Altman as someone who “misrepresented, distorted, renegotiated, reneged on agreements.” One senior executive even apparently said this of Altman: “I think there’s a small but real chance he’s eventually remembered as a Bernie Madoff- or Sam Bankman-Fried-level scammer.”

Those are alarming words to read about any executive in charge of a company as large and consequential as OpenAI, but they have even more weight considering that OpenAI is the leading company creating a technology that many, including its early employees, have defined as a possible existential threat to humanity.

Under Sam Altman’s leadership, OpenAI’s technology has infiltrated pretty much all aspects of modern life. OpenAI’s AI is used by tens of millions of people around the world for health advice, and by numerous others for everything from automating work across industries to finishing homework for students and even offering murky companionship to some lonely people who seek it. ChatGPT is used throughout the federal government as well, and Altman has also recently sold the technology to the Pentagon.

This is all fueled by Altman’s salesmanship. He has sold the potential and purported realities of ChatGPT to so many people, leading to an unprecedented and potentially fragile dealmaking spree that has garnered so much investment that some experts say it is propping up the entire American economy right now.

The New Yorker report also claims that Altman assured the board that GPT-4 had been approved by a safety panel, which turned out to be a misrepresentation when a board member requested documentation of the approvals. Sutskever claimed in the memos that Altman also downplayed the need for safety approvals in conversation with former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, citing the company’s general counsel. But when Murati asked the general counsel about it, he said he was “confused where sam got that impression.”

The accusations around ChatGPT’s safety features are particularly damning, considering the fallout of GPT-4o, the iteration of ChatGPT that followed GPT-4. The model’s knack for sycophancy reportedly caused instances of “AI psychosis” in vulnerable users, with some cases ending in fatalities.

Some of Altman’s inconsistencies have been well-documented publicly, too. Time and again, the OpenAI chief has published contradictory statements on things like the merits of putting ads in AI chatbots, the need for AI regulation, or whether ChatGPT’s voice feature unveiled in 2024 was inspired by Scarlett Johansson’s performance in the movie “Her.” Altman was also scrutinized recently over a whopping $100 billion Nvidia deal that just did not materialize as initially announced.

The report also details how the company’s culture vastly changed following Altman’s reinstatement as CEO. Before “the Blip,” the company had approached the concept of AGI cautiously, while after, AGI reportedly became a North Star for the company, with slogans like “feel the AGI” seen on merchandise around its offices. The alleged difference was seen in practice, too, as OpenAI disbanded some key teams focusing on chatbot safety, like the existential AI risk team and the superalignment team, which was co-led by Sutskever.

The report comes as Altman’s leadership is put under a microscope as the company begins preparing for a potential IPO.

According to a recent The Information report, Altman seems to be at odds with executives once again, this time regarding OpenAI’s readiness for an IPO. Altman reportedly wants to go public as soon as the fourth quarter of this year and is committing to spend $600 billion in the next five years despite expectations that OpenAI will burn more than $200 billion before it starts making money. Meanwhile, the report claims that OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar does not believe the company is ready to go public this year at all, due to the risky spending commitments. Unlike Altman, Friar reportedly does not yet believe that OpenAI’s revenue growth can support its financial commitments, nor is she certain that the company will even need to pour that much money into AI servers.

Monday, 27 April 2026

Social Media Users are Less Active on Platforms Due to Rise of Short-Form Video | PetaPixel

Social Media Users are Less Active on Platforms Due to Rise of Short-Form Video | PetaPixel

Social Media Users are Less Active on Platforms Due to Rise of Short-Form Video

A woman lies on a gray couch in a dimly lit room, smiling as she looks at her smartphone, which emits a soft light onto her face.

A new study revealed that U.K. social media users are less active due to the dominance of short-form video on the most popular platforms — in a trend that’s likely reflected across the Western world.

In a report published Thursday, Ofcom examined trends in adults’ social media habits and online behavior over the past year. The regulator’s latest survey, conducted between September 29 and November 28, gathered responses from 7,533 U.K. adults aged 16 and over on how they use social media, access news, and think about digital privacy, among other topics.

The findings show a notable drop in active participation. Just under half of adult social media users (49%) say they now post, share, or comment on platforms such as Instagram, Facebook, and X, down from 61% the previous year. The proportion of users exploring new websites has also declined, from 70% to 56%.

Ofcom says the decrease in active use appears to be linked to the growing influence of video-focused features and platforms, as well as concerns about the long-term impact of past posts on personal accounts.

Joseph Oxlade, senior research manager at Ofcom, tells The Guardian that the rise of video apps such as TikTok and Instagram’s Reels feature meant some users were posting and commenting less than they previously did on platforms like Facebook.

Despite this shift, overall social media use remains widespread. The report found that 89% of adult internet users in the UK use at least one social media platform, rising to 97% among those aged 16 to 34. The study also found that users are also becoming more selective about what they share. Concerns about data privacy, including the misuse of personal information such as photos, have contributed to changes in behavior, Oxlade tells The Guardian.

Some users have stopped posting altogether, while others are opting for less permanent forms of content. The report found that more people are choosing features like Instagram Stories instead of permanent grid posts, pointing to an increase in more “passive” forms of social media use.

Worries about future consequences are also growing. Nearly half of adults (49%) said they are concerned their posts could cause problems later in life, up from 43% a year earlier.

Social media expert Matt Navarra tells the BBC that the trend may reflect a shift toward what he described as “digital self-preservation,” with users moving to smaller, more private spaces such as group chats and direct messages.

“People haven’t fallen out of love with social media, I think they’ve just become a lot more intentional about how they show up on it,” Navarra says.

Sunday, 26 April 2026

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How much money does the US federal government collect?

   How much money does the US federal government collect?  Federal revenue has increased 2.5 times from FY 1980 to 2025 (adjusted for inflat...