Saturday, 4 April 2026

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

Waymo takes great pains to never describe its vehicles as giving up autonomy completely. Tesla doesn't seem to care.
BY 

READING TIME 3 MINUTES

 COMMENTS (20)

Tesla robotaxis are not necessarily operating without a human in the loop, even its small number of unsupervised robotaxis that lack safety operators. If you’re a self-driving car fan, that reflects a deflating fact of life about the current state of autonomous vehicles: the companies operating them still don’t trust them on the roads without occasional button pushes from a flesh-and-blood human sitting at a desk somewhere.

But Tesla appears to be unique among its competitors when it comes to the extent to which its vehicles occasionally rely on humans. That is to say: they occasionally surrender control to them completely.

Karen Steakley, director of public policy and business development at Tesla, recently divulged this in a letter to Senator Ed Markey, a Democrat representing Massachusetts (as first reported by Wired). Human operators, Steakley wrote, “are authorized to temporarily assume direct vehicle control as the final escalation maneuver after all other available intervention actions have been exhausted.”

Competitors like Waymo say they allow humans to play a role in the operation of a vehicle on the road, but a more limited one, and they take great pains to make this distinction. Waymo’s description of what went wrong last year when its vehicles seemed to have a widespread meltdown during a blackout in San Francisco touched on this, for instance.

The issue involved a large number of Waymo vehicles encountering four-way stoplights that were blacked out, and sending an unmanageable number of confirmation requests to human workers with Waymo’s “fleet response” division, which we now know is largely based in the Philippines.

According to Waymo’s public relations materials online, rather than, say, “steering” the vehicle remotely, perhaps with a joystick, fleet response workers see camera feeds and 3D representations of the Waymo vehicle’s position within its environment and give feedback. They might simply have to click an answer to a question like Is the street I’m trying to turn onto closed? Or they might suggest a new course of action for getting out of a jam, like pulling into a driveway to let others pass.

They do this in a way that is a bit like telling a unit what to do in a real-time strategy video game, except Waymo insists that the “Waymo Driver”—the hardware and software system that drives the car—can refuse the human suggestion, meaning it never surrenders executive control.

Steakley makes it pretty clear that Tesla lacks Waymo’s compunctions about seizing the car’s autonomy entirely. Tesla employs “remote assistance operators” (RAOs) in Austin, Texas and Palo Alto, California in order to “promptly move a vehicle that may be in a compromising position,” she told Markey in the letter. A human might take “temporary control of the vehicle,” and remotely move it up to 10 miles-per-hour, she explained.

This only happens “if direct access is granted by the Tesla [automated driving system].” Though she also notes that if a rider requests help, they may end up communicating with a Tesla RAO “via bidirectional audio.”

RAOs must also, according to Steakley:

  • have a “valid U.S. driver’s license for a minimum of 3 years”
  • “maintain a license and clean driving record throughout their employment.”
  • “undergo criminal background and Motor Vehicle Record checks”
  • “pass a U.S. Department of Transportation drug test”

Markey issued a report Tuesday, after receiving similar letters in response to  questions about remote operation in these vehicles not just from Tesla and Waymo, but also five other competitors. Markey believes the responses reflect a “patchwork of safety practices across the industry, with significant variation in operator qualifications, response times, and overseas staffing, all without any federal standards governing these operations.”

Gizmodo reached out to Tesla and Waymo about these letters, and about Markey’s report. We will update this article if we hear back.

Vivaldi 7.9 for Mobile is a big one

 What's better than fantastic, usually comes 7 days after a Vivaldi desktop release and is likely to make you and your mobile smile? It’s a Vivaldi mobile release!

Vivaldi 7.9 for Mobile is a big one. iOS users finally get a signature Vivaldi feature Android fans have enjoyed for years, Two-Level Tab Stacks! Both Android and iOS get the daily image feature, to add some sparkle to your day. Android users also get a taste of Desktop Mode.

Let's dive into what's new:


iOS: Stack up, switch over, and make it yours


Two-Level Tab Stacks arrive on iOS

It's here. The feature Android users have been putting to work since 2021 has finally made its way to Vivaldi on iOS.

Two-Level Tab Stacks let you group your tabs and see them all at once, no more scrolling through an endless single row. Your stacks sit in the top row of the Tab Bar, and the tabs inside that stack appear in the row below. Open what you need, hide what you don't. The second row only appears when you're inside a stack, so things stay clean when you just want to browse.



If you've ever found yourself drowning in tabs (research, shopping, planning a trip, keeping up with news), you'll immediately get why this matters. You can keep everything open without losing your mind. Work tabs in one stack, weekend reading in another. Each group is tidy, accessible, and right there in your Tab Bar.

To get started, long-press the New Tab button and choose "New Tab Stack." You can choose between two styles of tab stacking: Two-Level or Accordion. To pick your style, go to Settings > Tabs > Tab Stacking Style.



No other mobile browser offers this. We built it for Android first, refined it based on your feedback over the years, and now it's yours on iOS too.


A new view, every day

The Daily Image has always been one of those small things that makes Vivaldi feel a little more alive. Every day, a new photograph appears on your Start Page, something beautiful, something unexpected, something worth a second look.



In Vivaldi 7.9 for iOS, you can take it one step further. There's now an option to use your Daily Image directly as your wallpaper. Your Start Page and your home screen, in perfect sync, both dressed in the same image, refreshed every day without any effort from you.

It's a small thing, but it makes your phone feel a bit more like yours.

You can enable Daily Image from the Start Page:

Tap the three dots or Customize button > Use Daily Image

or from Settings:

Settings > Start Page > Wallpaper > Use Daily Image


Import from Safari in seconds

Switching browsers shouldn't feel like starting from scratch. In Vivaldi 7.9 for iOS, it doesn't have to.



You can now import your browsing data directly from Safari. Bring your bookmarks, passwords, history, stored credit card info and more, right into Vivaldi. If Safari has been your default, everything you've built up there can come with you. It takes a mere moment, and you'll feel right at home.

To import from Safari, go to Settings and there you’ll find the option “Safari import".

If you've been curious about trying Vivaldi but held back because of the friction of moving over, that friction is now gone.


Android: A beautiful daily image and Desktop Mode improvements


Daily Image comes to Android

The Daily Image feature is now on Vivaldi for Android. Every day, a new photograph fills your Start Page, curated, beautiful, and a welcome change from the usual blank slate.



Your Start Page has always been the place where browsing begins. Now it's worth a proper look.


Put your mobile to work with DeX and Desktop Mode

We continue refining DeX and Desktop Mode support for Android power users. Browsing in Desktop Mode for your mobile device is already available as DEX on Samsung devices, while for Android it is still in Beta. We know many of you are eager to test what the experience will be like.

We are very excited about Desktop Mode on Android. It turns your phone into a desktop computer, when connected to a screen, keyboard and mouse. Our goal is to make that experience as powerful as possible, just as you’d expect from Vivaldi. And with the most powerful mobile browser available, we have a head start. Not only do you have real tabs, you have powerful tab management features, like Tab Stacks and Two-Level Tab Stacks. You also have panels for quick access to your Bookmarks, History, Notes, Translate and Downloads.

With 7.9, we are including further improvements to how Vivaldi behaves in these environments, steadily getting better as we work toward a more complete experience. More on that front is coming soon.


Vivaldi 7.9 for Mobile is available now. Update through the Play Store or App Store.

Download Vivaldi 7.9 for Android👇





Download Vivaldi 7.9 for iOS👇




As always, thank you for being part of the Vivaldi community. Together, we’re fighting for a better web, one release at a time.

Best
Team Vivaldi

Friday, 3 April 2026

Turned down $26m

 

Ida Huddleston from Kentucky

Lex 18

Joan of Arc. King Leonidas and the 300 Spartans. History is filled with figures who stood steadfast against a more powerful adversary. Now, you can add Northern Kentucky farmowner Ida Huddleston and her daughter, Delsia Bare, to that list.

The pair rebuffed a $26 million offer from an anonymous AI company to buy part of their land for a proposed data center. According to WKRC, the company offered roughly 10x what land in the county is usually worth, but still, the farmers refused.

“Stay and hold and feed a nation,” Bare said, adding that her family raised wheat through the Great Depression and that “$26 million doesn’t mean anything.” The company has reportedly revised its plan and could still build its data center nearby.

Thursday, 2 April 2026

The next frontier in sports betting

 

DraftKings in the App Store

Adobe Stock

On the same day that Major League Baseball kicked off its 2026 season this week, DraftKings introduced a way to gamble on hundreds of thousands of pitch outcomes from old MLB games, because everyone’s main gripe with sports betting is that there’s not enough stuff to bet on.

The new in-app feature, DK Replay, looks like an arcade game:

  • Users have 15 seconds to bet on a simulated pitch being a ball, a strike, or in play.
  • Good luck trying to cheat—the historical at-bats are anonymized as “Pitcher” vs. “Batter,” with bronze, silver, or gold player ratings based on their stats at the time.

DK Replay is only available in Oregon right now, but DraftKings plans to expand it. That could be tricky if other states view the feature as less of a sportsbook offering and more online casino gambling, which isn’t legal in most of the US.

Endgame: DK Replay squares with DraftKings’s broader strategy to create a super app with sports betting, prediction markets, casino, lottery, and other methods of probably losing money wagering on your phone.

Meanwhile…anti-prediction-market sentiment is mounting in Congress. Several representatives across the aisle introduced bills this week that would crack down on services like Kalshi and Polymarket.

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

How much longer can tech support the markets?

  

Investors wary from Iran war

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

For three years, tech behemoths have been fueling a bull market on the promise that AI advancements will increase efficiency and profitability. But with investors growing skeptical, and with the continued war in the Middle East, the Nasdaq is now in correction territory after its worst week in nearly a year:

  • The index is down 11% since it peaked in October and is doing its best New York Giants impression with 10 weekly losses over the past 11 weeks.
  • Two of the biggest drains since late-October are two of the biggest spenders in AI computing—Microsoft (down 34%) and Meta (down 29%).
  • Even Nvidia, the AI chipmaker that has everyone throwing money at it like it’s in one of those windy cash booths, is down nearly 20% from its October high.
  • As a group, Magnificent Seven shares are down 8% since late October.

Microsoft is having its worst quarter since the 2008 global financial crisis. The stock is down 25% as shareholders recoil from the company’s move to continue spending on AI infrastructure. There are also fears that startups like OpenAI and Anthropic will create agents that can replace products made by companies like Microsoft.

Tech’s slide is in keeping with the market as a whole. Remember when US Attorney General Pam Bondi let the world know the Dow was over 50,000 at a congressional hearing in February? After dropping nearly 800 points yesterday, it, too, fell into correction territory from its record high on Feb. 11.

TACO is growing stale

Instead, crude prices soared to $110 per barrel yesterday, stoking inflation fears. This could be because, while Trump backed down, Israel threatened escalation, and Iran has been resistant to peace talks. Analysts believe the TACO tactic is carrying less weight due to the disconnect between the US and Iran.

But…Big Tech stocks could be viewed as a relative bargain, and a resurgence would almost certainly translate into good news for the markets overall.

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

State of the Economy in Numbers



State of the Economy in Numbers


SOTU 2026 Home
Economy


In 2025, the economy expanded as GDP increased, inflation decreased slightly, and the size of imports and exports shifted. These and other measures provide a snapshot of economic activity, prices, and the labor market heading into 2026.


The basics


$31T
Gross domestic product (2025)


2.4%
12-month percent change in CPI (January 2026)


$901B
Trade deficit (2025)


How is the economy doing?


In 2025, the economy grew and employment remained steady, while inflation and interest rates fell.


Gross domestic product (GDP) reached $30.8 trillion in 2025. Real GDP (rGDP), which accounts for inflation, increased by 2.2%, equal to the 2000 to 2024 average annual rate.


Real GDP increased 2.2% from 2024 to 2025.


Annual percent change in real gross domestic product (GDP)


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about GDP



Year-over-year inflation — the rate at which consumer prices increase — was 2.4% in January 2026. The average monthly inflation rate in 2025 was 2.6%, slightly lower than the 2024 average rate of 2.9%. Housing was the largest contributor to monthly inflation growth.


Year-over-year inflation — the rate at which consumer prices increase — was 2.4% in January 2026.


Year-over-year percent change of CPI-U, all items, seasonally adjusted

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about inflation and the CPI



The Federal Reserve (Fed) lowered the federal funds rate three times in 2025; it currently sits between 3.5% and 3.75%. This range guides the rate at which banks lend to each other, while the effective federal funds rate reflects the average rate banks actually pay. Adjusting this target range is one way the Fed pursues its dual mandate of controlling inflation and maximizing employment.


The Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds rate. It sits between 3.5% and 3.75%.


Federal funds effective rate, by month


Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Read more about interest rates



The unemployment rate was 4.3% in January 2026. A couple months prior, in November 2025, the rate was the highest since late 2021, at 4.5%.


The unemployment rate was 4.3% in January 2026.


Unemployment rate, seasonally adjusted

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about the unemployment rate


The average annual labor force participation rate decreased slightly to 62.4% in 2025 after staying the same from 2023 to 2024. The rate is the percentage of the population ages 16 and older who are either employed or actively seeking work. It's been trending downward since 2000, due to the nation's aging population.


The average annual labor force participation rate decreased to 62.4% in 2025.


Labor force participation rate, annual average

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data. Annual estimates for 2025 are 11-month averages that exclude October.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about labor force participation


What's going on with international trade?


New tariffs and global economic shifts altered US trade flows in 2025. Looking at how imports and exports changed helps explain the nation’s trade balance and its connection to the global economy.


In 2025, the US imported $4.3 trillion and exported $3.4 trillion in goods and services, resulting in a $901.5 billion trade deficit. This deficit was lower than in 2024 due to higher exports and lower imports throughout 2025.


In 2025, the US had a $901.5 billion trade deficit.


Trade balance, by component, not adjusted for inflation


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about the trade balance


In 2025, the average monthly effective tariff rate was 7.9%. The rate shows how much the US collects in customs duties as a percentage of the total value of imported goods. However, imports may have different tariff rates (or none at all) depending on various factors like country of origin, product type, trade agreements, and much more.


In 2025, the average monthly effective tariff rate was 7.9%.


Monthly average effective tariff rate (customs duty revenue as a share of good imports)


Source: Census Bureau
Read more about tariff rates



In FY 2025, the federal government collected $194.9 billion, or 4% of total revenue, from customs duties (tariffs and other import fees). It was more than two times larger than it was in FY 2024. As of January, approximately $117.7 billion in customs duties have been collected for FY 2026, already exceeding the FY 2024 total.


The federal government collected nearly $200 billion from customs duties in FY 2025.


Cumulative monthly customs duties revenue, not adjusted for inflation


Source: Department of the Treasury
Read more about tariff revenue



The nation's top trading partners in 2024 were Mexico, Canada, and China (when adding imports and exports). Mexico became the nation’s top trading partner for the first time. Trade with the top six trading partners accounted for 48% of the total.


The nation’s top trading partners in 2024 were Mexico, Canada, and China.


Share of total trade value (imports + exports), by country


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about US trading partners

Tens of thousands march against far right in London ahead of local elections - France 24

Tens of thousands march against far right in London ahead of local elections - France 24

Tens of thousands march against far right in London ahead of local elections
EUROPE

Tens of thousands of protesters marched through central London on Saturday in a major show of opposition to the far right, weeks before key elections and amid growing support for hard-right movements in the UK.


Issued on: 28/03/2026 - 16:19Modified: 29/03/2026 - 12:08
3 minReading time
Share
By:
FRANCE 24
The march was organised by hundreds of groups, including trade unions, anti-racism campaigners and Muslim representative bodies. © Henry Nicholls, AFP



Tens of thousands of people marched through central London Saturday to protest against the far right, weeks ahead of local elections and six months after Britain saw one of its largest far-right demonstrations.

Organised by hundreds of civic groups, including trade unions, anti-racism campaigners and Muslim representative bodies, Saturday's Together Alliance event was billed as the biggest in UK history to counter right-wing extremism.

A separate pro-Palestinian march had also converged with the main rally.

While organisers claimed half a million had turned out in total, the police gave a figure of around 50,000.

Protesters carrying placards with slogans like "no to racism" and "you cannot divide us" marched from near Marble Arch to Whitehall near the UK parliament for a planned rally featuring various speakers.

They included left-wing politicians like Zack Polanski, leader of the increasingly popular Green Party, singer Billy Bragg and members of English reggae band UB40.

"Days like this are here to send a message... we are unstoppable," Polanski told the event, which appeared to have attracted people of all ages from across Britain.
Members of the 'Red Rebel Brigade', a climate activist group, joined the march. © Henry Nicholls, AFP


Student Emily Roth said there was "a global toxic climate and the UK is not fighting it".

"The government is obsessed with immigration but that's not our biggest problem," the 23-year-old said as she walked the route.

The London police, which had promised a "significant policing presence" to ensure various protests passed off safely and lawfully, later said officers had made 25 arrests.

It noted 18 of those followed an alleged protest near the Together Alliance rally in support of Palestine Action, an activist group banned under anti-terror law.

WATCH MOREEngland's extreme patriots? Inside the growing nationalist movement

The London force announced earlier this week it would resume such arrests after pausing them in the wake of the High Court last month upholding a challenge against the government ban.
'We've been there with Brexit'

The Together Alliance march followed a rally organised last September by far-right activist Tommy Robinson that drew up to 150,000 people, many of whom draped themselves in English and British flags.

That event was marred on its fringes by what police called "unacceptable violence" which saw clashes with officers that left several of them seriously injured.
Police said they had a 'significant presence' at the march. © Henry Nicholls, AFP


Robinson is planning a follow-up rally in mid-May.

Saturday's march also came less than six weeks before voters head to the polls for elections to Scotland's parliament, the devolved assembly in Wales and local councils in London as well as some other parts of England.

Anti-immigration figurehead Nigel Farage's hard-right Reform UK party, which has been leading in national polls for over a year, is predicted to perform well across the contests.

Robert Gadwick, 48, who had travelled from Bath in western England for Saturday's march, said he was "worried" about Reform's rise.

READ MORE'Stop the boats': British far-right activists accused of harassing migrants in Calais

"We've been there with Brexit – it's all the same lies and yet some people decide to believe it," he told AFP.

Retiree Rose Batterfield, of central England, echoed the sentiment, saying the "current political climate" concerned her.

"I don't really recognise Labour anymore," she said of the country's centre-left ruling party which has been criticised for shifting to the right.

"The idea that you can implement far-right ideas in order to stop the far right is nonsense."

Interactive Communications

Interactive Communications
Interactive Communications VOIP and VPN

eComTechnology RG Richardson Communications

eComTechnology since 2003. I am a business economist with interests in international trade worldwide through politics, money, banking and secure VOIP and Mail Communications. The author of RG Richardson City Guides has over 300 guides, including restaurants and finance. RG Richardson City author has over 300 travel guides. Let our interactive search city guides do the searching, no more typing, and they never go out of date. With over 13,900 preset searches, you only have to click on the preset icon. Search for restaurants, hotels, hostels, Airbnb, pubs, clubs, fast food, coffee shops, real estate, historical sites and facts all just by clicking on the icon. Even how to pack is all there. Finance, Money, Banking, and Economics definitions interactive dictionary.

Data Centers Causing Huge Temperature Spikes for Miles Around Them

Data Centers Causing Huge Temperature Spikes for Miles Around Them, Study Suggests Not very cool. By Frank Landymore Published Apr 1, 2026 9...