Author name: Rejus Almole

2025-aston-martin-vanquish-volante:-a-m’s-ultimate-gt-goes-topless

2025 Aston Martin Vanquish Volante: A-M’s ultimate GT goes topless

It’s hard to blame them. Top up or down, the Vanquish’s aesthetic is one of eagerness and aggression, largely due to the F1-derived aero elements to cool the massive power unit as well as to balance out air from front to back. The rest is all Aston Martin-quality craftsmanship, shaping the Vanquish into a taut, sleek form wrapped in formal attire.

An Aston Martin Vanquish engine bay

Yes, you could just have an electric motor make this much torque and power almost silently. Credit: Aston Martin

Bond. Aluminum Bond.

The secret underlying the Vanquish’s capabilities is its bonded aluminum body, which is perfectly suited for a grand tourer like this. Bonding panels together rather than welding them makes controlling the NVH (noise, vibration, harshness) levels much easier as the adhesives absorb vibrations, while the stiffness provides much more control in terms of lateral movement. This also means the suspension has less to compensate for, which means it can be stiffer without adding teeth-rattling jitter.

Indeed, on the move, the Vanquish Volante is velvety-smooth on the highway, and with the top down, conversations don’t need to be shouted. Raise the soft top and the well-sealed cover is indistinguishable from the coupe as far as your ears are concerned.

The even-keeled nature is also due in part to the balance Aston Martin maintains between the throttle input and the electronic rear differential. At low speeds, the Vanquish is quite agile, but a progressive power band keeps it from being nervous or jerky when laying down the power, with the wheels effectively locked in place at high speeds for added stability.

A silver Aston Martin Vanquish Volante seen in profile

If a Vantage is for track work, a Vanquish is for cruising. Credit: Aston Martin

We’re talking autobahn speeds, here, by the way. What we’d usually muster on the highway is a cakewalk for this immense luxury chariot. It goes too fast too quickly, for better or for worse, with 80 mph (129 km/h) feeling like half of that. Different drive modes make a palpable difference in behavior, with GT mode supporting smooth, long stretches while Sport and Sport + offer more engaging, throaty behavior for twisty backroads. Here, the car continues to be well-mannered, though the occasional dab for power triggers an overeager automatic into dropping a gear or two, sending the V12 into a fury.

2025 Aston Martin Vanquish Volante: A-M’s ultimate GT goes topless Read More »

win-for-chemical-industry-as-epa-shutters-scientific-research-office

Win for chemical industry as EPA shutters scientific research office


Deregulation runs rampant

Companies feared rules and lawsuits based on Office of Research and Development assessments.

Soon after President Donald Trump took office in January, a wide array of petrochemical, mining, and farm industry coalitions ramped up what has been a long campaign to limit use of the Environmental Protection Agency’s assessments of the health risks of chemicals.

That effort scored a significant victory Friday when EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced his decision to dismantle the agency’s Office of Research and Development (ORD).

The industry lobbyists didn’t ask for hundreds of ORD staff members to be laid off or reassigned. But the elimination of the agency’s scientific research arm goes a long way toward achieving the goal they sought.

In a January 27 letter to Zeldin organized by the American Chemistry Council, more than 80 industry groups—including leading oil, refining, and mining associations—asked him to end regulators’ reliance on ORD assessments of the risks that chemicals pose for human health. The future of that research, conducted under EPA’s Integrated Risk Information System program, or IRIS, is now uncertain.

“EPA’s IRIS program within ORD has a troubling history of being out of step with the best available science and methods, lacking transparency, and being unresponsive to peer review and stakeholder recommendations,” said an American Chemistry Council spokesperson in an email when asked about the decision to eliminate ORD. “This results in IRIS assessments that jeopardize access to critical chemistries, undercut national priorities, and harm American competitiveness.”

The spokesperson said the organization supports EPA evaluating its resources to ensure tax dollars are being used efficiently and effectively.

Christopher Frey, an associate dean at North Carolina State University who served as EPA assistant administrator in charge of ORD during the Biden administration, defended the quality of the science done by the office, which he said is “the poster case study of what it means to do science that’s subject to intense scrutiny.”

“There’s industry with a tremendous vested interest in the policy decisions that might occur later on,” based on the assessments made by ORD. “What the industry does is try to engage in a proxy war over the policy by attacking the science.”

Among the IRIS assessments that stirred the most industry concern were those outlining the dangers of formaldehyde, ethylene oxide, arsenic, and hexavalent chromium. Regulatory actions had begun or were looming on all during the Biden administration.

The Biden administration also launched a lawsuit against a LaPlace, Louisiana, plant that had been the only US manufacturer of neoprene, Denka Performance Elastomer, based in part on the IRIS assessment of one of its air pollutants, chloroprene, as a likely human carcinogen. Denka, a spinoff of DuPont, announced it was ceasing production in May because of the cost of pollution controls.

Public health advocates charge that eliminating the IRIS program, or shifting its functions to other offices in the agency, will rob the EPA of the independent expertise to inform its mission of protection.

“They’ve been trying for years to shut down IRIS,” said Darya Minovi, a senior analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists and lead author of a new study on Trump administration actions that the group says undermine science. “The reason why is because when IRIS conducts its independent scientific assessments using a great amount of rigor… you get stronger regulations, and that is not in the best interest of the big business polluters and those who have a financial stake in the EPA’s demise.”

The UCS report tallied more than 400 firings, funding cuts, and other attacks on science in the first six months of the Trump administration, resulting in 54 percent fewer grants for research on topics including cancer, infectious disease, and environmental health.

EPA’s press office did not respond to a query on whether the IRIS controversy helped inform Zeldin’s decision to eliminate ORD, which had been anticipated since staff were informed of the potential plan at a meeting in March. In the agency’s official announcement Friday afternoon, Zeldin said the elimination of the office was part of “organizational improvements” that would deliver $748.8 million in savings to taxpayers. The reduction in force, combined with previous departures and layoffs, have reduced the agency’s workforce by 23 percent, to 12,448, the EPA said.

With the cuts, the EPA’s workforce will be at its lowest level since fiscal year 1986.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, EPA has taken a close look at our operations to ensure the agency is better equipped than ever to deliver on our core mission of protecting human health and the environment while Powering the Great American Comeback,” Zeldin said in the prepared statement. “This reduction in force will ensure we can better fulfill that mission while being responsible stewards of your hard-earned tax dollars.”

The agency will be creating a new Office of Applied Science and Environmental Solutions; a report by E&E News said an internal memo indicated the new office would be much smaller than ORD, and would focus on coastal areas, drinking water safety, and methodologies for assessing environmental contamination.

Zeldin’s announcement also said that scientific expertise and research efforts will be moved to “program offices”—for example, those concerned with air pollution, water pollution, or waste—to tackle “statutory obligations and mission essential functions.” That phrase has a particular meaning: The chemical industry has long complained that Congress never passed a law creating IRIS. Congress did, however, pass many laws requiring that the agency carry out its actions based on the best available science, and the IRIS program, established during President Ronald Reagan’s administration, was how the agency has carried out the task of assessing the science on chemicals since 1985.

Justin Chen, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Council 238, the union representing 8,000 EPA workers nationwide, said the organizational structure of ORD put barriers between the agency’s researchers and the agency’s political decision-making, enforcement, and regulatory teams—even though they all used ORD’s work.

“For them to function properly, they have to have a fair amount of distance away from political interference, in order to let the science guide and develop the kind of things that they do,” Chen said.

“They’re a particular bugbear for a lot of the industries which are heavy donors to the Trump administration and to the right wing,” Chen said. “They’re the ones, I believe, who do all the testing that actually factors into the calculation of risk.”

ORD also was responsible for regularly doing assessments that the Clean Air Act requires on pollutants like ozone and particulate matter, which result from the combustion of fossil fuels.

Frey said a tremendous amount of ORD work has gone into ozone, which is the result of complex interactions of precursor pollutants in the atmosphere. The open source computer modeling on ozone transport, developed by ORD researchers, helps inform decision-makers grappling with how to address smog around the country. The Biden administration finalized stricter standards for particulate matter in its final year based on ORD’s risk assessment, and the Trump administration is now undoing those rules.

Aidan Hughes contributed to this report.

This story originally appeared on Inside Climate News.

Photo of Inside Climate News

Win for chemical industry as EPA shutters scientific research office Read More »

here’s-why-there-are-so-few-new-cars-for-under-$30,000

Here’s why there are so few new cars for under $30,000

Winners and losers

However, averages conceal a lot, and not all cars are becoming more expensive. US-made vehicles got cheaper to the tune of $191 per car, and cars.com says that more and more consumers are searching for domestically made vehicles to save money. Imports from the UK have gotten the most expensive—increasing by an average of $10,129—since these are almost all luxury cars with high purchase prices. (A new, lower tariff was recently negotiated by the UK.) A less pronounced effect can be seen with vehicles from the EU, where the mix still contains plenty of premium cars; average EU car prices in the US have risen $2,455 since the start of the year. Japanese imports are in third place, with an average increase of $1,226.

But imports from South Korea, China, and Canada have also dropped in average price. Some of this is due to a reduction of imports or a change in trims—General Motors is bringing in fewer cars from South Korea, and both it and Hyundai are bringing over more cars with lower trim levels.

Which is a spot of good news for the bargain hunter. While the perception is that dealerships only stock fully loaded vehicles, cars.com found that 34 percent of new car inventory is made up of low trim-level vehicles, up from 30 percent two years ago. And only a quarter of new vehicles are fully loaded. Meanwhile, it’s the middle that’s been squeezed, as mid-level trims make up 41 percent of new vehicle inventory, down from 46 percent in 2023.

The electric vehicle market is facing perhaps the most significant challenge this year, as the Republican Party has succeeded in its efforts to eradicate incentives meant to drive EV adoption. The EV tax credit for both new and used cars will be gone on October 1, which will make many new EVs $7,500 more expensive for most of their buyers. And it’s not like EVs were cheap to begin with: average MSRP for a new EV is around $65,000, although KBB found that the average transaction price for a new EV in June was $56,910, reflecting the current incentives.

Bargain hunters should consider buying pre-owned. While new EV supply has grown by 15.1 percent year on year, used EV inventory grew by 31.3 percent over the same period, with prices dropping by 3.5 percent to an average of $35,629 in the process.

Here’s why there are so few new cars for under $30,000 Read More »

it’s-“frighteningly-likely”-many-us-courts-will-overlook-ai-errors,-expert-says

It’s “frighteningly likely” many US courts will overlook AI errors, expert says


Judges pushed to bone up on AI or risk destroying their court’s authority.

A judge points to a diagram of a hand with six fingers

Credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images

Credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images

Order in the court! Order in the court! Judges are facing outcry over a suspected AI-generated order in a court.

Fueling nightmares that AI may soon decide legal battles, a Georgia court of appeals judge, Jeff Watkins, explained why a three-judge panel vacated an order last month that appears to be the first known ruling in which a judge sided with someone seemingly relying on fake AI-generated case citations to win a legal fight.

Now, experts are warning that judges overlooking AI hallucinations in court filings could easily become commonplace, especially in the typically overwhelmed lower courts. And so far, only two states have moved to force judges to sharpen their tech competencies and adapt so they can spot AI red flags and theoretically stop disruptions to the justice system at all levels.

The recently vacated order came in a Georgia divorce dispute, where Watkins explained that the order itself was drafted by the husband’s lawyer, Diana Lynch. That’s a common practice in many courts, where overburdened judges historically rely on lawyers to draft orders. But that protocol today faces heightened scrutiny as lawyers and non-lawyers increasingly rely on AI to compose and research legal filings, and judges risk rubberstamping fake opinions by not carefully scrutinizing AI-generated citations.

The errant order partly relied on “two fictitious cases” to deny the wife’s petition—which Watkins suggested were “possibly ‘hallucinations’ made up by generative-artificial intelligence”—as well as two cases that had “nothing to do” with the wife’s petition.

Lynch was hit with $2,500 in sanctions after the wife appealed, and the husband’s response—which also appeared to be prepared by Lynch—cited 11 additional cases that were “either hallucinated” or irrelevant. Watkins was further peeved that Lynch supported a request for attorney’s fees for the appeal by citing “one of the new hallucinated cases,” writing it added “insult to injury.”

Worryingly, the judge could not confirm whether the fake cases were generated by AI or even determine if Lynch inserted the bogus cases into the court filings, indicating how hard it can be for courts to hold lawyers accountable for suspected AI hallucinations. Lynch did not respond to Ars’ request to comment, and her website appeared to be taken down following media attention to the case.

But Watkins noted that “the irregularities in these filings suggest that they were drafted using generative AI” while warning that many “harms flow from the submission of fake opinions.” Exposing deceptions can waste time and money, and AI misuse can deprive people of raising their best arguments. Fake orders can also soil judges’ and courts’ reputations and promote “cynicism” in the justice system. If left unchecked, Watkins warned, these harms could pave the way to a future where a “litigant may be tempted to defy a judicial ruling by disingenuously claiming doubt about its authenticity.”

“We have no information regarding why Appellee’s Brief repeatedly cites to nonexistent cases and can only speculate that the Brief may have been prepared by AI,” Watkins wrote.

Ultimately, Watkins remanded the case, partly because the fake cases made it impossible for the appeals court to adequately review the wife’s petition to void the prior order. But no matter the outcome of the Georgia case, the initial order will likely forever be remembered as a cautionary tale for judges increasingly scrutinized for failures to catch AI misuses in court.

“Frighteningly likely” judge’s AI misstep will be repeated

John Browning, a retired justice on Texas’ Fifth Court of Appeals and now a full-time law professor at Faulkner University, last year published a law article Watkins cited that warned of the ethical risks of lawyers using AI. In the article, Browning emphasized that the biggest concern at that point was that lawyers “will use generative AI to produce work product they treat as a final draft, without confirming the accuracy of the information contained therein or without applying their own independent professional judgment.”

Today, judges are increasingly drawing the same scrutiny, and Browning told Ars he thinks it’s “frighteningly likely that we will see more cases” like the Georgia divorce dispute, in which “a trial court unwittingly incorporates bogus case citations that an attorney includes in a proposed order” or even potentially in “proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.”

“I can envision such a scenario in any number of situations in which a trial judge maintains a heavy docket and looks to counsel to work cooperatively in submitting proposed orders, including not just family law cases but other civil and even criminal matters,” Browning told Ars.

According to reporting from the National Center for State Courts, a nonprofit representing court leaders and professionals who are advocating for better judicial resources, AI tools like ChatGPT have made it easier for high-volume filers and unrepresented litigants who can’t afford attorneys to file more cases, potentially further bogging down courts.

Peter Henderson, a researcher who runs the Princeton Language+Law, Artificial Intelligence, & Society (POLARIS) Lab, told Ars that he expects cases like the Georgia divorce dispute aren’t happening every day just yet.

It’s likely that a “few hallucinated citations go overlooked” because generally, fake cases are flagged through “the adversarial nature of the US legal system,” he suggested. Browning further noted that trial judges are generally “very diligent in spotting when a lawyer is citing questionable authority or misleading the court about what a real case actually said or stood for.”

Henderson agreed with Browning that “in courts with much higher case loads and less adversarial process, this may happen more often.” But Henderson noted that the appeals court catching the fake cases is an example of the adversarial process working.

While that’s true in this case, it seems likely that anyone exhausted by the divorce legal process, for example, may not pursue an appeal if they don’t have energy or resources to discover and overturn errant orders.

Judges’ AI competency increasingly questioned

While recent history confirms that lawyers risk being sanctioned, fired from their firms, or suspended from practicing law for citing fake AI-generated cases, judges will likely only risk embarrassment for failing to catch lawyers’ errors or even for using AI to research their own opinions.

Not every judge is prepared to embrace AI without proper vetting, though. To shield the legal system, some judges have banned AI. Others have required disclosures—with some even demanding to know which specific AI tool was used—but that solution has not caught on everywhere.

Even if all courts required disclosures, Browning pointed out that disclosures still aren’t a perfect solution since “it may be difficult for lawyers to even discern whether they have used generative AI,” as AI features become increasingly embedded in popular legal tools. One day, it “may eventually become unreasonable to expect” lawyers “to verify every generative AI output,” Browning suggested.

Most likely—as a judicial ethics panel from Michigan has concluded—judges will determine “the best course of action for their courts with the ever-expanding use of AI,” Browning’s article noted. And the former justice told Ars that’s why education will be key, for both lawyers and judges, as AI advances and becomes more mainstream in court systems.

In an upcoming summer 2025 article in The Journal of Appellate Practice & Process, “The Dawn of the AI Judge,” Browning attempts to soothe readers by saying that AI isn’t yet fueling a legal dystopia. And humans are unlikely to face “robot judges” spouting AI-generated opinions any time soon, the former justice suggested.

Standing in the way of that, at least two states—Michigan and West Virginia—”have already issued judicial ethics opinions requiring judges to be ‘tech competent’ when it comes to AI,” Browning told Ars. And “other state supreme courts have adopted official policies regarding AI,” he noted, further pressuring judges to bone up on AI.

Meanwhile, several states have set up task forces to monitor their regional court systems and issue AI guidance, while states like Virginia and Montana have passed laws requiring human oversight for any AI systems used in criminal justice decisions.

Judges must prepare to spot obvious AI red flags

Until courts figure out how to navigate AI—a process that may look different from court to court—Browning advocates for more education and ethical guidance for judges to steer their use and attitudes about AI. That could help equip judges to avoid both ignorance of the many AI pitfalls and overconfidence in AI outputs, potentially protecting courts from AI hallucinations, biases, and evidentiary challenges sneaking past systems requiring human review and scrambling the court system.

An overlooked part of educating judges could be exposing AI’s influence so far in courts across the US. Henderson’s team is planning research that tracks which models attorneys are using most in courts. That could reveal “the potential legal arguments that these models are pushing” to sway courts—and which judicial interventions might be needed, Henderson told Ars.

“Over the next few years, researchers—like those in our group, the POLARIS Lab—will need to develop new ways to track the massive influence that AI will have and understand ways to intervene,” Henderson told Ars. “For example, is any model pushing a particular perspective on legal doctrine across many different cases? Was it explicitly trained or instructed to do so?”

Henderson also advocates for “an open, free centralized repository of case law,” which would make it easier for everyone to check for fake AI citations. “With such a repository, it is easier for groups like ours to build tools that can quickly and accurately verify citations,” Henderson said. That could be a significant improvement to the current decentralized court reporting system that often obscures case information behind various paywalls.

Dazza Greenwood, who co-chairs MIT’s Task Force on Responsible Use of Generative AI for Law, did not have time to send comments but pointed Ars to a LinkedIn thread where he suggested that a structural response may be needed to ensure that all fake AI citations are caught every time.

He recommended that courts create “a bounty system whereby counter-parties or other officers of the court receive sanctions payouts for fabricated cases cited in judicial filings that they reported first.” That way, lawyers will know that their work will “always” be checked and thus may shift their behavior if they’ve been automatically filing AI-drafted documents. In turn, that could alleviate pressure on judges to serve as watchdogs. It also wouldn’t cost much—mostly just redistributing the exact amount of fees that lawyers are sanctioned to AI spotters.

Novel solutions like this may be necessary, Greenwood suggested. Responding to a question asking if “shame and sanctions” are enough to stop AI hallucinations in court, Greenwood said that eliminating AI errors is imperative because it “gives both otherwise generally good lawyers and otherwise generally good technology a bad name.” Continuing to ban AI or suspend lawyers as a preferred solution risks dwindling court resources just as cases likely spike rather than potentially confronting the problem head-on.

Of course, there’s no guarantee that the bounty system would work. But “would the fact of such definite confidence that your cures will be individually checked and fabricated cites reported be enough to finally… convince lawyers who cut these corners that they should not cut these corners?”

In absence of a fake case detector like Henderson wants to build, experts told Ars that there are some obvious red flags that judges can note to catch AI-hallucinated filings.

Any case number with “123456” in it probably warrants review, Henderson told Ars. And Browning noted that AI tends to mix up locations for cases, too. “For example, a cite to a purported Texas case that has a ‘S.E. 2d’ reporter wouldn’t make sense, since Texas cases would be found in the Southwest Reporter,” Browning said, noting that some appellate judges have already relied on this red flag to catch AI misuses.

Those red flags would perhaps be easier to check with the open source tool that Henderson’s lab wants to make, but Browning said there are other tell-tale signs of AI usage that anyone who has ever used a chatbot is likely familiar with.

“Sometimes a red flag is the language cited from the hallucinated case; if it has some of the stilted language that can sometimes betray AI use, it might be a hallucination,” Browning said.

Judges already issuing AI-assisted opinions

Several states have assembled task forces like Greenwood’s to assess the risks and benefits of using AI in courts. In Georgia, the Judicial Council of Georgia Ad Hoc Committee on Artificial Intelligence and the Courts released a report in early July providing “recommendations to help maintain public trust and confidence in the judicial system as the use of AI increases” in that state.

Adopting the committee’s recommendations could establish “long-term leadership and governance”; a repository of approved AI tools, education, and training for judicial professionals; and more transparency on AI used in Georgia courts. But the committee expects it will take three years to implement those recommendations while AI use continues to grow.

Possibly complicating things further as judges start to explore using AI assistants to help draft their filings, the committee concluded that it’s still too early to tell if the judges’ code of conduct should be changed to prevent “unintentional use of biased algorithms, improper delegation to automated tools, or misuse of AI-generated data in judicial decision-making.” That means, at least for now, that there will be no code-of-conduct changes in Georgia, where the only case in which AI hallucinations are believed to have swayed a judge has been found.

Notably, the committee’s report also confirmed that there are no role models for courts to follow, as “there are no well-established regulatory environments with respect to the adoption of AI technologies by judicial systems.” Browning, who chaired a now-defunct Texas AI task force, told Ars that judges lacking guidance will need to stay on their toes to avoid trampling legal rights. (A spokesperson for the State Bar of Texas told Ars the task force’s work “concluded” and “resulted in the creation of the new standing committee on Emerging Technology,” which offers general tips and guidance for judges in a recently launched AI Toolkit.)

“While I definitely think lawyers have their own duties regarding AI use, I believe that judges have a similar responsibility to be vigilant when it comes to AI use as well,” Browning said.

Judges will continue sorting through AI-fueled submissions not just from pro se litigants representing themselves but also from up-and-coming young lawyers who may be more inclined to use AI, and even seasoned lawyers who have been sanctioned up to $5,000 for failing to check AI drafts, Browning suggested.

In his upcoming “AI Judge” article, Browning points to at least one judge, 11th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Kevin Newsom, who has used AI as a “mini experiment” in preparing opinions for both a civil case involving an insurance coverage issue and a criminal matter focused on sentencing guidelines. Browning seems to appeal to judges’ egos to get them to study up so they can use AI to enhance their decision-making and possibly expand public trust in courts, not undermine it.

“Regardless of the technological advances that can support a judge’s decision-making, the ultimate responsibility will always remain with the flesh-and-blood judge and his application of very human qualities—legal reasoning, empathy, strong regard for fairness, and unwavering commitment to ethics,” Browning wrote. “These qualities can never be replicated by an AI tool.”

Photo of Ashley Belanger

Ashley is a senior policy reporter for Ars Technica, dedicated to tracking social impacts of emerging policies and new technologies. She is a Chicago-based journalist with 20 years of experience.

It’s “frighteningly likely” many US courts will overlook AI errors, expert says Read More »

local-cuisine-was-on-the-menu-at-cafe-neanderthal

Local cuisine was on the menu at Cafe Neanderthal

Gazelle prepared “a la Amud,” or “a la Kebara”?

Neanderthals at Kebara had pretty broad tastes in meat. The butchered bones found in the cave were mostly an even mix of small ungulates (largely gazelle) and medium-sized ones (red deer, fallow deer, wild goats, and boar), with just a few larger game animals thrown in. And it looks like the Kebara Neanderthals were “use the whole deer” sorts of hunters because the bones came from all parts of the animals’ bodies.

On the other hand (or hoof), at Amud, archaeologists found that the butchered bones were almost entirely long bone shafts—legs, in other words—from gazelle. Apparently, the Neanderthal hunters at Amud focused more on gazelle than on larger prey like red deer or boar, and they seemingly preferred meat from the legs.

And not too fresh, apparently—the bones at Kebara showed fewer cut marks, and the marks that were there tended to be straighter. Meanwhile, at Amud, the bones were practically cluttered with cut marks, which crisscrossed over each other and were often curved, not straight. According to Jallon and her colleagues, the difference probably wasn’t a skill issue. Instead, it may be a clue that Neanderthals at Amud liked their meat dried, boiled, or even slightly rotten.

That’s based on comparisons to what bones look like when modern hunter-gatherers butcher their game, along with archaeologists’ experiments with stone tool butchery. First, differences in skill between newbie butchers and advanced ones don’t produce the same pattern of cut marks Jallon and her colleagues saw at Amud. But “it has been shown that decaying carcasses tend to be more difficult to process, often resulting in the production of haphazard, deep, and sinuous cut marks,” as Jallon and her colleagues wrote in their recent paper.

So apparently, for reasons unknown to modern archaeologists, the meat on the menu at Amud was, shall we say, a bit less fresh than that at Kebara. Said menu was also considerably less varied. All of that meant that if you were a Neanderthal from Amud and stopped by Kebara for dinner (or vice versa) your meal might seem surprisingly foreign.

Local cuisine was on the menu at Cafe Neanderthal Read More »

trump-to-sign-stablecoin-bill-that-may-make-it-easier-to-bribe-the-president

Trump to sign stablecoin bill that may make it easier to bribe the president


Donald Trump’s first big crypto win “nothing to crow about,” analyst says.

Donald Trump is expected to sign the GENIUS Act into law Friday, securing his first big win as a self-described “pro-crypto president.” The act is the first major piece of cryptocurrency legislation passed in the US.

The House of Representatives voted to pass the GENIUS Act on Thursday, approving the same bill that the Senate passed last month. The law provides a federal framework for stablecoins, a form of cryptocurrency that’s considered less volatile than other cryptocurrencies, as each token is backed by the US dollar or other supposedly low-risk assets.

The GENIUS Act is expected to spur more widespread adoption of cryptocurrencies, since stablecoins are often used to move funds between different tokens. It could become a gateway for many Americans who are otherwise shy about investing in cryptocurrencies, which is what the industry wants. Ahead of Thursday’s vote, critics had warned that Republicans were rushing the pro-industry bill without ensuring adequate consumer protections, though, seemingly setting Americans up to embrace stablecoins as legitimate so-called “cash of the blockchain” without actually insuring their investments.

A big concern is that stablecoins will appear as safe investments, legitimized by the law, while supposedly private companies issuing stablecoins could peg their tokens to riskier assets that could tank reserves, cause bank runs, and potentially blindside and financially ruin Americans. Stablecoin scams could also target naïve stablecoin investors, luring them into making deposits that cannot be withdrawn.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.)—part of a group of Democrats who had strongly opposed the bill—further warned Thursday that the GENIUS Act prevents lawmakers from owning or promoting stablecoins, but not the president. Trump and his family have allegedly made more than a billion dollars through their crypto ventures, and Waters is concerned that the law will make it easier for Trump and other presidents to use the office to grift and possibly even obscure foreign bribes.

“By passing this bill, Congress will be telling the world that Congress is OK with corruption, OK with foreign companies buying influence,” Waters said Thursday, CBS News reported.

Some lawmakers fear such corruption is already happening. Senators previously urged the Office of Government Ethics in a letter to investigate why “a crypto firm whose founder needs a pardon” (Binance’s Changpeng Zhao, also known as “CZ”) “and a foreign government spymaker coveting sensitive US technology” (United Arab Emirates-controlled MGX) “plan to pay the Trump and Witkoff families hundreds of millions of dollars.”

The White House continues to insist that Trump has “no conflicts of interest” because “his assets are in a trust managed by his children,” Reuters reported.

Ultimately, Waters and other Democrats failed to amend the bill to prevent presidents from benefiting from the stablecoin framework and promoting their own crypto projects.

Markets for various cryptocurrencies spiked Thursday, as the industry anticipates that more people will hold crypto wallets in a world where it’s fast, cheap, and easy to move money on the blockchain with stablecoins, as compared to relying on traditional bank services. And any fees associated with stablecoin transfers will likely be paid with other forms of cryptocurrencies, with a token called ether predicted to benefit most since “most stablecoins are issued and transacted on the underlying blockchain Ethereum,” Reuters reported.

Unsurprisingly, ether-linked stocks jumped Friday, with the token’s value hitting a six-month high. Notably, Bitcoin recently hit a record high; it was valued at above $120,000 as the stablecoin bill moved closer to Trump’s desk.

GENIUS Act plants “seeds for the next financial crisis”

As Trump prepares to sign the law, Consumer Reports’ senior director monitoring digital marketplaces, Delicia Hand, told Ars that the group plans to work with other consumer advocates and the implementing regulator to try to close any gaps in the stablecoin legislation that would leave Americans vulnerable.

Some Democrats supported the GENIUS Act, arguing that some regulation is better than none as cryptocurrency activity increases globally and the technology has the potential to revolutionize the US financial system.

But Hand told Ars that “we’ve already seen what happens when there are no protections” for consumers, like during the FTX collapse.

She joins critics that the BBC reported are concerned that stablecoin investors could get stuck in convoluted bankruptcy processes as tech firms engage more and more in “bank-like activities” without the same oversight as banks.

The only real assurances for stablecoin investors are requirements that all firms must publish monthly reserves backing their tokens, as well as annual statements required from the biggest companies issuing tokens. Those will likely include e-commerce and digital payments giants like Amazon, PayPal, and Shopify, as well as major social media companies.

Meanwhile, Trump seemingly wants to lure more elderly people into investing in crypto, reportedly “working on a presidential order that could allow retirement accounts to be invested in private assets, such as crypto, gold, and private equity,” the BBC reported.

Waters, a top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, is predicting the worst. She has warned that the law gives “Trump the pen to write the rules that would put more money in his family’s pocket” while causing “consumer harm” and planting “the seeds for the next financial crisis.”

Analyst: End of Trump’s crypto wins

The House of Representatives passed two other crypto bills this week, but those bills now go to the Senate, where they may not have enough support to pass.

The CLARITY Act—which creates a regulatory framework for digital assets and cryptocurrencies to allow for more innovation and competition—is “absolutely the most important thing” the crypto industry has been pushing since spending more than $119 million backing pro-crypto congressional candidates last year, a Coinbase policy official, Kara Calvert, told The New York Times.

Republicans and industry see the CLARITY Act as critical because it strips the Securities and Exchange Commission of power to police cryptocurrencies and digital assets and gives that power instead to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is viewed as friendlier to industry. If it passed, the CLARITY Act would not just make it harder for the SEC to raise lawsuits, but it would also box out any future SEC officials under less crypto-friendly presidents from “bringing any cases for past misconduct,” Amanda Fischer, a top SEC official under the Biden administration, told the NYT.

“It would retroactively bless all the conduct of the crypto industry,” Fischer suggested.

But Senators aren’t happy with the CLARITY Act and expect to draft their own version of the bill, striving to lay out a crypto market structure that isn’t “reviled by consumer protection groups,” the NYT reported.

And the other bill that the House sent to the Senate on Thursday—which would ban the US from creating a central bank digital currency (CBDC) that some conservatives believe would allow for government financial surveillance—faces an uphill battle, in part due to Republicans seemingly downgrading it as a priority.

The anti-CBDC bill will likely be added to a “must-pass” annual defense policy bill facing a vote later this year, the NYT reported. But Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R.-Ga.) “mocked” that plan, claiming she did not expect it to be “honored.”

Terry Haines, founder of the Washington-based analysis firm Pangaea Policy, has forecasted that both the CLARITY Act and the anti-CBDC bills will likely die in the Senate, the BBC reported.

“This is the end of crypto’s wins for quite a while—and the only one,” Haines suggested. “When the easy part, stablecoin, takes [approximately] four to five years and barely survives industry scandals, it’s not much to crow about.”

Photo of Ashley Belanger

Ashley is a senior policy reporter for Ars Technica, dedicated to tracking social impacts of emerging policies and new technologies. She is a Chicago-based journalist with 20 years of experience.

Trump to sign stablecoin bill that may make it easier to bribe the president Read More »

phishers-have-found-a-way-to-downgrade—not-bypass—fido-mfa

Phishers have found a way to downgrade—not bypass—FIDO MFA

Researchers recently reported encountering a phishing attack in the wild that bypasses a multifactor authentication scheme based on FIDO (Fast Identity Online), the industry-wide standard being adopted by thousands of sites and enterprises.

If true, the attack, reported in a blog post Thursday by security firm Expel, would be huge news, since FIDO is widely regarded as being immune to credential phishing attacks. After analyzing the Expel write-up, I’m confident that the attack doesn’t bypass FIDO protections, at least not in the sense that the word “bypass” is commonly used in security circles. Rather, the attack downgrades the MFA process to a weaker, non-FIDO-based process. As such, the attack is better described as a FIDO downgrade attack. More about that shortly. For now, let’s describe what Expel researchers reported.

Abusing cross-device sign-ins

Expel said the “novel attack technique” begins with an email that links to a fake login page from Okta, a widely used authentication provider. It prompts visitors to enter their valid user name and password. People who take the bait have now helped the attack group, which Expel said is named PoisonSeed, clear the first big hurdle in gaining unauthorized access to the Okta account.

The FIDO spec was designed to mitigate precisely these sorts of scenarios by requiring users to provide an additional factor of authentication in the form of a security key, which can be a passkey, or physical security key such as a smartphone or dedicated device such as a Yubikey. For this additional step, the passkey must use a unique cryptographic key embedded into the device to sign a challenge that the site (Okta, in this case) sends to the browser logging in.

One of the ways a user can provide this additional factor is by using a cross-device sign-in feature. In the event there is no passkey on the device being used to log in, a user can use a passkey for that site that’s already resident on a different device, which in most cases will be a phone. In these cases, the site being logged into will display a QR code. The user then scans the QR code with the phone, and the normal FIDO MFA process proceeds as normal.

Phishers have found a way to downgrade—not bypass—FIDO MFA Read More »

court-rules-trump-broke-us-law-when-he-fired-democratic-ftc-commissioner

Court rules Trump broke US law when he fired Democratic FTC commissioner

“Without removal protections, that independence would be jeopardized… Accordingly, the Court held that the FTC Act’s for-cause removal protections were constitutional,” wrote AliKhan, who was appointed to the District Court by President Biden in 2023.

Judge: Facts almost identical to 1935 case

The Supreme Court reaffirmed its Humphrey’s Executor findings in cases decided in 2010 and 2020, AliKhan wrote. “Humphrey’s Executor remains good law today. Over the span of ninety years, the Supreme Court has declined to revisit or overrule it,” she wrote. Congress has likewise not disturbed FTC commissioners’ removal protection, and “thirteen Presidents have acquiesced to its vitality,” she wrote.

AliKhan said the still-binding precedent clearly supports Slaughter’s case against Trump. “The answer to the key substantive question in this case—whether a unanimous Supreme Court decision about the FTC Act’s removal protections applies to a suit about the FTC Act’s removal protections—seems patently obvious,” AliKhan wrote. “In arguing for a different result, Defendants ask this court to ignore the letter of Humphrey’s Executor and embrace the critiques from its detractors.”

The 1935 case and the present case are similar in multiple ways, the judge wrote. “Humphrey’s Executor involved the exact same provision of the FTC Act that Ms. Slaughter seeks to enforce here: the for-cause removal protection within 15 U.S.C. § 41 prohibiting any termination except for ‘inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office,'” she wrote.

The “facts almost identically mirror those of Humphrey’s Executor,” she continued. In both Roosevelt’s removal of Humphrey and Trump’s removal of Slaughter, the president cited disagreements in priorities and “did not purport to base the removal on inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance.”

Trump and fellow defendants assert that the current FTC is much different from the 1935 version of the body, saying it now “exercises significant executive power.” That includes investigating and prosecuting violations of federal law, administratively adjudicating claims itself, and issuing rules and regulations to prevent unfair business practices.

Court rules Trump broke US law when he fired Democratic FTC commissioner Read More »

nothing-phone-3-review:-nothing-ventured,-nothing-gained

Nothing Phone 3 review: Nothing ventured, nothing gained


The Nothing Phone 3 is the company’s best phone by a wide margin, but is that enough?

Nothing Phone 3 reply hazy

The Nothing Phone 3 has a distinctive design. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Nothing Phone 3 has a distinctive design. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The last few years have seen several smartphone makers pull back or totally abandon their mobile efforts. UK-based Nothing Technologies, however, is still trying to carve out a niche in the increasingly competitive smartphone market. Its tools have been quirky designs and glowing lights, along with a focus on markets outside the US. With the Nothing Phone 3, the company has brought its “first flagship” phone stateside.

Nothing didn’t swing for the fences with the Phone 3’s specs, but this device can hold its own with the likes of OnePlus and Google. Plus, it has that funky Nothing design aesthetic. There’s a transparent back, a tiny dot matrix screen, and a comprehensive Android skin. But at the end of the day, the Nothing Phone 3 is not treading new ground.

Designing Nothing

Despite Nothing’s talk about unique designs, the Nothing Phone 3 looks unremarkable from the front. The bezels are slim and symmetrical all the way around the screen. Under a sheet of Gorilla Glass 7i, it has a 6.67-inch 120Hz OLED screen with an impressive 1260 x 2800 resolution. It hits 4,500 nits of brightness, which is even higher than Google and Samsung phones. It’s more than bright enough to be readable outdoors, and the touch sensitivity is excellent—sometimes too excellent, as we’ve noticed a few accidental edge touches.

Specs at a glance: Nothing Phone 3
SoC Snapdragon 8s Gen 4
Memory 12GB, 16GB
Storage 256GB, 512GB
Display 1260 x 2800 6.67″ OLED, 120 Hz
Cameras 50MP primary, f/1.7, OIS; 50MP ultrawide, f/2.2; 50MP 3x telephoto, f/2.7, OIS; 50MP selfie, f/2.2
Software Android 15, 5 years of OS updates
Battery 5,150 mAh, 65 W wired charging, 15 W wireless charging
Connectivity Wi-Fi 7, NFC, Bluetooth 6.0, sub-6 GHz 5G, USB-C 3.2
Measurements 160.6 x 75.6 x 9 mm; 218 g

Like many other phones, the Nothing Phone 3 has an optical fingerprint sensor under the display. It’s quick and accurate, but it’s a bit too low (barely a pinky finger’s width from the bottom of the device). As an optical sensor, it’s also very bright in a dark room. Similar phones from Google and Samsung have faster and less disruptive ultrasonic fingerprint sensors.

Nothing Phone 3 home screen

Nothing OS is a great Android skin.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

Nothing OS is a great Android skin. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The overall shape of the phone is almost the same as current Samsung, Apple, and Google phones, but it’s closest to the Pixel 9 series. The IP68-rated body has the same minimalist aesthetic as those other phones, with flat edges and rounded corners. The aluminum frame curves in to merge seamlessly with the front and rear glass panels. It has a matte finish, making it reasonably grippy in the hand. Nothing includes a clear case in the box—we appreciate the effort, but the case feels very cheap and will probably discolor after a couple of months of use.

You won’t see anything extravagant like a headphone jack or IR blaster. The volume and power buttons are flat, tactile, and very stable, with no discernible wiggle. Below the power button is the Essential Key, a convex button that plugs into Nothing’s on-device AI features (more on that later). It’s a delight for button-lovers, but it can be too easy to accidentally press when picking up the phone. And no, you can’t remap the button to do something else.

Nothing Phone 3 side

The Essential Button has a nice feel, but it’s too easy to mistake for the power button.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Essential Button has a nice feel, but it’s too easy to mistake for the power button. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

It’s not until you get to the back that the Nothing Phone 3 stands out. The back has a clear panel of extra-strong Gorilla Glass Victus, but you’re not seeing the phone’s internals through it. The panels under the glass have slightly different colors and textures and were chosen to create an interesting visual effect. It’s certainly eye-catching, but whether or not you like it is a matter of taste. The camera sensors are near the top in a staggered arrangement, right across from the “Glyph Matrix.”

The monochrome Glyph Matrix is Nothing’s replacement for the Glyph light bars on its older phones. A pressure-sensitive button under the glass can be pressed to switch between various display options, some of which might occasionally be useful, like a clock and battery monitor. There are also less useful “Glyph toys” like a Magic 8-ball, a low-fi mirror, and a Rock, Paper, Scissors simulator. It can also display call and status notifications, for instance letting you know when Do Not Disturb is activated or when you have a missed call. Or you can just turn the phone over and use the full display.

Nothing Phone 3 Glyph

The Glyph matrix is a gimmick, but it does look cool.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Glyph matrix is a gimmick, but it does look cool. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

There’s only so much you can do with 489 LEDs and a single button, which makes some of the toys frustrating. For example, you have to long-press to stop the stopwatch, which defeats the purpose, and the selfie mirror is very difficult to use for framing a photo. The Glyph dot matrix is fun to play around with, but it’s just a gimmick. Really, how much time do you spend looking at the back of your phone? Checking the time or playing Rock, Paper, Scissors is not a game-changer, even if the display is visually interesting.

Flagship-ish performance

Nothing says this is a flagship phone, but it doesn’t have Qualcomm’s flagship mobile processor. While you’ll find the Snapdragon 8 Elite in most high-end devices today, Nothing went with the slightly more modest Snapdragon 8s Gen 4. It doesn’t have the Oryon CPU cores, relying instead on eight Arm reference cores, along with a slower GPU.

Nothing Phone 3 and Pixel 9 Pro XL

The Nothing Phone 3 (left) is about the same size and shape as the Pixel 9 Pro XL (right).

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Nothing Phone 3 (left) is about the same size and shape as the Pixel 9 Pro XL (right). Credit: Ryan Whitwam

What does that mean for the speeds and feeds? The Nothing Phone 3 doesn’t keep up with high-end devices like the Galaxy S25 in benchmarks, but it’s no slouch, either. In fact, the Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 beats Google’s latest Tensor chip featured in the Pixel 9 series.

As expected, the standard Arm cores fall behind the custom Oryon CPUs in Geekbench, running about 40 percent behind Qualcomm’s best processor. However, the gulf is much narrower in graphics because the Adreno 825 in the Nothing Phone 3 is very similar to the 830 used in Snapdragon 8 Elite phones.

So you could see better gaming performance with a phone like the Galaxy S25 compared to the Nothing Phone 3, but only if you’re playing something very graphically intensive. Even when running these devices side by side, we have a hard time noticing any loss of fidelity on the Nothing Phone 3. It performs noticeably better in high-end games compared to the latest Pixels, though. The Phone 3 maintains performance fairly well under load, only losing 25 to 30 percent at peak temperature. The body of the phone does get uncomfortably hot, but that’s better than overheating the processor.

That modest drop in CPU performance benchmarks does not equate to a poor user experience. The Nothing Phone 3 is very snappy, opening apps quickly and handling rapid multitasking without hesitation. The animations also have a Google level of polish.

Nothing managed to fit a 5,150 mAh battery in this phone, which is a bit larger than even the Galaxy S25 Ultra at 5,000 mAh. The battery life is strong, with the phone easily making it all day—no range anxiety. It won’t last through a second day on a single charge, though. Just like a Pixel or Galaxy phone, you’ll want to plug the Nothing Phone 3 in every night.

But you don’t necessarily have to save your charging for nighttime. The Nothing Phone 3 offers 65 W wired charging, which is much faster than what you get from Google, Samsung, or Apple phones. If the battery gets low, just a few minutes connected to almost any USB-PD charger will get you enough juice to head out the door. You also get 15 W wireless charging, but it doesn’t support the magnetic Qi 2 standard.

We’ve had no problems using the Phone 3 on T-Mobile, and Nothing says AT&T is also fully supported. However, there’s no official support for Verizon. The phone has all the necessary sub-6GHz 5G bands, but you may have trouble activating it as a new device on Verizon’s network.

Upgraded cameras

A camera upgrade was a necessary part of making this device a “flagship” phone, so Nothing equipped the Phone 3 with a solid array of sensors, ensuring you’ll get some good shots. They won’t all be good, though.

Nothing Phone 3 back

The clear glass shows off subtly differing blocks and a button to control the Glyph Matrix display.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The clear glass shows off subtly differing blocks and a button to control the Glyph Matrix display. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Nothing Phone 3 has a quartet of 50 MP sensors, including a wide-angle, a 3x telephoto, and an ultrawide on the back. The front-facing selfie camera is also 50 MP. While you can shoot in 50 MP mode, smartphone camera sensors are designed with pixel binning in mind. The phone outputs 12.5 MP images, leaning on merged pixel elements to brighten photos and speed up captures. We’ve found Nothing’s color balance and exposure to be very close to reality, and the dynamic range is good enough that you don’t have to worry about overly bright or dim backgrounds ruining a shot.

The Nothing Phone 3 cameras can produce sharp details, but some images tend to look overprocessed and “muddy.” However, the biggest issue is shutter lag—there’s too much of it. It seems like the phone is taking too long to stack and process images. So even outdoors and with a high shutter speed, a moving subject can look blurry. It’s challenging to snap a clear photo of a hyperactive kid or pet. In low-light settings, the shutter lag becomes worse, making it hard to take a sharp photo. Night mode shots are almost always a bit fuzzy.

Low indoor light. Ryan Whitwam

Photos of still subjects are generally good, and you can get some nice ones with the ultrawide camera. Landscapes look particularly nice, and the camera has autofocus for macro shots. This mode doesn’t activate automatically when you move in, so you have to remember it’s there. It’s worth remembering, though.

The telephoto sensor uses a periscope-style lens, which we usually see on sensors with 5x or higher zoom factors. This one is only 3x, so it will get you somewhat closer to your subject without cropping, but don’t expect the same quality you’d get from a Pixel or Samsung phone.

In its sub-flagship price range, we’d put the Nothing Phone 3 camera experience on par with Motorola. A device like the OnePlus 13R or Pixel 9a will take better pictures, but the Nothing Phone 3 is good enough unless mobile photography is at the top of your requirements.

Great software, plus an AI button

Nothing isn’t beating Samsung to the punch with Android 16—the first new phone to launch with Google’s latest OS will be the Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7 later this month. Nothing is releasing its phone with Android 15 and Nothing OS 3.5, but an Android 16 update is promised soon. There’s not much in the first Android 16 release to get excited about, though, and in the meantime, Nothing OS is actually quite good.

Nothing’s take on Android makes changes to almost every UI element, which is usually a recipe for Samsung levels of clutter. However, Nothing remains true to its minimalist aesthetic throughout the experience. The icon styling is consistent and attractive, Nothing’s baked-in apps are cohesive, and the software includes some useful home screen options and widgets. Nothing also made a few good functional changes to Android, including a fully configurable quick settings panel and a faster way to clear your recent apps.

We’ve encountered a few minor bugs, like the weather widget that won’t show freedom units and a back gesture that can be a little finicky. Nothing’s Android skin is also very distinctive compared to other OEM themes. Not everyone will like the “dot matrix” vibe of Nothing OS, but it’s one of the more thoughtfully designed Android skins we’ve seen.

Nothing Phone 3 software

Nothing OS has a distinctive look.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

Nothing OS has a distinctive look. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

Like every other 2025 smartphone, there’s an AI angle here. Nothing has a tool called Essential Space that ties into the aforementioned Essential Key. When you press the button, it takes a screenshot you can add notes to. It logs that in Essential Space and turns an AI loose on it to glean important details. It can create to-do lists and reminders based on the images, but those suggestions are misses as often as they are hits. There’s also no search function like the Google Pixel Screenshots app, which seems like a mistake. You can hold the essential key to record a voice memo, which goes through a similar AI process.

There are also some privacy caveats with Essential Space. The screenshots you save are uploaded to a remote server for processing, but Nothing says it won’t store any of that data. Your voice notes are processed on-device, but it would be nice if images were as well.

Nothing has part of a good idea with its mobile AI implementation, but it’s not as engaging as what we’ve seen from Google. And it’s not as if Google’s use of AI is essential to the mobile experience. The Nothing Phone 3 also gets the standard Gemini integration, and Google’s chatbot will probably get much more use than Essential Space.

Nothing has promised five years of major Android version updates, and there will be two additional years of security patches after that. Nothing is still a very new company, though, and there’s no guarantee it will still be around in seven years. If we assume the best, this is a good update policy, surpassing Motorola and OnePlus but not quite at the level of Google or Samsung, both of which offer seven years of full update support.

Different but not that different

The Nothing Phone 3 is a good smartphone, and it’s probably the best piece of hardware the company has made in its short run. The performance is snappy, the software is thoughtfully designed, and the hardware, while gimmicky, is solid and visually interesting. If you prefer a more understated look or plan to encapsulate your phone in the most durable case you can find, this is not the phone for you.

Nothing Phone 3

The Nothing Phone 3 is a rather large, heavy phone.

Credit: Ryan Whitwam

The Nothing Phone 3 is a rather large, heavy phone. Credit: Ryan Whitwam

Nothing’s Glyph Matrix is fun to play with, but it’s the kind of thing you’ll write off after some time with the phone. You can only play so many games of Rock, Paper, Scissors before the novelty wears off. Nothing is not alone in going down this path—Asus has a dot matrix on its ROG gaming phones, and Xiaomi has slapped full LCDs on the back of a few of its devices. It’s really no different from the days when OEMs tinkered with secondary ticker displays and rear-facing e-paper screens. Those weren’t very useful, either.

Nothing did all it could to make the secondary display attractive, but even if it came up with a truly great idea, there’s little utility in a screen on the back of your phone. The transparent design and dot matrix screen help the phone stand out from the crowd, but not because they’re doing anything radical. This is still a pretty typical glass sandwich smartphone, like most other 2025 offerings.

At $799, the Nothing Phone 3 is competing with devices like the Pixel 9 and OnePlus 13, both of which have it beat in the camera department, and the OnePlus phone is faster. Meanwhile, Google also has better update support. If you buy the Nothing Phone 3, it should be because you genuinely like the hardware and software design, and there’s very little bad to say about Nothing OS. Otherwise, there are better options for the same or less money.

The good

  • Excellent build quality with IP68 rating
  • Nothing OS looks and works great
  • Good performance
  • Glyph Matrix looks cool

The bad

  • Glyph Matrix is an unnecessary gimmick
  • AI features are still not very useful
  • Cameras have noticeable shutter lag
  • Verizon not officially supported

Photo of Ryan Whitwam

Ryan Whitwam is a senior technology reporter at Ars Technica, covering the ways Google, AI, and mobile technology continue to change the world. Over his 20-year career, he’s written for Android Police, ExtremeTech, Wirecutter, NY Times, and more. He has reviewed more phones than most people will ever own. You can follow him on Bluesky, where you will see photos of his dozens of mechanical keyboards.

Nothing Phone 3 review: Nothing ventured, nothing gained Read More »

chatgpt’s-new-ai-agent-can-browse-the-web-and-create-powerpoint-slideshows

ChatGPT’s new AI agent can browse the web and create PowerPoint slideshows

On Thursday, OpenAI launched ChatGPT Agent, a new feature that lets the company’s AI assistant complete multi-step tasks by controlling its own web browser. The update merges capabilities from OpenAI’s earlier Operator tool and the Deep Research feature, allowing ChatGPT to navigate websites, run code, and create documents while users maintain control over the process.

The feature marks OpenAI’s latest entry into what the tech industry calls “agentic AI“—systems that can take autonomous multi-step actions on behalf of the user. OpenAI says users can ask Agent to handle requests like assembling and purchasing a clothing outfit for a particular occasion, creating PowerPoint slide decks, planning meals, or updating financial spreadsheets with new data.

The system uses a combination of web browsers, terminal access, and API connections to complete these tasks, including “ChatGPT Connectors” that integrate with apps like Gmail and GitHub.

While using Agent, users watch a window inside the ChatGPT interface that shows all of the AI’s actions taking place inside its own private sandbox. This sandbox features its own virtual operating system and web browser with access to the real Internet; it does not control your personal device. “ChatGPT carries out these tasks using its own virtual computer,” OpenAI writes, “fluidly shifting between reasoning and action to handle complex workflows from start to finish, all based on your instructions.”

A still image from an OpenAI ChatGPT Agent promotional demo video showing the AI agent searching for flights.

A still image from an OpenAI ChatGPT Agent promotional demo video showing the AI agent searching for flights. Credit: OpenAI

Like Operator before it, the agent feature requires user permission before taking certain actions with real-world consequences, such as making purchases. Users can interrupt tasks at any point, take control of the browser, or stop operations entirely. The system also includes a “Watch Mode” for tasks like sending emails that require active user oversight.

Since Agent surpasses Operator in capability, OpenAI says the company’s earlier Operator preview site will remain functional for a few more weeks before being shut down.

Performance claims

OpenAI’s claims are one thing, but how well the company’s new AI agent will actually complete multi-step tasks will vary wildly depending on the situation. That’s because the AI model isn’t a complete form of problem-solving intelligence, but rather a complex master imitator. It has some flexibility in piecing a scenario together but also many blind spots. OpenAI trained the agent (and its constituent components) using examples of computer usage and tool usage; whatever falls outside of the examples absorbed from training data will likely still prove difficult to accomplish.

ChatGPT’s new AI agent can browse the web and create PowerPoint slideshows Read More »

eu-presses-pause-on-probe-of-x-as-us-trade-talks-heat-up

EU presses pause on probe of X as US trade talks heat up

While Trump and Musk have fallen out this year after developing a political alliance on the 2024 election, the US president has directly attacked EU penalties on US companies calling them a “form of taxation” and comparing fines on tech companies with “overseas extortion.”

Despite the US pressure, commission president Ursula von der Leyen has explicitly stated Brussels will not change its digital rule book. In April, the bloc imposed a total of €700 million fines on Apple and Facebook owner Meta for breaching antitrust rules.

But unlike the Apple and Meta investigations, which fall under the Digital Markets Act, there are no clear legal deadlines under the DSA. That gives the bloc more political leeway on when it announces its formal findings. The EU also has probes into Meta and TikTok under its content moderation rule book.

The commission said the “proceedings against X under the DSA are ongoing,” adding that the enforcement of “our legislation is independent of the current ongoing negotiations.”

It added that it “remains fully committed to the effective enforcement of digital legislation, including the Digital Services Act and the Digital Markets Act.”

Anna Cavazzini, a European lawmaker for the Greens, said she expected the commission “to move on decisively with its investigation against X as soon as possible.”

“The commission must continue making changes to EU regulations an absolute red line in tariff negotiations with the US,” she added.

Alongside Brussels’ probe into X’s transparency breaches, it is also looking into content moderation at the company after Musk hosted Alice Weidel of the far-right Alternative for Germany for a conversation on the social media platform ahead of the country’s elections.

Some European lawmakers, as well as the Polish government, are also pressing the commission to open an investigation into Musk’s Grok chatbot after it spewed out antisemitic tropes last week.

X said it disagreed “with the commission’s assessment of the comprehensive work we have done to comply with the Digital Services Act and the commission’s interpretation of the Act’s scope.”

© 2025 The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.

EU presses pause on probe of X as US trade talks heat up Read More »

steam-cracks-down-on-some-sex-games-to-appease-payment-processors

Steam cracks down on some sex games to appease payment processors

Valve’s famously permissive rules for what games are and are not allowed on Steam got a little less permissive this week, seemingly in response to outside pressure from some of its partner companies. In a Tuesday update to the “Rules and Guidelines” section of Steam’s Onboarding Documentation, the company added a new rule prohibiting “Content that may violate the rules and standards set forth by Steam’s payment processors and related card networks and banks, or Internet network providers. In particular, certain kinds of adult only content.”

On its own, the new rule seems rather vague, with no details on which of the many kinds of “adult only content” would belong in the “certain” subset prohibited by these unnamed payment processors and ISPs. But the trackers over at SteamDB noticed that the publication of the new rule coincides with the removal of dozens of Steam games whose titles make reference to incest, along with a handful of sex games referencing “slave” or “prison” imagery.

Holding the keys to the bank

Valve isn’t alone in having de facto restrictions on content imposed on it by outside payment processors. In 2022, for instance, Visa suspended all payments to Pornhub’s ad network after the adult video site was accused of profiting from child sexual abuse materials. And PayPal has routinely disallowed payments to file-sharing sites and VPN providers over concerns surrounding piracy of copyrighted materials.

Steam cracks down on some sex games to appease payment processors Read More »