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For the first time since CEO Elon Musk's takeover of X (formerly Twitter), the social media platform is taking the public behind the scenes of its increasingly opaque reporting and moderation practices. Sort of.
Released today, the 15-page Global Transparency Report is the first public report on internal enforcement data beyond Dec. 2021 (Musk took over Twitter in Oct. 2022). It covers the first six months of 2024, and attempts to paint a picture of the platform's new enforcement ethos. According to the data, X received more than 224 million user reports, suspended more than 5 million users, and took down more than 10 million posts between January and June.
Previously, Twitter issued twice-yearly reports on its enforcement mechanisms via its Transparency Center. The practice began in 2012, and didn't stop until new ownership took hold over the platform's reigns. At the time, Musk spoke openly about fighting the government's "bullying" of social media platforms and tech leaders, which included shutting out researchers from internal data like transparency reports.
SEE ALSO: Blocking users will soon be banned on XNow, the platform has changed its tune. "Our policies and enforcement principles are grounded in human rights, and we have been taking an extensive and holistic approach towards freedom of expression by investing in developing a broader range of remediations, with a particular focus on education, rehabilitation, and deterrence," the report reads. "These beliefs are the foundation of 'Freedom of Speech, not Freedom of Reach'— our enforcement philosophy, which means we restrict the reach of posts, only where appropriate, to make the content less discoverable as an alternative to removal."
The report is notably more scarce than previous iterations. It features a brief run down of user reporting and corresponding company action, covering a variety of policy areas, including child safety, abuse and harassment, platform manipulation, and suicide and self-harm. It depicts a hybrid machine-learning and human moderation process, featuring an "international, cross-functional team with 24-hour coverage," making enforcement decisions.
What "rehabilitation" looks like is not explained — although previous reinstatements of some of the platform's worst offenders, and the focus on account suspensions in the report, suggest X is moving away from outright banning.
X sent 370,588 reports of child exploitation, required by law, to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)'s CyberTipline in the first half of the year. The platform says it also suspended more than 2 million accounts actively engaging with child sexual abuse media (CSAM). In 2021, X/Twitter reported 86,000 cases to NCMEC. The number increased to 98,000 in 2022, and then saw a massive jump to 870,000 in 2023.
An X spokesperson explained the jump in numbers in a statement to Mashable. "In 2023, X updated its enforcement guidelines to also suspend users who engaged with actioned CSAM content (Like, Reply, Share, Bookmark, etc.) and added additional proactive defenses. We saw a spike in enforcements after these changes (catching and cleaning up an existing problem), and we believe that those changes have been effective at discouraging users from either sharing CSAM or looking for it (the actions trending down over time, even though we continue to improve defenses)."
The report also offers (limited) information on government data requests and removals, formerly a major focus of Twitter's reporting as it then championed for a more "open" internet. At the time of the 2021 report, X/Twitter said it had fielded 11,460 requests for information from 67 countries, complying with 40.2 percent of them. In 2024, the platform reported more than 18,000 requests for information and 72,000 requests for content removal from an undisclosed amount of countries. X reportedly disclosed information in 52 percent of cases and complied with 70 percent of removal requests.
The report drops as the platform is subtly revamping itself and its generative AI offerings pre-election. In previous months, X has quietly reinvested in its safety and security teams, with Musk simultaneously redefining the notion of site wide "transparency" and supporting content moderation tools. The CEO also announced this week that the company will soon shutter the site's block feature.
For those of us TV fans who cut the cable cord ages ago, it's time again to cut... something. I don't honestly know what we're cutting this time exactly. But it's time to cancel all your streaming services. To use the industry term, churn out every month, and don't churn back in unless a particular service has something you just can't miss.
That's right: go cancel them all.
After all, how many of these ever-increasing monthly fees are you already tolerating? The average is reportedly four, and depending on whether or not you pay for the ad-free options, that could set you back about $75 per month. And four services isn't enough to keep you in the loop about everything buzzy on TV. If you just pay for four of the most popular ones — perhaps Netflix, Max, Amazon Prime, and Disney+ — you missed awards juggernaut Shōgun on Hulu (the ad-free version of which now costs an eye-watering $18.99 per month). And how have you survived 2024 without the Olympics on Peacock? Oh, and you're on track to miss out on Severance season 2 if you're not an Apple TV+ subscriber.
Tweet may have been deletedThe sneaky price spiral just goes on and on until you're paying more than the cost of cable — and there's a good chance you are.
Then again, you probably don't just watch your favorite shows. If you're like a lot of people, you often fire up a streaming service app, browse to whatever you've seen talked about online, and give it a try. And what's your reward for such open-mindedness? Perhaps you watched streaming services dump some of your favorite characters into festering swamps like they did in Secret Invasion, or Velma. Maybe you tuned into The Circle season 6, which featured the unwatchably try-hard plot twist of an "AI" contestant. Maybe you checked out The Idol, or Deep Fake Love, which you'd heard were so bad they're good, but they turned out to be so bad that you just want those precious hours of your life back.
Millions of Americans are already quitting in 2024. In response to password-sharing crackdowns, rising costs, and the proliferation of ads on streamers like Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon Prime — which one day decided to turn ads on for you by default — consumers in 2024 are cancelling streaming services in record numbers.
But don't just make a mental note to cancel when the offerings on one service or another feel exceptionally dire; go cold turkey right now. The best part of streaming à la carte instead of paying all the time is the newfound freedom you'll feel not to watch the next big thing if you don't really want to. You'll soon notice that other, cheaper, better ways of consuming TV and movies have just become strangely attractive.
SEE ALSO: Netflix is axing its cheapest ad-free tier How streaming arrived at its cut-the-cord moment so fastCord cutting the first time around was a no-brainer because it felt like everyone agreed that cable was a drag. Watching TV in the '90s sometimes meant clicking around the upper channels of your cable package, waiting for something — anything remotely interesting, please — to come back from an epic commercial marathon. It certainly wasn't what you wanted as a paying consumer, but it was obviously the experience the pay TV industry wanted you to have.
For millions of cord cutters (not to mention "cord nevers") that experience is gone forever, but the feeling of time and money flushed down the toilet, supposedly in the name of "entertainment," is back with a vengeance.
A decade ago, it felt like the Silicon Valley disruptors had arrived to fix the entertainment industry. House of Cards showed up on Netflix in 2013 like a precision-guided missile of politically charged melodrama straight to the cerebral cortexes of "discerning" viewers like myself. (It turned out we weren't all that discerning; we were just TV gluttons at our first all-you-can-eat buffet). Netflix's addictive grand slam during its first at-bat was astonishing. The networks could never. HBO could sometimes, but who can remember what HBO's first-ever drama even was? (Answer: Philip Marlowe, Private Eye. Yeah, me neither).
Netflix was defying the very laws of entertainment industry physics. The stream-and-binge TV era had begun, and it felt like nothing would ever be the same. The Big Data guru Rick Smolan told the New York Times' David Carr in 2013, "Programmers have been wandering out and shooting a shotgun into the night sky and hoping they hit something, and I end up paying $150 for channels full of nothing I want to watch. These guys know what they are aiming at."
But the TV industry has fully reverted to its old ways in the decade since that House of Cards moment. The business is once again all about getting people to overpay for tons and tons of ad-saturated mediocrity. Dan Goman, CEO of the video software company Ateliere Creative Solutions, told Forbes earlier this year that, "For many years, streaming services offered subscriptions at rates that were enticingly low," but that, "We’re now seeing the industry gravitating toward familiar models — ads and bundles."
You already know the highlights here: One after another, streaming services are hiking their prices, in a series of moves designed to push consumers to cheaper ad-supported tiers which generate more revenue than the premium ones. Meanwhile, the services themselves kill programming users expect to be there in an effort to cut their spending on library content, all while degrading cherished brands, abandoning quality in favor of quantity, and — perhaps oddest and most irksome of all — cutting corners on audio, making it hard to literally hear the content we're paying our hard-earned money for.
The term "enshittification" is overused these days, but this sort of thing is exactly what its coiner, Cory Doctorow, had in mind when he came up with it. As Doctorow wrote last year:
Why is Netflix putting the screws to its customers? It’s part of the enshittification cycle, where platform companies first allocate surpluses to their customers, luring them in and using them as bait for business customers. Once they turn up, the companies reallocate surpluses to businesses, lavishing them with low commissions and lots of revenue opportunities. And once they’re locked in, the company starts to claw back the surpluses for itself.
Do streaming services deserve your passive, monthly dollars?Regardless of how you feel about the overall degradation of the streaming experience, maybe you just like knowing the content you love is available anytime you want, and that makes keeping your subscriptions worthwhile. But time and again, you've opened up a streaming service hoping to see something you could have sworn was there, and it was just... gone. It's not your imagination. On top of everything else, Streamland has become a messy place where it's never clear how to find what you want, and what you can count on today might be gone tomorrow.
Think the trashy reality show that binds your friend group together will always have a home on Peacock? Think your Disney+ subscription is a parenting must-have because it houses the whole Disney and Marvel animated universes? Think the long-awaited streaming service Venu (assuming it's ever allowed to exist) has the makings of the mythical stable home for sports programming that all sports fans have been dreaming of?
Think again. Fire up any given streaming service, and what you'll see is the confusing result of behind the scenes wheeling-and-dealing, with no apparent thought given to reliability or viewer convenience.
As an illustration of this convenience problem, look at Sex and the City. The intuitive place to watch all things Sex and the City is Max, the service formerly known as HBO Max, but Sex and the City's availability on Max may well be in danger. Yes, SATC is safe on Max for now, but starting this past April, it became available on Netflix too. A bit confusing, but as soon as the dollars and cents penciled out, Max's parent company gave up exclusivity and let Netflix in on the action. If you can keep track of all this in your head, no big deal, but it gets worse: you'd better believe that one day soon, Max may very well stop streaming Sex and the City. If that sounds implausible, it shouldn't. You already can't watch the movie Sex and the City 2 on Max.
Max, like all streaming services, will unceremoniously dump its most treasured content if it feels like it. I cannot watch my personal favorite COVID-era movie, An American Pickle, on Max — nor on literally any streaming service whatsoever — even though it was an HBO Max exclusive when it debuted. And remember HBO's hit show Westworld? You already can't watch it at all on Max even though it bagged Emmys and was by some measures HBO's biggest hit of all time. Want to stream Westworld on a monthly service? As far as I can tell, there is one streaming service with exclusive streaming rights to Westworld: DIRECTTV's "Premier" streaming package, which will set you back — are you sitting down? — $149.99 per month.
This brand of chaos is the most reliable attribute in the streaming universe. Not even bundling Hulu and Disney+ together guarantees access to all things Marvel. To wit: Marvel's Runaways, a Hulu original is now exclusive to Apple TV+. The Office — a longtime NBC hit which achieved cultural critical mass only when it became a Netflix staple, is no longer on Netflix. For that you have to go to Peacock, the NBCUniversal streaming service, which is making itself a major destination by becoming the only place to stream the likes of Yellowstone, the biggest hit on the Paramount Network, but which doesn't stream on Paramount+. So you might assume you need the all-powerful Peacock for that other NBC mega-hit, Friends, right? Not so much. Friends is only available on... Netflix? Nope, for heaven only knows what reason (money), Friends is only available on Max. Netflix is no longer your destination for legendary NBC shows. Oh, except Seinfeld. For the next two years. And after that who knows?
The promise of streaming in the first place was instant gratification, and subscribing to upwards of eight streaming services doesn't guarantee any gratification at all. What's a content addict to do?
Watch whatever you want. You're free.After you cancel them all, you'll find that in a manner of speaking, you have more access to the programming you want, not less.
In the barbaric bygone days of content consumption, everyone tolerated something called "video rental." Before Netflix came along and started mailing people discs in paper sleeves (yes, that was once the entire Netflix business model), this way of consuming movies and TV involved the very real hassle of physically getting off your duff and going to a store. It also meant an even worse hassle that seems totally alien now: late fees. But in terms of content-for-money, this terrible system was vastly superior to what we have today. The viewing possibilities felt truly limitless. If your local chain video store didn’t have what you were looking for, you could hunt for it elsewhere in town, or — if it was really obscure — fork over the extra money and buy it, even if that meant importing a disc from another country.
That feeling of boundless possibility is partly why some people — mostly nostalgic film buffs — are still video store partisans. But you don't have to take on any such affectation to get the benefits of the pre-streaming lifestyle (and none of the drawbacks) thanks to this one weird trick: just watch TV and movies à la carte. À la carte video rental is admittedly a form of streaming, but without the subscription. And it couldn't be easier to get started: You can just Google the exact movie or TV show you want to watch, find a site that lets you rent or "buy" that piece of content for viewing on your preferred device or smart TV, and enjoy your truly personalized entertainment experience.
Forking over these small amounts can feel like a splurge or even a defeat if you already pay the standard American $75 per month to access "unlimited" streaming content on a bunch of streaming services, but if you cut ties with those monthly fees, you'll instantly have a nice à la carte budget. Most movies will set you back somewhere between $2 and $5 (fresh-from-theaters new releases like Blink Twice can set you back $19.99, but that sort of extravagance isn't really part of the à la carte equation), and watching a single TV show episode can look like a $0.99 rental or a rather steep $2.99 "purchase" with no option to rent.
And à la carte is, in fact, essentially the only way to watch some of those favorites I mentioned earlier, like Westworld and An American Pickle. The freedom of being a streaming service cord cutter, then, means you're in a charmed position in which you can just not sweat the shrinking archives at the streaming services at all.
Not relying on streaming services changes how you watch, but only a little Tweet may have been deletedCanceling your streaming services and getting yourself used to à la carte streaming are just two steps on the path to maximizing your entertainment dollar. While you're at it, an antenna and a blu-ray/DVD player are good investments that will pay for themselves in a hurry. What's more, your local library has discs you can bring home for free, and if you're honest with yourself, you probably have some movies and box sets collecting dust around the house that you could watch instead of chasing a new shiny object on one of the streamers.
Now that you're free, you can make a bucket list of every movie and TV show you've ever hoped to watch, and just work your way through it.
As for me, I've started thinking about TV somewhat differently, but I don't feel nearly as cut off as one might think. I subscribed to Max recently so I could watch Curb Your Enthusiasm's final season, and while I had that subscription, I scratched a couple movies from the Max archive off my watchlist before canceling. When White Lotus season 3 comes out, this cycle will begin again.
Sports were a problem when I had streaming services, and it's certainly still a problem now that I don't, but I have an antenna for in-market games, and I watch baseball in bars — where other fans are — instead of at home.
But the best way to summarize my new TV outlook is my attitude toward the Star Wars franchise. I've completely avoided all the Star Wars shows, and I have no regrets, but I'm considering watching Andor. I might, and I might not. As a streaming cord cutter, I still enjoy taking risks on new streaming shows from time to time like White Lotus and The Curse, but I mostly prefer bucket list classics, or shows where I'm more or less guaranteed to get what I want, like Law & Order: Organized Crime (available for free with my trusty antenna). In short, I rarely involve myself in shows with those deliciously intriguing opening episodes, which might turn out to be genius, but let's face it, usually turn out to be the TV equivalent of low-effort clickbait.
So if the second and final season of Andor jumps the shark, I'll have dodged a bullet. If it gets the same rapturous response as the first season, then I'll know it's a good bet. I'll subscribe to ad-free Disney+ for exactly one month, and I'll watch the whole thing at my own pace.
Cybersecurity firm Kaspersky has uninstalled its popular antivirus software from U.S. users' computers, automatically replacing it with a completely different program from completely different company UltraAV. Kaspersky customers are not happy.
Rolled out in an update on Sept. 19, Kaspersky's unilateral swapping of users to UltraAV quickly garnered many confused and upset reactions online. Numerous people took to social media to complain about UltraAV being automatically installed on their computer without their consent, as well as express dissatisfaction at how the transition was handled. Some even voiced suspicion regarding the unfamiliar antivirus software, speculating that it was malware and demanding to know how to uninstall it.
SEE ALSO: FCC flags Russian cybersecurity firm Kaspersky as risk to national securityYet despite customers' complaints, Kaspersky's handoff to UltraAV didn't come entirely out of the blue.
Kaspersky had already announced plans to pull out of the U.S. earlier this year after the Russian cybersecurity company was banned from continuing to operate in the country. As such, Kaspersky informed U.S. customers at the beginning of the month that while they would still receive cybersecurity protection under their paid subscription, these services would now be provided by its U.S.-based partner UltraAV.
"In the coming days, you will be receiving communications from UltraAV with instructions on how to activate your new account," wrote Kaspersky in messages that began rolling out on Sept. 5. "We're confident that you'll enjoy the enhanced protection and features UltraAV offers."
Unfortunately, at least some customers claim they never received this notification or weren't provided with the promised follow-up instructions.
Reddit Reddit RedditResponding to the uproar on Saturday, Kaspersky and UltraAV issued a joint statement explaining that their aim had been to make the transition "as seamless as possible."
"Kaspersky and UltraAV worked closely to ensure customers would maintain the standards of security and privacy users have come to expect from their service," read the statement. "This update ensured that users would not experience a gap in protection upon Kaspersky’s exit from the market."
Even so, UltraAV isn't a perfect one-to-one substitute for Kaspersky. UltraAV does have a few added features that Kaspersky didn't offer, such as notifying you when your social security number is used, monitoring "high-risk transactions" such as password resets, and up to $1 million in identity theft insurance. However, unlike Kaspersky, UltraAV does not provide webcam or online payment protection, features many customers will no doubt miss.
Credit: UltraAV Why is Kaspersky uninstalling antivirus software from U.S. computers?Kaspersky is being forced to exit the U.S. market after the government banned it from providing its services to anyone within the country, citing national security concerns about the Russian cybersecurity giant. Though announced in June, the ban is set to take effect from Sept. 29 to allow customers time to find alternative antivirus solutions.
In a press release at the time, the Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) claimed that Kaspersky posed a risk to national security "due to the Russian Government’s offensive cyber capabilities and capacity to influence or direct Kaspersky’s operations."
"[This risk] could not be addressed through mitigation measures short of a total prohibition," the BIS wrote.
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission had previously labelled Kaspersky an "unacceptable risk to national security" in 2022, while federal agencies were banned from using its antivirus software in 2017.
Kaspersky has consistently argued that its U.S. ban is unconstitutional and politically motivated, claiming that there is no evidence it is a national security threat. Nonetheless, it began winding down its U.S. operations on July 20, including dismissing employees based in America.
"To respond to the U.S. authorities’ concerns, the company has proposed a comprehensive assessment framework providing for the verification of its solutions, database updates, [and] threat detection rules by an independent trusted reviewer," Kaspersky wrote in a July statement regarding the ban.
"Therefore, Kaspersky maintains that the U.S. Department of Commerce decision was based on the geopolitical climate rather than on the evaluation of the integrity of the company’s solutions and deprives U.S. users and companies of best in class protection."
Kaspersky's arguments are similar to those TikTok has mounted in the face of its own U.S. ban. The U.S. government has also accused TikTok of posing a threat to national security, claiming that the popular video sharing app is controlled by a "foreign adversary" due to its Chinese parent company ByteDance. TikTok is currently fighting its high-profile ban in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, where it's no doubt hoping for a better outcome than Kaspersky.
Elon Musk's social media platform X is losing users in two of its most important markets: the U.S. and UK.
According to a new report from the Financial Times, Musk's X has lost nearly one-fifth of its daily active user base in the U.S. and a whopping one-third in the UK.
Tweet may have been deletedThe data, collected by third-party analytics company SimilarWeb, compares X's daily active user numbers from May 2023 to September 2024.
It's important to note that as a third-party data firm, SimilarWeb does not have direct access to X's internal user stats. The company collects data based on web traffic stats. While SimilarWeb's data includes traffic from mobile devices to mobile websites, SimilarWeb cannot account for activity within X's official apps on platforms like iOS and Android.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk reportedly surrenders to Brazil in battle over X banHowever, some of X's own internal user numbers are public information – at least as it pertains to the EU. Thanks to EU regulations known as the Digital Services Act (DSA), which requires social media platforms to make this information available, we know that the SimilarWeb data showing a decline in X's users is largely accurate across the board.
X itself has recently reported a decline in users in the EU.
X's downward usage trendsX most recently shared its latest usage data, as required by EU law, last month.
As Social Media Today points out, Musk's company reported a decline in monthly active users over the last year.
In X's EU user base report consisting of data from February to July 2023, Musk's social media platform had 112.2 million monthly active users in the EU. In the following six month period from August 2023 to January 2024, that number dropped to 111.4 million users.
X's most recent report, covering February to July 2024, showed that its user base in the EU fell once more to 105.9 million.
In addition to its woes in the U.S., UK, and EU, X has been banned in another major market, Brazil, over the past month. Musk has since acquiesced to Brazil's Supreme Court's orders and access to the social media site will likely soon be reinstated. However, as of publishing time, X is still unavailable in Brazil.
Furthermore, as Mashable previously reported in September of last year, CEO Linda Yaccarino had also shared X's internal worldwide user numbers, seemingly inadvertently showcasing how the company had shed millions of users since Musk's takeover of the former Twitter just less than a year earlier.
While traffic stats and user numbers can ebb and flow due to many factors, it's clear that any real movement in X's user base is heading down and not upward. A previous report in July 2024 noted that while X hadn't declined in global users from a year ago, its growth was stagnant – registering just a 1.6 percent in users over the past 12 months.
Musk's leadership has taken center stage on the platform and has likely contributed to the decline of users. In fact, the Financial Times mentioned in its report that X's user base decline in the UK picked up after Musk commented that "civil war is inevitable" in response to an X post about riots in the country.
X will likely enjoy a boost in user activity over these next few weeks thanks to the U.S. election season. But Musk is playing an active role in U.S. politics this year including endorsing former president Donald Trump. Assuming another politics-based user bump is ongoing, Musk's ongoing commentary and involvement in the U.S. election, like his earlier UK social unrest comments, could further affect X's user numbers if that bump subsides.
Mashable reached out to X for comment, and will update this if we hear back.
With tech industry players rolling out shiny new AI investments on the banks of the Hudson River, international leaders gathered across Manhattan on the East River, coalescing for September's annual UN General Assembly session — a global forum on big issues like sustainable development, ending armed conflict, and, amid it all, artificial intelligence.
Neil Sahota, CEO of AI research firm ACSILabs, was present too, a longstanding UN AI advisor and early AI R&D specialist. Twenty years ago, Sahota found himself in the midst of a "business intelligence" investment boom, eventually brought on to IBM's secret team behind its Jeopardy!-playing AI, Watson. He's a founder of the UN's AI for Good initiative, observing the rise of global AI tools and accompanying concerns in real time, even shepherding them on. And for almost a decade, Sahota has been on call with the international body as it devised a "tactical" response to AI.
"It was a bit of a brave new world," said Sahota. Since then, the UN has invested in hundreds of AI projects and programs, with different bodies taking a stab at AI guidance that reflects the needs of the global population. But with the acceleration of national AI investments, one unanswered question has loomed: How should it be regulated?
SEE ALSO: Parents have no idea how teens are using AI, survey findsDespite its complexity, advocates like Sahota believe the international body is the world's best bet at guarding the impact of AI. "The UN is one, if not the only, globally-trusted organization that has the credibility to actually lead this effort," he explained. "It can become a leader, to help member nations — help the people, help the industry — understand and create a new mindset around AI."
But it might be too late. "People are realizing that we're running out of time, or maybe we've already run out of time, to figure these things out," Sahota told Mashable. "We live in a time of hyper change, experiencing 100 years worth of change in the next 10 years. We don't have time to react to things anymore."
The UN steps into the AI arms raceGlobally, nation states are rushing into AI investment at an increasingly high pace, attempting to beat each other to the technological punch. It's what the AI Now Insitutite refers to as the "AI arms race." The race has fostered the rise of what experts have coined "AI nationalism," or the transformation of AI into a core industrial concern and national industrial resource, the institute explains. The claim for technological sovereignty among nation states leading the charge (mainly the U.S. and China) has grown alongside it.
Other governments and international bodies have spent the last few years formulating responses to the increasingly political nature of AI development. The UN has discussed the impact of AI in regulatory conversations since at least 2017. In March, the General Assembly adopted a resolution on "steering AI use for global good" amid "existential" concerns. U.S. representatives introduced the landmark statement of intent, saying the international community must "govern this technology rather than have it govern us."
The UN's current working group, the high-level Advisory Body on Artificial Intelligence, was formed in 2023, after several years of suggestions from advisors like Sahota.
Birthed from this year's convening is a new "Governing AI for Humanity" report, which at times reads as a sobering list of risks and at others an optimistic guide to co-investment, amid AI's burgeoning "opportunity envelope." It recommends the creation of a new, independent scientific panel to survey AI "capabilities, opportunities, risks, and uncertainties"; it encourages "AI standards sharing" and sets out plans for a kind of AI governance network; and it pushes for a Global AI fund to foster more "equitable" investment.
"Fast, opaque and autonomous AI systems challenge traditional regulatory systems, while ever-more-powerful systems could upend the world of work. Autonomous weapons and public security uses of AI raise serious legal, security, and humanitarian questions," the report warns. "There is, today, a global governance deficit with respect to AI. Despite much discussion of ethics and principles, the patchwork of norms and institutions is still nascent and full of gaps. Accountability is often notable for its absence, including for deploying non-explainable AI systems that impact others. Compliance often rests on voluntarism; practice belies rhetoric."
Sahota provided input on the report, but didn't sit on the committee. He explained that the report was in development for years — at one point, the possible culmination of the body's AI for Good summit — but it needed unanimous input from all 192 member nations for it to have any credence.
Having observed the political give and take of formalizing an AI report of this size, Sahota noted the expected "mellowing out" of certain regulatory suggestions and the "beefing up" of other suggestions. Sahota has championed a separate UN arm dedicated to AI and technological oversight for years, and the new report recommends the creation of an "independent international scientific panel" and an AI office in the UN Secretariat. But there's a long journey ahead before that body has any kind of formal influence.
An office of that kind, Sahota argues, is crucial, acting as a focal point to coalesce working groups, committees, projects, and to provide visibility to international regulation efforts.
The report notes a surfeit of "documents and dialogues" that have been adopted by governments, companies, consortiums, and international organizations that focus on AI governance. But, the UN argues, "none of them can be truly global in reach and comprehensive in coverage. This leads to problems of representation, coordination, and implementation." The less-than-ideal future of AI governance involves "disconnected and incompatible AI governance regimes," the UN says, prompting the need for coordination.
The call seems urgent, but it's long overdue.
"In the digital age, there are no boundaries," said Sahota. "Someone develops an AI technology, or any kind of technology, and there's really no way to stop its spread or use anywhere in the world." The omnipresence of AI has worried many, and its impact on the global majority, on formerly colonized nations, is an issue that will warrant international collaboration. In many ways, it bears the same complicated questions as the worsening climate crisis. And national policy is already making similar concessions.
AI sneaks past the long arm of the lawA variety of regulatory and standards-building efforts have been proffered by nations and political blocs. In May, the European Union signed into law a first-of-its-kind AI Act, intended to protect its citizens from "high-risk" AI. Canada also has a legally enforceable regulatory standard, known as the Artificial Intelligence and Data Act.
But for the most part, AI's regulatory oversight has been piecemeal, reliant on soft law principles. UNESCO has led a widespread international effort to create a human rights framework around AI, including its AI Ethics Recommendations, a Global AI Ethics and Governance Observatory, and an AI "RAM," designed to help member states assess readiness for implementation of AI. "In no other field is the ethical compass more relevant than in artificial intelligence," writes Gabriela Ramos, UNESCO assistant director-general for Social and Human Sciences.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, or OECD, is a huge player, too, establishing international frameworks for possible intergovernmental cooperation and creating methodologies for ethical evaluation. The OECD Recommendation on Artificial Intelligence, the first set of intergovernmental principles for trustworthy AI, emphasized "interoperability" AI policy. Notably, OECD's biggest players — the nations signing onto their work — are wealthier, "industrialized" countries: Japan's Hiroshima AI Process Friends Group, the US's Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI), the UK's Bletchley Declaration, and China's Interim Measures on generative AI, for example.
The U.S. has introduced dozens of AI regulation bills, with states focusing on the regulation of synthetic digital forgeries, or deepfakes.
But the slow legislative efforts of nation states has allowed for a proliferation of bad use cases for generative AI, and the growth of private interests in its development and implementation.
The UN's report suggests that, if extreme risk arose with the development of AI, the tech could be treated along the lines of a biological weapon or even nuclear energy — science that has been limited and regulated by participating member nations for the greater good of humanity. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), for example, drew lines around nuclear science for the purposes of energy and medicine and bans on further weaponization. (The irony that nuclear energy may be the next path forward for AI's demands on the energy grid, is not lost.)
But the analogy is limited. "Nuclear energy involves a well-defined set of processes related to specific materials that are unevenly distributed, and much of the materials and infrastructure needed to create nuclear capability are controlled by nation states," the report outlines. "AI is an amorphous term; its applications are extremely wide and its most powerful capabilities span industry and states."
The UN's 'lead by example' strategyThe diffuse nature of AI means collaboration and forethought is key. "One of my concerns is that we're working on things that we don't fully understand. As technologists, we build towards the outcome — we just need to measure the outcome we're looking for," Sahota explained. "We don't think about other uses or misuses. We're not thinking about these other ancillary impacts, these indirect impacts, the ripple effects."
Even with the international body's history, and the ongoing issue of cooperation-avoidant nation states, Sahota doesn't believe there's a better international forum for regulating AI. "We have to define what right and ethical use means. There's just no way around that. And who is going to lead that? It's tailor made for a body like the UN."
Could it be, then, that AI's existence as a broad, cross-sector tech — one that countries are eagerly seeking and which isn't, on the surface, pegged to historically contentious issues — offers the first opportunity for unilateral agreement?
The UN, Sahota argues, can act as an international standards-setting body that nation states look to as a foundation for AI investment and regulation. Rather than just planning for the potential negative impacts, Sahota says, the UN should model the appropriate use cases of AI technology. "Policy and regulation shouldn't just be to clean up the guardrails and limit negative risk or legal liability, there's also a possibility to create good."
That might be the only path forward too, as the UN's recent AI governance recommendations are less of a regulatory framework, and more of a plan for co-investment. They require buy-in from international powers at large, those who will agree to things like a shared data trust, a global AI investment fund, or a "development network" to convene experts and resources. While the UN's new report makes a similar ethical argument to Sahota, he says the lack of member state backing — proving there are many who are already on board with the "lead-by-example" plan — is a misstep.
"This AI fund could be a way to create that nudge, to create incentives for people to think about the impact these [technologies] may have," he explained. "But it would have been nice to see the next steps laid out, to be able to see at least some of the buy-in, and for it to be a motivator or to lend credibility. It would show that this can be more than just talking heads. It's more than pieces of paper that collect dust."
The publication of the UN's report, and the fact the high level meetings are devoting time to ethical AI discussions, is a monumental feat amid rising AI nationalism. But technology moves faster than people and processes, Sahota explained, and political bodies need to speed things up. "There are more and more people that see that this window is rapidly closing," said Sahota. "It is now a people challenge. Can you imagine if everyone became a proactive thinker? How profound of a change that would be? You can tell people that there's a couple years to figure this out, and they think that is a long time. Two weeks can feel like an eternity, but we only have as much time as we think we do."
On Mars, some 120 million miles away in space right now, anything that isn't another version of dusty red stands out like a sore thumb.
That's how the Perseverance rover, a lab on wheels about the size of a Mini Cooper, spotted an unusual rock with black and white zebra stripes two weeks ago. Scientists back on Earth named the oddball "Freya Castle" after a landmark in the United States' Grand Canyon.
Because it's a loose stone that is different from the bedrock underneath it, scientists suspect it rolled downhill at some point in the planet's history.
"This possibility has us excited," wrote Athanasios Klidaras, a Purdue University doctoral student, for NASA. "We hope that as we continue to drive uphill, Perseverance will encounter an outcrop of this new rock type so that more detailed measurements can be acquired."
SEE ALSO: NASA's Mars rovers had a gangbusters summer of rocks Perseverance poses for a selfie with Cheyava Falls, a leopard-spotted rock it recently discovered on Mars that could have evidence of ancient microbial life. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSSThe latest finding follows the highly productive summer the rover and its twin Curiosity enjoyed, discovering several rocks that reveal Mars as having been a more geologically diverse planet than once thought. In a span of seven weeks, Perseverance and Curiosity found pure sulfur, a likely anorthosite boulder that could be a part of the planet's original crust, and a spotted rock with the most compelling signs of ancient Martian life yet, though a sample would need to be shipped back to Earth for confirmation.
For about a month, Perseverance has been crawling up the steep slopes of Jezero Crater, a site where scientists believe a river once emptied into a body of water. The rover is attempting to reach the crater's rim, which rises about 1,000 feet above the basin floor, on a quest to find a larger variety of rocks. The journey has been slow, but the rover is making better progress now that it has reached a flatter stretch of land.
After seeing the unusual Freya Castle from afar on Sept. 13, scientists took higher-resolution photos to get a better look before the rover drove away. The closeups show that the rock, about eight inches wide, has a rather unusual texture — different from anything seen on Mars before. Though the team doesn't know much about its chemical makeup yet, scientists believe its zebra stripes could be the result of igneous or metamorphic processes.
Igneous rocks form when magma from within the planet crystallizes and solidifies. Metamorphic rocks started out as something else but were significantly altered from their original state after exposure to high heat and pressure.
The stark linear pattern of light and dark minerals found makes Freya Castle unique, Katie Stack Morgan, deputy project scientist for the Perseverance's mission, told Mashable. A reasonable guess is that this rock is igneous and composed of feldspar, the lighter-colored minerals, and pyroxene or amphibole, the darker minerals.
"Since this block was sitting alone on the surface without any context, we don’t know where it came from or how it found its way into the crater," Stack Morgan wrote in an email. "Perseverance may find the source of a block like this during its upcoming crater rim exploration."
The reason scientists want the rover to explore the rim in the first place is for its potential to be littered with ancient Martian bedrock rubble. Jezero Crater formed when something substantial smacked into Mars billions of years ago. The impact could have churned up and tossed deep materials to the surface.
A blue marker shows the location of the rover in mid-August, before it began its climb up Jezero Crater's slopes. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / University of Arizona / ESA"Crater rims act as keepers of ancient Martian history, uplifting and exposing the stratigraphy of these impacted materials," NASA has previously explained. "Additionally, extreme heat from the impact can encourage the circulation of fluids through fractures similar to hydrothermal vents, which have implications for early habitability and may be preserved in the exposed rim bedrock."
The recent rock discoveries have only mounted pressure on NASA to solve the problems facing its proposed Mars Sample Return mission, an expensive and technologically complex plan to fly bits of rock, dust, and air collected by Perseverance back to Earth.
The mission has been in limbo since a review found it would cost upward of $11 billion and take nearly two decades to achieve. NASA has since engaged the greater aerospace industry for input on how to wrangle in spending and development. Seven companies have suggested a variety of ideas, which Mashable has reported, including repurposing Artemis moon landers and rethinking the last leg of the journey. NASA hasn't yet announced its path forward.
As its 50th anniversary nears, Saturday Night Live is unquestionably an institution, not only in comedy or in late-night TV but in American pop culture itself. It has launched countless comedians, cemented the arrival of up-and-coming musical acts, spawned iconic characters, and even influenced politics, through its much-covered casting and guest stars.
With his new movie Saturday Night, co-writer/director Jason Reitman — whose films range from the superb coming-of-age comedy Juno and the provocative mid-life dramedy Tully to the the horrid reboot Ghostbusters: Afterlife — wants you to remember back when SNL was a scrappy sketch show stocked with counterculture comedians, signifying a major risk for NBC and the show's creator, Lorne Michaels.
SEE ALSO: 'Ghostbusters: Afterlife' is a soulless ode to nepotismWith Saturday Night (a nod to the the show's original title, NBC's Saturday Night), Reitman and screenwriter Gil Kenan (Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire co-writer/director) dug through the Saturday Night Live archives for anecdotes, fun facts, and Easter eggs to reimagine that first landmark night. Set over the course of the 90 minutes leading up to showtime, this film aims to capture the manic mayhem, creative conflicts, soul-crushing obstacles, and larger-than-life personalities that contributed to Saturday Night Live's birth. And it fails.
Concentrating the massiveness of SNL into one film about its premiere is a boldly ambitious project. At the film's premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, Reitman noted in his curtain speech that the movie contains over 80 speaking parts. One might admire the filmmaker's passion, but that's also the problem. Reitman, who spent a week as a guest writer on Saturday Night Live in 2008, is a devotee of the church of SNL. As such, Saturday Night is so stuffed with impressions and nostalgic callbacks that it's not much of a movie at all.
Saturday Night throws down a ticking clock that doesn't work. Ella Hunt as Gllda Radner goof off on set of "Saturday Night." Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentBeginning on the sidewalk in front of NBC's Manhattan studios, Saturday Night shows Lorne Michaels (The Fabelmans' Gabriel LaBelle) fretting to an NBC page (Stranger Things' Finn Wolfhard), who is trying unsuccessfully to lure an audience into this free, live comedy show. From there, the film will follow Lorne almost constantly as he dips into the set still under construction, stressful meet-and-greets with network execs, literally explosive rehearsals, an intense control room, and a fateful dive bar, all before the metaphorical curtain rises on his show.
To enhance the tension, Reitman injects title cards that announce the time, counting down until the live show kicks off — or fails to launch entirely. But there's a prequel-like problem here in that we all know how this ends. Occasionally, this works as a visual gag, like when the camera cuts to the time just after a particularly anxiety-ridden moment as a mocking reminder. But as the film drags on with less story and more and more SNL fluff, this device turns on the viewer, reminding us how much of this movie we still have to sit through.
Saturday Night delivers a cavalcade of impressions. Nicholas Braun as Andy Kaufman in "Saturday Night." Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentAs teased in the film's first trailer, Saturday Night throws a bunch of young Hollywood stars into the shoes of SNL's earliest icons, like Gilda Radner (Ella Hunt), Chevy Chase (May December standout Cory Michael Smith), Garrett Morris (Lamorne Morris), John Belushi (Matt Wood), Dan Aykroyd (Dylan O'Brien), and Jane Curtin (Kim Matula). Also in the mix are the likes of Billy Crystal (Nicholas Podany), George Carlin (Matthew Rhys), Jim Henson, and Andy Kaufman (the last two both played by Cat Person's Nicholas Braun).
To Reitman's credit, his cast ably captures the dynamic energy of the Not Ready For Prime Time Players. Hunt has Radner's childlike verve. Wood captures Belushi's wounded ego and belligerent brand of physical comedy. O'Brien nails the macho arrogance of Aykroyd, along with his signature Canadian cadence. Recent Emmy–winner Lamorne Morris brings a sophisticated smoothness to Garrett Morris, who calls out anti-Black racism on set and lights a cigarette on a flaming piece of fallen lighting equipment with equal swagger.
Lamorne Morris as Garrett Morris in "Saturday Night." Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentPodany as Crystal is so dead-on in pitch that the comedian is recognizable from voice alone. Rhys harnesses Carlin's wrath; Matula nails Curtin's crisp comedic timing. In his dual role, Braun capably shifts from the soft-voiced pleading of Henson to the high-pitched buffoonery of Kaufman doing his "thank you very much" shtick. The standout in this group, however, is Cory Michael Smith as Chevy Chase, and that's probably because he's the one who gets the closest thing to a character arc. Cocky, caustic, yet undeniably charismatic, Chase acts like he owns 30 Rock as soon as he enters frame. Smith owns the stride, smirk, and silliness that was Chase's signature. But sparks fly when he comes face-to-face with a bigger star with an even bigger ego.
Saturday Night finds a great villain in J.K. Simmons as Milton Berle. J.K. Simmons as Milton Berle in "Saturday Night." Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentReitman and Kenan's script hinges on the conflict between the Golden Age of comedy versus the new revolutionaries. As such, Lorne faces off against snarling NBC executive David Tebet (Willem Dafoe), and takes a call from a derisive Johnny Carson (an uncredited role that's also the worst impersonation in the film). But most menacing of all is Berle, a well-established comedian who has his own variety show on NBC, which the movie regards as flashy hackery.
Berle prowls Lorne's studio like a predator searching for easy prey, riling the talent and brazenly hitting on Chevy's fiancée, Jacqueline Carlin (Kaia Gerber). This leads to the film's most exciting exchange, where two equal forces of braggadocio face off with a battle of wits that is absolutely crass and cunning. Incredibly, it's Berle who gets the movie's best punchline, involving a bit of wordplay about a choice "comeback" and Chevy's mom. Perhaps that wasn't what Reitman intended, and Simmons just delivered the hell out of that line. Perhaps this moment — which leaves even Chevy Chase speechless — is meant to reflect the uphill battle SNL had ahead of them. Regardless, it's bizarre when a non-SNL figure gets the biggest laugh in your SNL movie.
Rachel Sennott shines, despite an underwritten role. Rachel Sennott, Kim Matula, and Emily Fairn treated as set dressing in "Saturday Night" scene with Gabriel LaBelle and Matt Wood. Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentSennott, who has awed critics and audiences in such heralded comedies as Shiva Baby, Bodies Bodies Bodies, and Bottoms, unsurprisingly delivers one of the best performances in Saturday Night, despite her part being horrifically written.
Sennott plays Rosie Shuster, an Emmy–winning comedy writer whose stint on Saturday Night Live ran from 1975 to 1988; she had a hand in bringing together the cast that would be in the show's first season, as well as many now-classic characters and sketches. She was also married to Lorne Michael from 1967 to 1980, and Saturday Night is much more focused on this latter bit. It's not just that Reitman and Kenan's script treats her like Lorne's sidekick, someone who can dole out advice or a pep talk with equal readiness. It's that the longest bit of dialogue she's given in this movie is doggedly explaining exactly who she is to Lorne, detailing their courtship, relationship, and sex life to Dan Aykroyd in a tedious walk-and-talk.
Reitman overloads the film with such cinematic devices. Far from bringing the excitement or tension of The West Wing to Saturday Night, repeated walk-and-talks reveal little new information visually and make overlong sequences impossible to cut down. A perfect example of Reitman's reliance on this technique is a drug trip experienced by a tertiary character who winds about in mounting panic; it's a detour that tries our patience with no escape. This is true of much of Saturday Night, which is overloaded with tidbits that are potentially fun or nostalgic, but with so little cohesion that this love letter feels more like a rant. It's left to the talented ensemble cast to keep things together, narratively speaking. While Sennott is beguiling with her trademark crooked grin and skill for biting banter, the role of Rosie is regressive, existing chiefly to inform the audience about Lorne.
This is especially dismaying when you look back at Reitman's filmography. Juno, Young Adult, and Tully all had complex female characters who were funny and fleshed out! Notably, Reitman directed but didn't write any of those movies; Diablo Cody wrote them. Without her, it seems Reitman loses track of women's autonomy. But here, he loses track of much, much more.
Saturday Night fails to thrill or be all that funny. John Belushi (Matt Wood) gets violent on "Saturday Night," while Lorne (Gabriel LaBelle) looks on. Credit: Hopper Stone / Sony Pictures EntertainmentIn writing the script, Reitman and Kenan made some liberal changes from the facts of the matter. They include sketches and behind-the-scenes anecdotes that weren't a part of that first episode, and even cut an entire cast member from the story because his presence would have put the lie to their generational conflict. (Sorry to George Coe!) Such changes could be excused as poetic license in pursuit of good storytelling — if it actually added up to good storytelling.
Like Saturday Night Live, this movie is a frenzied collection of scenes. Some work, but many don't, primarily because of how this script chips away at others in service of Lorne. While weaving around sets and silliness, Saturday Night above all else paints Lorne Michaels as a creative genius. His main flaw is that he can't communicate his vision to basically anyone, which creates a domino effect of fighting, screaming, and violence. But far from recognizing these as consequences of Lorne's mercurial leadership, Saturday Night is infuriatingly conventional, excusing the shitty behavior of a famous man because he makes something that is popular.
The film treats Lorne as an underdog, put upon by powerful forces that refuse to acknowledge his (yet to be remotely proven) greatness. It's a tiresome, thin argument as it ever was. And in holding him up, Saturday Night reduces the female characters around Lorne to hasty sketches of the women they represent. The well-documented, damaging sexism on that set is addressed only by a tongue-in-cheek rehearsal of a famous sketch, where the female players turn the male gaze on a womanizing Aykroyd, to the amusement of the crew. Essentially, the actual sexism of early SNL is laughed off.
It's not that any movie could be expected to capture the complexity of early Saturday Night Live. But in capturing that first night, Reitman reduces Gilda Radner to a smile, Jane Curtin to a smirk, Laraine Newman (Emily Fairn) to a running gag about quick changes, and Rosie Shuster to a sidekick.
Further confounding, Reitman spends a gratuitous amount of time building the film's finale, literally brick by brick in a tedious metaphor. Then, he fumbles the turning point that brings this motley crew of chaotic individuals together into an ensemble. What saves the day is not a group scene. It's not a collaboration. It's the re-creation of a solo bit that's not even from an SNL cast member, and which didn't air until later in the season.
In the end, Saturday Night is not an ode to Saturday Night Live. It's a fawning portrait of the men of Saturday Night Live, who are granted punchlines, complexity, and character arcs, while their female counterparts are left with scraps. Longtime lovers of the show may find reason enough to soldier through Reitman's aggravating fanboying over Lorne and the guys. But assembling such a promising cast, looking back on such a pivotal moment in American entertainment, and offering this? It's a punchline that doesn't land.
Saturday Night was reviewed out of its Canadian Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. The movie has since shown at Fantastic Fest as a secret screening. Saturday Night opens in select theaters on Sept. 27 and expands nationwide on Oct. 11.
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Opens in a new window Credit: UGR Tech 220W GaN USB-C 7-Port Charging Station $32.99If you like playing daily word games like Wordle, then Hurdle is a great game to add to your routine.
There are five rounds to the game. The first round sees you trying to guess the word, with correct, misplaced, and incorrect letters shown in each guess. If you guess the correct answer, it'll take you to the next hurdle, providing the answer to the last hurdle as your first guess. This can give you several clues or none, depending on the words. For the final hurdle, every correct answer from previous hurdles is shown, with correct and misplaced letters clearly shown.
An important note is that the number of times a letter is highlighted from previous guesses does necessarily indicate the number of times that letter appears in the final hurdle.
If you find yourself stuck at any step of today's Hurdle, don't worry! We have you covered.
SEE ALSO: Hurdle: Everything you need to know to find the answers Hurdle Word 1 hintAnything that is this would fail the white-glove test.
SEE ALSO: NYT's The Mini crossword answers for September 25 Hurdle Word 1 answerDUSTY
Hurdle Word 2 hintThe rarest kind is common.
SEE ALSO: Wordle today: Here's the answer hints for September 25 Hurdle Word 2 AnswerSENSE
Hurdle Word 3 hintKeeps the weather off you.
SEE ALSO: NYT Connections today: See hints and answers for September 25 Hurdle Word 3 answerPARKA
Hurdle Word 4 hintTo initiate something.
SEE ALSO: NYT Strands hints, answers for September 25 Hurdle Word 4 answerENACT
Final Hurdle hintTo have courage or to endure something.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Games available on Mashable Hurdle Word 5 answerBRAVE
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
The Mini is a bite-sized version of The New York Times' revered daily crossword. While the crossword is a lengthier experience that requires both knowledge and patience to complete, The Mini is an entirely different vibe.
With only a handful of clues to answer, the daily puzzle doubles as a speed-running test for many who play it.
So, when a tricky clue disrupts a player's flow, it can be frustrating! If you find yourself stumped playing The Mini — much like with Wordle and Connections — we have you covered.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Play games on MashableHere are the clues and answers to NYT's The Mini for Wednesday, September 25, 2024:
AcrossToot one's own hornThe answer is Brag.
The answer is Love.
The answer is Simon.
The answer is Knew.
The answer is IDos.
The answer is Blind
The answer is Romeo.
The answer is Avows.
The answer is Gen.
The answer is Ski.
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Featured Video For You The Wordle Strategy used by the New York Times' Head of GamesAre you also playing NYT Strands? See hints and answers for today's Strands.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to yesterday's Mini Crossword.
If you're reading this, you're looking for a little help playing Strands, the New York Times' elevated word-search game.
Strands requires the player to perform a twist on the classic word search. Words can be made from linked letters — up, down, left, right, or diagonal, but words can also change direction, resulting in quirky shapes and patterns. Every single letter in the grid will be part of an answer. There's always a theme linking every solution, along with the "spangram," a special, word or phrase that sums up that day's theme, and spans the entire grid horizontally or vertically.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Play games on MashableBy providing an opaque hint and not providing the word list, Strands creates a brain-teasing game that takes a little longer to play than its other games, like Wordle and Connections.
If you're feeling stuck or just don't have 10 or more minutes to figure out today's puzzle, we've got all the NYT Strands hints for today's puzzle you need to progress at your preferred pace.
SEE ALSO: Wordle today: Here's the answer hints for September 25 SEE ALSO: NYT Connections today: See hints and answers for September 25 NYT Strands hint for today’s theme: Claim your steakThese words are quite meaty.
Today’s NYT Strands theme plainly explainedThe answers are all related to types of meat cuts.
NYT Strands spangram hint: Is it vertical or horizontal?Today's NYT Strands spangram is horizontal.
NYT Strands spangram answer todayToday's spangram is BeefCuts.
Featured Video For You Strands 101: How to win NYT’s latest word game NYT Strands word list for September 25Round
Chuck
Shank
Sirloin
BeefCuts
Flank
Ribeye
Brisket
Looking for other daily online games? Mashable's Games page has more hints, and if you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now!
Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to yesterday's Strands.
Meta is ready to roll out its latest hardware and software trinkets this week, with Facebook's parent company set to host Meta Connect 2024. Here's how to watch this year's event.
SEE ALSO: Meta Connect 2024: What to expect, including Quest 3S and new AR smart glasses What is Meta Connect?Previously called Facebook Connect (and Oculus Connect before that), Meta Connect is an annual event where the company shows off all its shiny new tech and what developers can do with it. It's been the venue for some pretty big announcements as well, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg announcing Facebook's rebrand to Meta during 2021's Facebook Connect.
We aren't expecting any similarly large revelations from the tech giant at this week's event. What we are expecting, however, are new product announcements, information about Meta's metaverse plans, and a whole lot of talk about AI.
What to expect at Meta Connect 2024While we don't know the exact details of what Meta plans to announce this Wednesday, Facebook's parent company is expected to continue last year's heavy focus on AI. According to rumours, Meta's announcements may include updates on the company's artificially intelligent assistant Meta AI, as well as a more budget-friendly Quest 3 and a new pair of augmented reality glasses.
If you want to know more about what to expect, Mashable's Kimberly Gedeon has provided a rundown of all the rumours circulating in the lead-up to Meta Connect 2024.
How to watch Meta Connect 2024Meta Connect 2024 is scheduled to start Sept. 25 at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT, with a keynote speech by Zuckerberg kicking off the event. This will be followed by a developer keynote shared by several Meta executives at 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT. The livestream will be available to watch on Facebook via the official Meta for Developers page.
People with a Quest VR headset will also be able to jump into Meta Horizon to watch Meta Connect in virtual reality. According to Meta, the VR experience will be inspired by the company's Menlo Park campus in California, and offer attendees the chance to unlock "exclusive rewards." Whether the promise of such nebulous incentives is worth it is a question only you can answer.
Meta Connect 2024 will run for two days, featuring talks on how to use some of the tech giant's tools for developers. You won't have to stay glued to your computer for the entire event, as some of the sessions will be recorded and made available to stream once Meta Connect ends. Meta hasn't specified which parts of the program might be left out though, so you'd be best off catching it live if you're super keen on a specific session.
TL;DR: As of Sept. 25, you can get a lifetime license to Microsoft Windows 11 Pro for just £14.89 instead of £148.34 — that's a savings of 89%. Act fast, because this deal ends soon.
Got an old PC? Whether you snagged an amazing deal on a refurbished device or just have an older PC that's still running, you can give your computer a new lease on life with help from Microsoft's latest operating system, Microsoft Windows 11 Pro.
This updated operating system can make an old computer feel like new. And through Sept. 29 at the Mashable Shop, you can snag major savings on a lifetime license that can be used on three different devices. Right now, Microsoft Windows 11 Pro is only £14.89 — a massive £133 off the usual price — with no coupon code required. We've written about this deal before, but after the latest price drop, we had to highlight it again.
If you're ready to reinvigorate old devices, Microsoft Windows 11 Pro can help. Enhanced security features are included, including Microsoft Information Protection, BitLocker Encryption, advanced antivirus defenses, and support for biometrics login (depending on your computer).
Microsoft Windows 11 Pro also offers great features for work, like Windows Hello for Business that includes management tools that can make working from home easier. Want to keep your work life and your personal life separate? Windows Information Protection can separate them, only letting authorised apps have access to certain types of data. Windows 11 Pro also comes with the latest AI features, which turns your laptop or desktop into your very own digital assistant.
Enjoy a lifetime license to Microsoft Windows 11 Pro, available for a limited time at £14.89 (reg. £148.34) until Sept. 29 at 11:59 p.m. PT.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Opens in a new window Credit: Microsoft Lifetime license to Microsoft Windows 11 Pro £14.89 at the Mashable Shop