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Billy Vunipola shines as Montpellier demolish Ulster to claim Challenge Cup

  • Montpellier 59-26 Ulster

  • Dominant French side run in nine tries

Ulster’s dreams of claiming a first trophy for 20 years were summarily dashed by a strong Montpellier on a steamy night in Bilbao. Led by a revitalised Billy Vunipola the French side possessed too much power for their opponents and were duly rewarded with their third Challenge Cup triumph in 11 seasons.

Vunipola, who last featured for England at the 2023 World Cup, was at the forefront of an increasingly dominant forward effort which steadily wore Ulster down in energy-sapping conditions. The wing Donovan Taofifénua collected two of his side’s nine tries as Montpellier, currently second in the Top 14 table, claimed the latest trophy of this distinctly French-dominated season.

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Barça and OL Lyonnes a clash of styles in Women’s Champions League final

Barcelona’s former coach Jonatan Giráldez can bring insider knowledge to a fourth final between the European giants

You could be forgiven for having a sense of deja vu before a fourth Champions League final between the Spanish champions, Barcelona, and French title-winners, OL Lyonnes, on Saturday evening.

The three-time champions and eight-time champions played each other in the final of Europe’s premier competition three times in six years between 2019 and 2024, with Lyonnes earning a 4-1 win over the Catalan giants in 2019 and a 3-1 win in 2022, before Barcelona delivered a 2-0 defeat of the French side in 2024.

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The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Zuck defends monitoring employees to win AI race in purported leaked audio

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg appears so determined to win the AI race that he is willing to sacrifice some employee privacy to make it happen. In a leaked audio recording published by the worker advocacy group More Perfect Union, Zuckerberg purportedly answered an employee's question about "device monitoring" with a six-minute monologue in which he said Meta employees are very smart and to win the most competitive technology race in history, he would need to collect their keystrokes, mouse clicks, and screenshots to make its own AI measure up to its rivals. “We are using this to feed a very large amount of content into the AI model, so that way it can learn how smart people use computers to accomplish tasks. I think that this is going to be a very big advantage if we can do it,” Zuckerberg purportedly said during an April 30 meeting in which an employee asked about the "top of mind" issue. Meta did not reply to an email from The Register seeking comment and has not confirmed the authenticity of the audio clip, but a company spokesperson confirmed in April that Meta would monitor employees to train AI. Meta's tracking tool is called Model Capability Initiative, according to reports. The audio was posted the same day Meta announced 8,000 job cuts. It captured Zuckerberg's thoughts on the news, first reported by Reuters, that Meta planned to install software on employees' computers to monitor activity for AI training. More Perfect Union did not reply to an email from The Register seeking comment. "So if we're trying to teach the models coding, for example, then having people internally build tools that or solve tasks that help teach the model how to code, we think, is going to dramatically increase our models' coding ability faster than what others in the industry have the capability to do, who don't have thousands and thousands of extremely strong engineers at their company," he purportedly said in the audio. "So that's one example. Another thing that our system needs to be very good at is using computers, so the way that you get a system to be good at using computers is by having it watch really smart people use computers. So that's basically the essence of what we are trying to do here." In one part of the audio, Zuckerberg said the software would not be used to surveil employees' actions on the job, though he stopped short of saying the data would be anonymized. Rather, he said the purpose was narrowly focused on making its AI work better than competitors. “The content is sort of, you know, stripped out in like as much as is possible,” he purportedly said in the leaked audio. “It's like none of the data has been used for like looking at what people are doing, or surveillance, or performance tracking, or anything like that.” That aligns with what a Meta spokesperson told Reuters: that MCI data would not be used for performance assessments. European employees are reportedly exempt from the program because the EU's General Data Protection Regulation likely prohibits this type of monitoring without explicit consent, according to multiple reports. Meta is not the only major technology company turning to its own workforce for AI training data. The Information reported this week that Microsoft and xAI are also leveraging internal employees to generate and refine training datasets. In a similar vein to what Zuckerberg purportedly said, Microsoft, which employs thousands of software engineers, reportedly views its workforce as a competitive advantage for improving GitHub Copilot. In the recording, Zuckerberg purportedly said Meta settled on using its own employees over contractors because they were smarter. “One basic insight and hypothesis that we have is that a lot of data generation across the field is done by these like contract companies,” Zuckerberg purportedly said. “(B)ut in general, the average intelligence of the people who are at this company is significantly higher than the average set of people that you can get to do tasks if you're working through these contractors.” However, the contractor pipeline is also being watched. In January 2026, Wired reported that OpenAI's data vendor, Handshake AI, began asking freelance contractors to upload real work products from past and current jobs, including contracts, financial models, presentations, and code repositories. OpenAI provided a tool to help contractors strip confidential information before uploading, but intellectual property lawyers warned the approach carries significant legal risk. Zuckerberg said this sort of surveillance and the difficult conversations around it are the cost of competing at the frontier of AI. "How do we navigate running the company through what is just this incredibly dynamic period?" he said. "There's lots of things that people would like more certainty on than we have." ®

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

This Cannes Film Cost $500,000 to Make. $400,000 Was AI Compute Costs.

Higgsfield AI is debuting a 95-minute fully AI-generated film at Cannes called "Hell Grind" that reportedly cost $500,000 to make, $400,000 of which was spent on compute alone. The project took just two weeks to produce and is intended to showcase the startup's AI production tools. But it also underscores the current limits of AI filmmaking: thousands of detailed prompts, endless iteration, high costs, and plenty of traditional filmmaking judgment were still required. The Wall Street Journal reports: What might surprise viewers is how much technical film know-how was needed to create the movie, said Adil Alimzhanov, a content lead at Higgsfield who also worked on it. "You have to understand camera composition, which shots are changed. Like you can't have two close-ups back to back, you have to start with an establishing shot," he said. "You still need those filmmaking skills." Higgsfield, which was valued at $1.3 billion in its latest funding round earlier this year, crossed $400 million in annual revenue run rate in May. It doesn't make the actual video-generation models, relying instead on existing tools like Google's Veo 3. But it does provide the tooling on top to make sure that the visuals are consistent across all the incoming generations.

The core of the movie-making process here was prompting the AI models and getting clips back, Alimzhanov said. Each prompt would generate about 15 seconds of footage. Those 15 seconds needed to be generated a number of times, with tweaks to the prompt to get the best possible version. The first 25 minutes of the movie required 16,181 initial video generations, which ended up as 253 final shots. One of the biggest difficulties in making longer-form films with AI is maintaining consistency across the outputs. AI models can be unpredictable, and a feature-length film can't have scenes that look completely different from one moment to the next.

Because of that, every prompt had to be extremely long and detailed. Each one would typically start with a prefix that defined requirements like style (8k IMAX, photorealistic), lighting (natural light only, "contre-jour" backlight, camera on shadow side) and the type of camera it should look like it was being shot on ("cine lens," 180-degree shutter motion blur). The lighting was key to avoiding the AI sheen that typically gets branded as "slop," said Alimzhanov. AI-generated video tends to over-light scenes in an unnatural way. That prefix would also have to remind the AI to obey the laws of physics with wording like: "gravity and inertia respected -- mass has real weight, correct contact shadows, no floating props." The individual prompts were, on average, 3,000 words each.

One aspect of what Higgsfield has built, and sells to clients, is an AI tool that generates these complex, detailed prompts. Users can enter a page from the original script, and the Higgsfield tool will return with a prompt that could be thousands of words long, designed to create production-quality outputs. And all that prompting is how the company racked up a $400,000 AI compute bill on the project. Co-founder and CEO Alex Mashrabov, however, noted that working with "cloud" providers, like Nebius and CoreWeave, rather than big hyperscalers, helped it keep costs from going even higher. You can watch the trailer for Hell Grind on YouTube and judge the results for yourself.

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Ripples on a Rainbow Shore

Radiohead's In Rainbows, in Mario 64 soundfont.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Winstreeks op Wall Street door hoop op akkoord VS en Iran

NEW YORK (ANP) - De Amerikaanse aandelenbeurzen zijn vrijdag met winsten het weekend ingegaan. Hoop op een akkoord tussen de VS en Iran, dat een fragiel staakt-het-vuren kan omzetten in blijvende vrede, wakkerde volgens analisten het optimisme op Wall Street aan.

De S&P 500-index tekende een dagwinst op van 0,4 procent tot 7473,47 punten. Het is tevens de achtste week op rij dat de graadmeter een weekwinst neerzet, wat de langste winstreeks is sinds 2023. De Dow-Jonesindex won daarnaast 0,6 procent tot 50.579,70 punten. Techbeurs Nasdaq kreeg er 0,2 procent bij op 26.343,97 punten.

De beurzen wereldwijd gaan al langer omhoog door hoopgevende berichten uit het Midden-Oosten. Maar of de oorlog echt bijna ten einde is, blijft de vraag. Kenners hebben erop gewezen dat beleggers het conflict en de speculatie over een mogelijke vrede ook als koopkans zien. Dat verklaart waarom de beurzen al weken records laten zien, terwijl de wereld kampt met een grote energiecrisis. Beleggers maakten zich vrijdag ook op voor een lang weekend. Maandag zijn de beurzen in New York gesloten om Memorial Day.

Vrijdag werd ook Kevin Warsh ingezworen als het nieuwe hoofd van de Federal Reserve, de Amerikaanse centrale bank. President Donald Trump benadrukte dat hij wil dat Kevin Warsh onafhankelijk de Fed leidt, terwijl hij probeerde de bezorgdheid van beleggers te bagatelliseren dat hij de nieuwe centralebankpresident onder druk zou zetten over beleidsbeslissingen. Trump heeft de Fed eerder vaak bekritiseerd, omdat hij vond dat de centrale bank de rente niet snel genoeg verlaagde.

Of Warsh Trump zijn zin gaat geven, valt op korte termijn te bezien. De nieuwe Fed-voorzitter verklaarde vrijdag dat de Fed onder zijn leiding een "hervormingsgezinde" agenda zal nastreven. Vooralsnog lijkt Wall Street voor dit jaar echter een renteverhoging in te prijzen, omdat de oorlog in het Midden-Oosten de inflatie aanwakkert.

Uber Technologies was vrijdag een duidelijke verliezer op de beurs. Het aandeel zakte dik 2 procent. Persbureau Bloomberg meldde op basis van ingewijden dat de taxi- en maaltijdbezorgapp de mogelijkheden onderzoekt voor een volledige overname van de Duitse maaltijdbezorger Delivery Hero. Uber maakte onlangs bekend dat het zijn belang in Delivery Hero had vergroot tot bijna 20 procent. Volgens Bloomberg kijkt de onderneming samen met adviseurs inmiddels naar manieren om zijn belang verder te vergroten.


Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

How many upgrades has each team brought to Canada?

F1.com delves into the various upgrades the grid's teams will introduce at the Canadian Grand Prix.

Antonelli leads Russell in disrupted Canadian GP practice

Kimi Antonelli led Mercedes team mate George Russell and Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton in the sole Free Practice ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix, as the session was disrupted by three red flags.

VK: Voorpagina

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Nieuwe wet van de Taliban impliceert dat kindhuwelijken zijn toegestaan; ‘zwijgen is instemmen met een huwelijk’

this isn't happiness.

ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, DESIGN & DISAPPOINTMENT INSTAGRAM ★ ELSEWHERES

Variations on the theme, Norbert Schwontkowski









Variations on the theme, Norbert Schwontkowski