The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

All lobbying should be publicly declared in transparency laws shake-up, watchdog says

Ethics and integrity commission chief says overhaul is crucial to help restore trust in standards

All lobbying of government ministers, aides and senior officials should be publicly declared – from WhatsApp chats to party conference meetings – in a fundamental shake-up of transparency laws, the government’s ethics watchdog has said.

A review led by Doug Chalmers, the head of the ethics and integrity commission, has called for a new register to highlight who is lobbying, which policies they are seeking to influence and who in government they are meeting.

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Disability benefits system ‘not working’ Timms review finds

Interim report into Pip found process had systematic and deep-rooted problems and required bold and radical overhaul

A landmark government review of disability benefits has warned “challenging discussions” remain on how to overhaul and pay for a system it concludes is unfit for purpose and too often leaves vulnerable claimants dehumanised and degraded.

The Timms review of the personal independence payment (Pip) concluded the benefit, claimed by nearly 4 million people in England and Wales, suffered from systematic and deep-rooted problems that had undermined public trust in the benefits system.

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Louise Lasser, star of cult sitcom Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman and Woody Allen comedies, dies aged 87

The 1970s soap parody made a household name of Lasser, who was also known for her collaborations with ex-husband Allen and later films including Requiem for a Dream

Louise Lasser, star of cult 70s sitcom Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman and early films by Woody Allen (to whom she was married for four years), has died aged 87. The New York Times reported she died “at home in Manhattan”.

Lasser’s role as a satirically conceived housewife in suburban Ohio in Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, designed as a parody of daytime soap operas, made her a national star, landing her on the cover of People magazine and Rolling Stone. The series lasted a year and a half, between January 1976 and July 1977, but due to its five-days-a-week schedule squeezed more than 300 episodes out of its two season run. Lasser’s Hartman, with her signature pigtails, was preoccupied with domestic minutiae but found herself in unsettling and disturbing situations, including bizarre deaths. The show was intended to explore the changes sweeping ordinary life in the US in the 1970s.

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Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Apple Says It Will Spend $30 Billion To Design US-Made Broadcom Chips

Apple says it will spend $30 billion to design US-made Broadcom wireless connectivity chips, part of its broader push to diversify its supply chain and support domestic chip production. CNN reports: The agreement with Broadcom will lead to the production of 15 million chips in United States and allow Broadcom to invest $1.5 billion to expand and modernize its manufacturing facilities in Fort Collins, Colorado. It is part of Apple's commitment in August to invest $600 billion as part of its "American Manufacturing Program" which it said is dedicated to bringing even more of the company's supply chain and advanced manufacturing back to the US.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Someday When You Leave Me

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Someday When You Leave Me

Yuksel Arslan

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Yuksel Arslan

Westminster, London ウェストミンスター、ロンドン

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:

Westminster, London ウェストミンスター、ロンドン

kottke.org

Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. NES cartridge...

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. NES cartridge recently sold at auction for $3 million. “It bears the coveted gloss sticker seal affixed to the top lid, identifying it as a second-production example.”

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. NES cartridge...

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. NES cartridge recently sold at auction for $3 million. “It bears the coveted gloss sticker seal affixed to the top lid, identifying it as a second-production example.”

The Register

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

The AI that spawned MechaHitler and deepfake porn puts on a suit to become legal advisor and Excel jockey

To say Elon Musk's AI company has trained some of the most unhinged models on the internet would be an understatement. Grok’s sordid past includes cosplaying as “MechaHitler” and a foray into deepfake porn generation that briefly got the platform banned in some regions. As concerning as that might sound, the recently renamed Eloncorp known as SpaceXAI says Grok, now in version 4.5, has cleaned up its act, wiped its browser history, covered up the swastikas, and is ready to take on more serious endeavors such as tending to your legal quandaries, fiddling in Microsoft Excel, and generating code. “Today we’re launching Grok 4.5, SpaceXAI’s smartest model built to excel at coding, agentic tasks, and knowledge work,” the company wrote in a blog post. “The model is equally adept at office work, scoring number one on Harvey’s Legal Agent Benchmark.” If the company is to be believed, this incarnation of Grok is a whole lot less Van Wilder and more The Office. That is, the Microsoft Office. “Grok Build is capable of building complex Excel models that involve research from the web, multi-sheet formula use, and even leaves stickies or notes behind for future reference,” the company writes. Nothing like slipping in a passive aggressive sticky note to remind your boss you’re totally on board with the office AI mandate. And if Grok does go off the rails and starts fudging the numbers, perhaps it can help keep you out of jail when regulators come knocking – Harvey's Benchmark result aside, recall that Musk and Tesla ended up paying only $40 million to settle fraud charges with the SEC when Musk tweeted out "funding secured" over a supposed Tesla buyout offer that may never have existed. According to SpaceXAI, the model was trained on “tens of thousands" of Nvidia GB300 GPUs alongside Cursor, which it’s currently in the process of acquiring for $60 billion. A major emphasis with this training run was placed on quality rather than quantity. “Beyond raw token volume, we invested heavily in data filtering and curation: deduplication, quality scoring, and domain focused selection so that the data mixture stayed high-coverage and high-signal.” The model was further refined through reinforcement learning — the same technique originally used by OpenAI and DeepSeek to imbue their models with chain of thought “reasoning” capabilities — to teach the model hundreds of thousands of tasks. This has apparently helped cut down on the number of thinking tokens required to solve complex problems, which, along with faster serving speeds of up to 80 tokens a second, means higher-quality results with less delay. Or, at least that’s what SpaceXAI says. Independent benchmarks by Artificial Analysis show the model still isn’t as good as Anthropic’s Claude Fable, but roughly matches OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.8 and Sonnet 5. GPT-5.6 — which, much like Fable, set off alarm bells in Washington — is still in preview and hasn’t quite made it on the leaderboard just yet. Also, it's cheap. SpaceXAI is charging $2 per million input tokens and $6 for every million tokens generated. For comparison, GPT-5.5 will set you back $5/M input tokens, $0.50/M cached tokens, and $30/M output tokens. Grok 4.5 is available starting Wednesday in Grok Build, Cursor, and the SpaceXAI console to anyone who doesn’t call the European Union home. You fine folks will have to wait a little longer with rollout expected in mid-July. ®