The Guardian

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

‘I was five seconds from death’: Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man, on owning Shakhtar and resisting Russia

In a rare interview the businessman discusses football, his ownership of the Azovstal steelworks and why he is optimistic about the future

It is the morning after Russia’s heaviest aerial raid on Kyiv in several months. At least 25 people have been killed and, as always, those emerging from a sleepless night are the lucky ones. Rinat Akhmetov meets the Guardian at the end of a paved driveway half an hour from the city centre. Shakhtar Donetsk’s owner rarely gives interviews and his whereabouts have been a subject of conjecture during the war.

But he is here in Ukraine, speaking to mark the 90th birthday of a club whose tribulations over the past dozen years have been unmatched. It is also 30 years since Akhmetov, the richest person in Ukraine and arguably eastern Europe’s most influential businessman, became president of Shakhtar. The club has been a labour of love, the straightforward face of a career whose complexities beyond football have been widely documented. Akhmetov’s influence spreads across the country and beyond, most visibly in the form of places such as Azovstal, the iron and steelworks that became symbolic of a nation’s resilience in 2022.

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The Mothers of May’s 20-year struggle for justice after Brazil police rampage

In 2006 police took revenge for deadly prison riots by killing more than 500 people in alleged shootouts that others call executions. A court is to rule on compensation for victims

When authorities in the Brazilian state of São Paulo transferred nearly 800 suspected gang members to maximum-security prisons in May 2006, the crime group launched a wave of prison riots and attacks on law enforcement officers. Fifty-nine police and prison officers were killed.

In the following nine days, police officers took their revenge, killing more than 500 people in what were described as shootouts with “criminals”, but which human rights organisations and forensic studies attribute, at least in large part, to executions, including of innocent people.

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Hybrid training: is this the secret to getting fitter and stronger?

Whether it’s Hyrox or CrossFit, some of this century’s biggest exercise trends have one thing in common: combining cardio with strength training. Here’s how to do it

Tough Mudder. CrossFit. Hyrox. Some of this century’s biggest fitness trends have one thing in common: they require feats of both strength and endurance. People used to pick a side: either you used weights and resistance machines to build your muscles or you did cardio for the sake of your heart and lungs. Now everyone wants to be a “hybrid athlete”. So is this the best way to get fit – and where do you start if you’re a complete beginner?

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Government declines to protect Indigenous sacred site to be bulldozed for Brisbane Olympic stadium

Environment minister Murray Watt decides against emergency declaration to halt construction but does not rule out ‘longer term protections’

The federal government has decided against an 11th-hour intervention to halt construction of an Olympic stadium and aquatic centre in the heart of Brisbane, in a park that traditional owners say is a First Nations sacred site.

The environment minister, Murray Watt, issued a statement on Sunday afternoon to say he had considered applications made under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act for him to stop construction in Victoria Park.

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The Register

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

Netflix wiz creates app to slash AI bills, then open sources it

As the COOs from both Uber and Microsoft recently learned, encouraging company engineers to use AI aggressively can lead to hefty usage bills, perhaps even offsetting all the gains from laying off employees. The AI bills at Netflix may not be so eye-popping thanks to company senior engineer Tejas Chopra, who has created software to prune agent instructions, as measured in tokens, before they hit the LLM. Chopra has estimated that as much as 90% of tokens are redundant to the giant thinking machine of your choice. Although not an official Netflix project, several teams there already use Project Headroom, and a number of external projects rely on it as well. In a talk at the Open Source Summit last week, Chopra said that Headroom has saved an estimated $700,000 for its users, who collectively now have 200 billion tokens to spend elsewhere. Not bad for an open source application that’s been out only since January. Headroom, currently at a still-raw v0.22, has gathered 2,000 stars on GitHub and has been forked over 120 times. “A lot of our users are people who have been really burned by token costs, more than anything else,” Chopra said in his presentation. Lossless context compression A $287 bill from Claude Sonnet first brought Chopra’s attention to the idea of token economization. The bill was typical home project stuff: a bit of debugging, some refactoring, MCP tools querying a database. At the time, Claude Sonnet’s token-based pricing seemed pretty generous: $3 for every million input tokens, or $6/million if you went over the 200,000 token limit for your context window. Still, that $287 added up quickly. Upon deeper inspection, Chopra found a lot of this data was highly redundant to the LLM. By and large, his own hand-crafted instructions were not the culprit. Rather it was all the boilerplate and machine metadata that came along for the ride: Needlessly-verbose JSON schemas, nested templates within API responses, identical database columns. “This isn’t prose. This isn’t creative writing. This is compressible data masquerading as text,” Chopra wrote in a blog post introducing his software. In 2025, a group of researchers found that reading user input accounted for about 76% of all token consumption. The model providers have their own tools to save tokens. But to date, the settings on these tools are somewhat oblique to end users. By default, Claude has a prefix cache setting of just five minutes. After five minutes of inactivity, the entire context window needs to be refreshed, even if the LLM needs the exact same data. Another setting is exposed in the API documentation: a one-hour time to live (TTL). But there is a catch. "You pay two times the cost for your writes to get 90% savings for your reads," Chopra told the audience. It’s up to you to find the sweet spot. There are also a number of new commercial token barbers popping up, such as YCombinator-funded Token Company, which offers token compression as a service. On the open source side there is RTK (Rust Token Killer), which trims to the output of verbose commands, such as calls to a repository. Another open source project, LeanCTX, is a variant of RTK. All these tools are useful, Chopra admitted, but he designed Headroom to keep the operations confined to the developer’s workflow. And it had something none of the apps and services could offer: reversible compression. Headroom’s job is to compress all the source material that is fed into the user’s context window – not only the conversation history, but also logs, tool outputs, files, chunks of documentation that the RAG found useful – before it arrives at the LLM. The context window is the set space for each user session. The latest frontier models are rapidly expanding their context windows upwards towards two million tokens, which holds both input and output. Such generosity is a mixed blessing, as Pope Leo might point out. As a unit of measurement, a single token is more or less equivalent to a human word. For pay-as-you go plans, the more you feed the context window, the more you’ll pay. Gobbling tokens like Pac-Man Running on Python and Node, Headroom runs as a proxy (port 8787) on the engineer’s computer. The user wraps their LLM at the command line interface (i.e. “headroom wrap codex”) and it then parses the input. While Headroom does compress a bit of programming code and human instruction, it is best at chopping server logs (90% of which can be jettisoned), MCP tool outputs (70% redundant JSON), Database outputs (it’s all one schema), and file trees (much repeated metadata). Headroom’s first step is a process called CacheAligner which looks only for information that has been changed within input that's already been entered, and ships only the new info, eliminating the need to replace an entire body of mostly unchanged text in KV Cache, the cache where the AI provider stores the user’s context window. “If your system prompt contains a date field or contains some UUID that changes per session, you are effectively getting a cache miss every single time,” he told the audience. “That will blow up your costs.” Then, a router process infers the type of content and sends it to one of a number of compressors. An Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) compressor squishes programming code. JSON and Document Object Model (DOM) compressors snip unneeded JSON and Web boilerplate, respectively. Headroom also has some “squashers” that look at text or JSON input and decide which bits are actually relevant, based on statistical analysis. These tools learn in a feedback loop if they are over- or under-compressing, based on how often the model has to call back into the original uncompressed prompt. The final process, called Compress Cache and Retrieve (CCR), offers that ability for the LLM to look at the original unsquashed data. It puts markers to where the data has been compressed, so if the LLM wishes to get the original context, it can call a Headroom MCP to retrieve the needed material from the user’s machine. The original context is stored on Redis or SQLite. There is still work to be done to this software stack, Chopra admitted, particularly on testing accuracy. It should be an easy task because the CCR stores the original prompts. More compressors can also be built for other specific types of data, such as financial data. Audio, image, and video will also have to be tackled (one user has already forked the project for video parsing). A related project, which Chopra says will be open source soon, is Headlight. Headlight will keep track of the origin of each token, which could be especially handy for ensuring the accuracy of multi-model work. A token saved is a token earned Minding your tokens does not only save money, it can improve results, research suggests. Agents send more context than the model can possibly use, which, in addition to emptying the user’s coffers, can actually make the LLM dumber. Like the rest of us, LLMs get confused when presented with too much information. A group of Stanford University boffins found that LLMs tend to pay more attention to the beginning and the end of the context window, and tend to disregard the middle bits. Likewise, a set of researchers from data integrator Chroma deduced that, across 18 LLMs, “performance grows increasingly unreliable as input length grows.” “Context rot,” they called this phenomenon. Trimming prompts can also improve latency. In his presentation, Chopra relayed how one of Headroom’s users forked the software for a voice-activated application. With voice, even silence can generate tokens. The user expects a response from the app within 200 milliseconds for the service to sound natural, so the company is using Headroom to help shrink that latency window down as much as possible. Headroom also offers some good news for those worrying about data centers heating the world into a fiery inferno with their energy usage. Fewer tokens means a smaller context window, which means less energy use – at least until Jevon's Paradox kicks in and people find even more power-hungry ways to render their animated cat movies. ®

The rice field

etsu2 has added a photo to the pool:

The rice field

Nikon-Zf(NIKKOR Z 24-200mm f/4-6.3 VR)

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Recordbedrag ingezameld rond Nacht tegen Seksueel Geweld

ROTTERDAM (ANP) - In aanloop naar en tijdens de vierde editie van de Nacht tegen Seksueel Geweld is een recordbedrag opgehaald van meer dan 320.000 euro. Dat meldt Plan International, de organisatie achter de mars in Rotterdam waaraan zaterdagavond en afgelopen nacht bijna 2300 deelnemers meededen. Zij vroegen daarmee aandacht voor straatintimidatie en seksueel geweld.

Deelnemers konden een route van 10 of 20 kilometer lopen, langs plekken waar vrouwen zich in het dagelijks leven regelmatig onveilig voelen. Directeur Garance Reus-Deelder spreekt van een krachtige en solidaire nacht. "Wat bijzonder is, is dat hier niet alleen mensen lopen die dit zelf hebben meegemaakt, maar ook velen, waaronder mannelijke bondgenoten, die zich uitspreken: dit keuren wij af."

De Rotterdamse burgemeester Carola Schouten trapte de Nacht tegen Seksueel Geweld af in de Laurenskerk. "Dit is geen vrouwenprobleem. Dit is een probleem van iedereen", zei ze daar.

Het ingezamelde geld gebruikt Plan International voor een wereldwijd programma om de veiligheid van meisjes en jonge vrouwen in wijken te verbeteren.


Basketballers San Antonio naar finale na zege bij Oklahoma City

OKLAHOMA CITY (ANP/RTR) - De basketballers van San Antonio Spurs hebben voor het eerst sinds 2014 de finale van de Amerikaanse profcompetitie NBA bereikt. De ploeg uit Texas won de best-of-seven-serie tegen titelverdediger Oklahoma City Thunder in de finale van de Western Conference met 4-3, na een 111-103-zege in de beslissende uitwedstrijd.

Oklahoma City speelt in de finale tegen New York Knicks. De Knicks schakelden eerder in de finale van de Eastern Conference Cleveland Cavaliers uit (4-0). Het eerste duel is woensdag in San Antonio.

De Franse sterspeler Victor Wembanyama van de Spurs, die werd weggestuurd na vijf overtredingen, tekende voor 22 punten en 7 rebounds. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, de meest waardevolle speler van de NBA, was goed voor 35 punten namens Oklahoma City.

San Antonio Spurs won tussen 1999 en 2014 vijf keer het kampioenschap. In hun eerste finale in 1999 wonnen de Texanen met 4-1 van New York Knicks. De ploeg uit New York veroverde de titel alleen in 1970 en 1973.


Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Tuin met drie doodskisten: patholoog Frank van de Goot is geïntrigeerd door de dood

In de tuin van forensisch patholoog Frank van de Goot zijn geen kleurrijke bloemenperkjes of gezellige rotan zitjes. Wel staan er drie doodskisten. Wat moet hij ermee? “Geen idee joh. Maar de verbazing bij mensen die hier voor het eerst komen, is de lol al waard.”

Man en hond gered uit woning vol rook

In de Van Marumstraat in Schiedam is in de nacht van zaterdag op zondag brand uitgebroken in een woning. De bewoner werd door de bovenburen bevrijd, net als zijn hond. De man moest uiteindelijk wel naar het ziekenhuis omdat hij te veel rook had binnengekregen.