Well, he does impact the stock market, but access to the betting sites might be more valuable.
Trump Media pitched $100,000 monthly fee for fastest feed of US president's posts, sources say
Are we learning to fear the drones?
https://thenextweb.com/news/pentagon-freezes-155-wind-projects-drone-threat
The Pentagon froze 155 wind projects in 24 states, claiming drones can hide in wind farms
The year-long freeze affects 44 gigawatts of capacity and has cost developers $2 billion. The wind industry says it is the latest political attack on renewables.
If something as simple as when the sun is directly overhead befuddles legislatures, what else are they getting wrong?
Daylight Saving Time Debate Reveals Science Literacy Hole
The U.S. House recently passed the Sunshine Protection Act, a bill proposing permanent daylight saving time, though its passage in the Senate remains uncertain. This legislative debate has exposed a significant science literacy gap, with many mistakenly believing that adjusting clocks affects the actual amount of sunlight delivered to Earth. The article emphasizes that Daylight Saving Time and time zones are entirely human constructs. Clock changes simply shift daylight relative to our daily schedules, without altering natural factors like latitude, Earth's tilt, or seasons that truly determine daylight duration. A similar attempt at permanent DST in the 1970s was quickly abandoned, suggesting potential challenges ahead.
Still not ready for prime time.
https://www.axios.com/2026/07/18/ai-lawyers-judges-balancing-act
May (A)I approach the bench?
Judges are becoming AI firewalls, setting guidelines for lawyers and litigants entering their courtrooms and reprimanding those who fail to vet their research or cite fake AI-generated cases.
But judges are also navigating how to use the tech themselves.
… Case in point: Last month, a federal judge in Mississippi punished four lawyers and canceled a civil trial after both sides cited fake, AI-generated cases. And it's not just lawyers who have faced heat.
Damien Charlotin, a senior research fellow at HEC Paris, has identified more than 1,700 cases where generative AI hallucinated.
On Thursday, a federal judge in Michigan accused the government of likely citing an AI-generated case in an immigration-related filing.
While Chief Judge Hala Jarbou, a Trump appointee, did not impose sanctions, she wrote that "the Government must ensure its future filings with this Court do not include nonexistent case law."
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