EPA makes it harder for states, tribes to block pipelines

The Trump administration on Tuesday proposed a new rule aimed at speeding up and streamlining the permitting process for large energy and infrastructure projects, including oil and gas pipelines and facilities tied to artificial intelligence.

The rule, which does not require action by Congress, includes a suite of procedural changes to section 401 of the Clean Water Act—a law enacted in the 1970s that is the primary federal statute governing water pollution in the United States.

For decades, section 401 has granted states and tribes the authority to approve, impose conditions on, or reject, federal permits for projects that they determine will pollute or damage local waterways.

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Betterment Users Are Being Targeted in This Crypto Scam

Customers of automated investment platform Betterment are being targeted with a cryptocurrency rewards scam following a data breach that allowed threat actors to obtain some user data and send fake emails promising huge returns on Bitcoin and Ethereum deposits.

According to a Jan. 12 security update posted on Betterment’s website (and sent to users via email), hackers gained unauthorized access on Jan. 9 to a third-party platform used for marketing and operations. Following the breach, they sent fraudulent messages to some customers with offers to triple crypto investments.

Betterment crypto rewards scam

The scam emails were sent to Betterment users on Jan. 9, soon after the data breach, with subject lines like “We’ll triple your crypto!” The message inside claimed that Betterment was “giving back” for a limited time and tripling Bitcoin and Ethereum deposits as large as $750,000 to specified wallets. Threat actors tried to create a sense of urgency with an expiration deadline for the promotion (a typical scam tactic).

The messages came from support@e.betterment.com, which is a legitimate Betterment subdomain, allowing them to appear verified in users’ inboxes. Note that this is the same email address Betterment used to send the security update to all of its customers.

A nearly identical crypto scheme targeted Grubhub users in December with emails—also sent from a real Grubhub subdomain—promoting a 10x return on $1,000 in deposited bitcoin.

Betterment data hacked

Cybercriminals were able to steal some customer information from the compromised system, including names, email addresses, mailing addresses, phone numbers, and dates of birth. Betterment has said that no passwords or credentials were included in the breach, nor did threat actors gain access to user accounts. While few official details have been published, the company is reportedly being extorted as the target of the distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack.

If you’re a Betterment customer, be wary of any unsolicited communication in the coming days and weeks about your account. Scammers will use events like this as a phishing opportunity. Know that Betterment (and other legitimate companies) will not request your password or other personal information via email, text, or phone call. If you are concerned about your account or want to update your credentials or other data, go directly to the website or app and do so there—this is generally safer than clicking links in communication, even if messages from Betterment are (or seem) legitimate.

NVIDIA rolls out DLSS 4.5 to all RTX GPUs

Just a week after announcing the latest version of its image-upscaling tech at CES, NVIDIA is rolling out DLSS 4.5. The company released a beta version of the update last week. Starting today, all NVIDIA app users with a GeForce RTX GPU will be able to upgrade to the full release of DLSS 4.5.

NVIDIA says DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution (to give its full name) delivers sharper visuals and improved temporal stability. The 2nd Generation Super Resolution Transformer reduces ghosting and improves anti-aliasing in more than 400 games and apps, the company claims. “This second-generation model is our most sophisticated yet, utilizing five times the compute power of the original transformer model, having been trained on a significantly expanded, high-fidelity dataset,” NVIDIA added.

The company plans to bring an upgraded frame generation feature to DLSS 4.5 sometime this spring for those with GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs. It says the Dynamic 6x Frame Generation feature can generate up to five extra frames for each traditionally generated one, delivering up to 4K 240Hz path traced performance.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/nvidia-rolls-out-dlss-45-to-all-rtx-gpus-140000322.html?src=rss

Fender’s guitar lessons are coming to Samsung TVs later this year

We’ve all heard of couch surfing, but Fender and Samsung have made it their 2026 mission to make couch shredding a thing. Samsung TV users will soon be able to take guitar lessons from the comfort of their living rooms, with the first TV edition of the Fender Play app set to arrive in the first half of this year.

Debuted at CES, players can choose from video-based lessons for both electric and acoustic guitar, as well as bass and — for all the wannabe Jake Shimabukuros or George Formbys (one for the Brits) among you — the ukulele. There are on-demand courses for different levels of skill, with each lesson built around a wide spectrum of well-known songs, everything from The Beatles’ “Blackbird” to Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License“. 

If you’re a bit more confident in your axe-wielding prowess, Jam Mode allows you to play along to genre-specific playlists. Call in the kids to watch and you’ve got your very own Woodstock.

Fender Play is already available on a variety of screens via the App Store and Google Play, but with your TV likely being the largest one you own, you won’t have to squint to make out those chord progressions. You can already use the app on a TV by pairing your iPhone or Android device to your Apple TV or Chromecast, but Samsung’s native TV app is more immediate.

Fender Play first launched way back in 2017 and has a number of virtual instructors who teach all levels of guitar players. A subscription costs $20 per month or $150 annually, and there’s a seven-day trial if you want to see what it’s all about. It will, for some reason, only be available on Samsung TVs released in 2025 or later (no word on support for older models at a later date) in the coming months.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/fenders-guitar-lessons-are-coming-to-samsung-tvs-later-this-year-134551816.html?src=rss

Is 2026 the year buttons come back to cars? Crash testers say yes.

Like any industry that’s led by designers, the automotive world is subject to trends and fashions. Often, these are things the rest of us complain about. Wheels that used to be 16 inches are now 20s, because the extra size makes the vehicle they’re fitted to look smaller, particularly if it’s an SUV with a slab of electric vehicle battery to conceal. Front seat passengers now find themselves with their own infotainment screen, often with some kind of active filter tech to prevent the driver from being distracted by whatever it is they’re doing. And of course le buzz du jour, AI, is being crammed in here, there, and everywhere.

But the thing about fashion and trends is that they don’t remain in style for ever. For a few years, it was hard to drive a new car that didn’t use piano black trim all over the interior. The shiny black plastic surfaces hide infotainment screens well when the display is not turned on, but they scratch and show every speck of dust and lint and every smudge and fingerprint. And that’s true for the cheap econobox to the plush luxobarge. The industry finally cottoned on to this, and “black gloss has had its time—we can do without it,” Kia designer Jochen Paesen told me a few years ago.

Many of those design trends may have been annoying, but the switch away from buttons isn’t just about aesthetics; it’s affecting safety. And increasingly, safety regulators are pushing back. A couple of years ago, we learned that the Euro New Car Assessment Programme (NCAP) organization that crash tests cars for European consumers decided that from 2026, it would start deducting points for basic controls that weren’t separate, physical controls that the driver can easily operate without taking their eyes off the road. And now ANCAP, which provides similar crash testing for Australia and New Zealand, has done the same.

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Bandcamp prohibits music made ‘wholly or in substantial part’ by AI

Bandcamp has addressed the AI slop problem vexing musicians and their fans of late. The company is banning any music or audio on its platform that is “wholly or in substantial part” made by generative AI, according to its blog. It also clarified that the use of AI tools to impersonate other artists or styles is “strictly prohibited” by policies already in place.

Any music suspected to be AI generated may be removed by the Bandcamp team and the company is giving users reporting tools to flag such content. “We believe that the human connection found through music is a vital part of our society and culture, and that music is much more than a product to be consumed,” the company wrote.

The announcement makes Bandcamp one of the first music platforms to offer a clear policy on the use of AI tech. AI-generated music (aka “slop”) has increasingly been invading music-streaming platforms, with Deezer for one recently saying that 50,000 AI-generated songs are uploaded to the app daily, or around 34 percent of its music. 

Platforms have been relatively slow to act against this trend. Spotify has taken some baby steps on the matter, having recently promised to develop an industry standard for AI disclosure in music credits and debut an impersonation policy. For its part, Deezer said it remains the only streaming platform to sign a global statement on AI artist training signed by numerous actors and songwriters. 

Bandcamp has a solid track record for artist support, having recently unveiled Bandcamp Fridays, a day that it gives 100 percent of streaming revenue to artists. That led to over $120 million going directly to musicians, and the company plans to continue that policy in 2026.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/bandcamp-prohibits-music-made-wholly-or-in-substantial-part-by-ai-130050593.html?src=rss

Microsoft’s Latest Patch Tuesday Fixes 114 Vulnerabilities

Microsoft has released its “Patch Tuesday” update for January, and you should ensure your computer receives these security fixes as soon as possible. This update addresses 114 vulnerabilities in total, including three zero-days (bugs that have been actively exploited or publicly disclosed before an official fix is available from the developer).

As reported by BleepingComputer, security flaws were found across the following categories: 57 elevation-of-privilege vulnerabilities, three security feature bypass vulnerabilities, 22 remote code-execution vulnerabilities, 22 information disclosure vulnerabilities, two denial of service vulnerabilities, and five spoofing vulnerabilities. Six of the remote code execution vulnerabilities and two of the elevation of privilege vulnerabilities are considered “critical.”

Your machine should receive security updates automatically when Patch Tuesday drops, which is around 10 am PT on the second Tuesday of the month. You can check to confirm by going to Start > Settings > Windows Update and selecting Check for Windows updates

Three zero-days patched in January

One of the three zero-days fixed this month has been actively exploited in the wild. The flaw, labeled CVE-2026-20805, is an information disclosure vulnerability in the Desktop Windows Manager that allows attackers access to memory addresses from a remote ALPC port. Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) & Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) have been credited with identifying this bug.

The other two zero-days have been publicly disclosed. CVE-2026-21265 is a security bypass feature vulnerability that allows threat actors to bypass Secure Boot on systems that have not updated certificates issued in 2011 and nearing expiration. CVE-2023-31096 is an elevation of privilege vulnerability in third-party Agere Soft Modem drivers that ship with supported Windows operating systems installed. Microsoft has removed these drivers from Windows.

Microsoft released other non-security updates today, as well as additional patches for Microsoft Edge and Mariner vulnerabilities earlier this month.

This App Updates All Your Mac Apps in One Place

Are you tired of every application you open offering to install an update before you can use it? Do you wish you could take care of all those updates at once? Updatest is an application made for exactly this.

I’ve talked about Homebrew for Mac, which is a command line tool for installing and updating Mac software. Updatest scans all the software on your computer and updates it using Homebrew, even if you didn’t initially install it that way. But there’s more. Many applications use an open source tool called Sparkle to offer updates, and Updatest can find and update all of them. The application can also identify applications downloaded from GitHub that have newer releases, along with any application you downloaded from the Mac App Store.

Basically, if an application has updates, Updatest can find them and install them for you. To get started, click the download button on the app’s website (you can also install using Homebrew, if you’ve already set that up). The application will tell you a bit about how it works, ask you which categories of applications you want to update using the tool, and offer to install Homebrew if you haven’t done that already.

Once you’re done with all of that, you will see a list of all the applications on your system. You can filter to see only the apps that need updates, if you want.

Click any application to learn more about the update. From here you can install the update. Alternatively, you can click the Bulk Update button below the search bar to update all of your outdated applications at once. You can watch the updates happen by clicking the Terminal button in the top-right corner, or you can let the application do its thing while you work on something else.

Some updates require passwords, in which case you’ll be asked to run the update command in the Terminal.

Updatest offers to install software in the Terminal

Credit: Justin Pot

And in some cases, applications from the Mac App Store won’t update—in my tests, this was mostly iPad apps I’ve installed. The application will instead give you a link to open the App Store and install the update.

These minor annoyances are inevitable, and not too burdensome. And it’s nice to be able to check all of my applications for updates in once place. If you’re interested, there’s a 15-day free trial, allowing you to get a feel for how the application works. After that you can buy a personal license, which works on up to three Macs, for $9.99; a household license, which works on up to 10 Macs, costs $19.99.

Matthew McConaughey fights unauthorized AI likenesses by trademarking himself

Matthew McConaughey filed trademark applications to prevent his likeness from being used by AI companies without permission, and the US Patent and Trademark Office has approved eight so far. According to the Wall Street Journal, the trademarks were for video and audio clips featuring the actor staring, smiling and talking. One was for a video of him standing on a porch, while another was for an audio recording of him saying “alright, alright, alright,” his signature catchphrase from the movie Dazed and Confused.

Under the law, it’s already prohibited for companies to steal someone’s likeness to sell products. However, McConaughey is taking a proactive approach due to the nebulous rules around the use of someone’s likeness for artificial intelligence and what’s considered commercial use involving the technology. His lawyer, Kevin Yorn, admits that they don’t know how the court would decide if an offender challenges the trademarks. But they’re hoping that the threat of a lawsuit would deter companies from using McConaughey’s likeness for AI in the first place. Actors have been trying to protect themselves from AI since the technology blew up, and it was one of the sticking points in the negotiations between SAG-AFTRA and Hollywood studios when the labor union went on a strike in 2023.

McConaughey isn’t anti-AI by any means: He is an investor in ElevenLabs and has partnered with the AI startup to create a Spanish version of his newsletter. He said in a statement sent to The Journal that he just wants to make sure that if his voice or likeness is ever used, it’s because he approved and signed off on it. “We want to create a clear perimeter around ownership with consent and attribution the norm in an AI world,” he added.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/matthew-mcconaughey-fights-unauthorized-ai-likenesses-by-trademarking-himself-130000567.html?src=rss

Never-Before-Seen Linux Malware Is ‘Far More Advanced Than Typical’

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Researchers have discovered a never-before-seen framework that infects Linux machines with a wide assortment of modules that are notable for the range of advanced capabilities they provide to attackers. The framework, referred to as VoidLink by its source code, features more than 30 modules that can be used to customize capabilities to meet attackers’ needs for each infected machine. These modules can provide additional stealth and specific tools for reconnaissance, privilege escalation, and lateral movement inside a compromised network. The components can be easily added or removed as objectives change over the course of a campaign.

VoidLink can target machines within popular cloud services by detecting if an infected machine is hosted inside AWS, GCP, Azure, Alibaba, and Tencent, and there are indications that developers plan to add detections for Huawei, DigitalOcean, and Vultr in future releases. To detect which cloud service hosts the machine, VoidLink examines metadata using the respective vendor’s API. Similar frameworks targeting Windows servers have flourished for years. They are less common on Linux machines. The feature set is unusually broad and is “far more advanced than typical Linux malware,” said researchers from Checkpoint, the security firm that discovered VoidLink. Its creation may indicate that the attacker’s focus is increasingly expanding to include Linux systems, cloud infrastructure, and application deployment environments, as organizations increasingly move workloads to these environments. “VoidLink is a comprehensive ecosystem designed to maintain long-term, stealthy access to compromised Linux systems, particularly those running on public cloud platforms and in containerized environments,” the researchers said in a separate post. “Its design reflects a level of planning and investment typically associated with professional threat actors rather than opportunistic attackers, raising the stakes for defenders who may never realize their infrastructure has been quietly taken over.”

The researchers note that VoidLink poses no immediate threat or required action since it’s not actively targeting systems. However, defenders should remain vigilant.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Zwift Ideas: Quick Map Expansions with Big Impacts

Since launching, Zwift have added or updated their road networks 32 times. On 11 of these occasions, they added a new world, or 2 worlds as was the case with Paris and France both dropping at the same time. The other 21 updates have been to expand possibilities in existing worlds with either large new networks or a few simple connector roads.

Watopia accounts for 14 of these as Zwift’s largest world. Makuri Islands and London have both had 2 updates, and France, New York, and Richmond just 1 each. That means Paris, Crit City, Bologna, Innsbruck, and Scotland have never been updated and remain today as they were at launch.

Interestingly, Zwift hasn’t launched a new world for 3 years (Scotland was launched at the start of 2023). If you look at the release timelines in this article, you can clearly see a change post-2020. The rate of new km’s has not changed dramatically, but the rate of new releases has definitely slowed, and if you look at the launches of new worlds, this has almost stalled.

If we use Paris + France as the chronological midpoint, we had 8 new worlds before COVID and 2 new worlds after it. Scotland was a small world in terms of map size with around 15km of new roads, but Makuri Islands has been a huge addition with 3 large segments released in stages.

The trend has been to add roads to existing maps. We know Watopia is constantly being extended, but the last 2 updates have been on the rotation worlds of France and New York that many probably thought would never be updated.

That got me thinking: what about the other rotation maps that we’ve previously seen as “finished?” Can they be updated and given a new lease on life, too? What updates be time efficient enough to have a chance of implementation, yet have a big enough improvement to make them worth the effort?

Aside from a world’s total road length, what often makes a big impact is the number of junctions and connecting roads which open new route options for racing and free riding. The Epic KOM bypass was a short addition but created many new routes. Some maps have many junctions and connectors, but others are much simpler and therefore have very few route options. The worst of these “limited” worlds are:

  • Bologna – 1 road
  • Crit City – 1 loop
  • Paris – 1 loop
  • Innsbruck – 2 loops
  • Richmond – 2 loops
  • Yorkshire – 2 loops

As an example, if you ignore Ven-Top, the original France map was also only 2 loops and offered very few route options. In early 2025, Zwift added 2 new roads, amounting to just 3km of tarmac, yet the result was a plethora of new routes and therefore increased value to all the existing roads.

Here are my thoughts on quick-win expansions with increasing difficulty.

Innsbruck

Innsbruck routes all fall into 1 of 2 categories. Those that go up the KOM, and those that don’t. If you avoid the KOM you have 2 options, Legsnapper or Legsnapper Reverse. Ignoring the KOM portion as being a big project to expand, the lower single loop circuit has many interesting features, but everyone usually just saves their legs for the Legsnapper each lap. What if there was a new short 400m long road opposite the pens taking you straight to the bottom of the Legsnapper? Better warm up well for those race starts, although that’s just 1 of many possibilities.

The Red road on my map does just that, but also creates 2 crit-style loops which can be combined or isolated in many ways. Laps of the northern loop gives you little respite from the Legnapper, while the southern loop is rather gentler other than the rise over the railway bridge which may become a valid attack point. Perhaps you fancy 10 Laps of the southern loop with a Legsnapper afterparty or Pretzel routes to break your legs in both directions?

I’ve also added a second Blue road which is also 400m long and opens more options, but I don’t think it adds enough extra value. It could, though, serve as an alternate connection. The best bit is that both these roads exist in real life, and much of the graphics for them appear to already exist in Zwift’s map.

Yorkshire

This is probably the least tarmac for the most possibilities. The red road offers the biggest wins with just 600m of road needed, plus most of the graphics of the environment will already exist. A shortcut between Otley Road and the top of the KOM will create a Pot Bank bypass or pretzel options, although it doesn’t play nicely with the KOM banner position.

There are also 3 similar length connection options shown in Blue. Any one of those would add a different dynamic and again should mean limited effort compared with the reward. The most northerly of the 3 is my preference as a KOM bypass, but all are equally viable. None of them work nicely with the KOM segment, but the most southern works with the sprint just fine. Just 1.5km of new road and how many new route options?  Anyone fancy Yorkshire KOM repeats? As with Innsbruck, these roads also exist in real life, too.

Crit City

This is the only fictional route on the list, and the smallest map in the game with just 2km of roads. Despite being an event-only map, it’s a very popular race map with races here several times every day. There are also plenty of options for alternate routes without straying too far from the pens. Many of the side roads are visible from the current route, and as it’s not modelled on a real location, Zwift do not need to replicate, just create what they want.

Given that crits are very short circuits, adding 2km of extra roads should be possible and offer many new potential routes. Going further though and adding the Blue roads would transform the map. Who knows what lies on those roads as they don’t exist yet, but I’m curious what the Zwift design team’s imagination can do with them. (And yes, the map looks like a running mushroom.)

Bologna

This is an interesting world, as it’s just 8km of road, up and down a hill. Like Crit City, the map is event-only and tends to only be used for occasional time trials. The route starts quite flat for the first 6km before turning quite sharply, both right around a hairpin and up a brutal climb. These factors mean the route is rarely ridden, and I’d bet many casual riders don’t even know it exists.

The climb portion follows the Portici di San Luca (the longest portico in the world) to Santuario Madonna di San Luca, a shrine at the top of the climb where you do a 180-degree turn and return to the start. The route only follows the portico for roughly half of its total length, however, as we deviate from its route at the hairpin. The map design team would have to do more work than adding a mere 400m link road, but any additions here may bring this map out of obscurity and allow regular racing on it.

The portico stretches along the shown red road to the Porta Saragozza, after which there is a maze of narrow roads and further porticos which Zwift can use to create a circuit back to the start pens and finish banner. We would now have an interesting ~10km loop with a reverse option, and an afterparty finish for the daring. As with Innsbruck’s Leg Snapper, the climb in Bologna renders the rest of the route into conservation mode. Offering an alternate section without the climb would create compelling alternative routes for an otherwise little-used map.

Paris

This map came out alongside France during the COVID pandemic to host a virtual version of the 2020 Tour de France. I can’t fault it for being limited in scope, as it was rushed out alongside a bigger map and was intended to replicate the iconic TdF finishing circuit, which it does very nicely. However, as a single loop, it has just 2 route options which are largely the same other than sprint and finish line locations, and is therefore only really used for racing.

Recently, the tour has added an extension to this route which goes north, meandering through Paris to take in some short but tough cobbled climbs around Montmartre. The entirety of this new section can be traced on the Zwift route map already (although it really tested my MSPaint skills), but I highly doubt it’s been rendered in game beyond some low-resolution outlines. This would take a bit of work to achieve, but would make this iconic route even more interesting, varied, and current to the real-life route.

Richmond

I almost didn’t add this map, it’s been updated once already, and I don’t see any easy or valuable additions. The map as it is, bears similarities to my proposal for Innsbruck, with 2 loops, 1 flat and one with punchy climbs. A quirk, though, is that when the map was updated to be rideable in both directions, the junctions circled in red and the road between them don’t quite work as expected. I’m not even sure if you can do a proper U-turn here, as it’s actually 2 roads rather than 1. The sprint is only on 1 of the roads for example.

Another quirk is the 2 roads alongside each other I’ve circled in blue. I’ve seen many Zwifters propose a junction here. It would be very little work as no extra road would be needed, but I’m not sure how much value it adds. I’m more interested in what possible routes lie north, south, east, and west to expand this map, and I have no idea if any gains would be worth the effort.

Other Maps

For me, the other maps are fairly strong and don’t have any low effort and high return options. (Not that I think adding 400m or road is low effort, but relative to adding the long rumoured Mt. Fuji to Makuri Islands, it is a walk in the park.)

London has a lot of route options already, and a lot of variation too. There are certainly options to travel further north and take in the sights of Oxford St, Leicester Square, St Paul’s, and Covent Garden, but that would be a lot of work, and I’m not sure it would add any new dynamics.

France has just had an update, but many would love to see an alternate route up/down Ven Top. I’m just not sure how many riders would go up there vs the time to make it.

We can assume Makuri is not finished, as there is an enticing bridge to nowhere leading east from Mech Island before the canyon.

New York has just had a huge update, but the map is very linear, with essentially 3 additional circuits dotted along a long and flat (apart from escalators) road. I would imagine it is too much to ask for an alternate route from Prospect Park to Central Park on the east side of the Hudson, especially not so soon after this previous update.

Watopia is almost certainly not finished, and there are many ways they could expand it, from simple link roads to large updates. There are also plenty of roads to nowhere teasing us with potential new routes! (The blocked-off mine entrance as you descend towards the jungle, and the barriered road by the southern Tempus Fugit turn around are 2 good examples.) A quick search on the forums will show you many riders’ dreams and ideas for new roads such as linking Jarvis to the base of the Alpe.

Of course, as Zwift’s biggest map, it also has hundreds of possible routes available, as last year’s ZRL route design competition showed. For example, the Southern Crit (below) is one I’d like to see. Try to make your own here: zwiftmap.com/watopia

Wildcard

My final option for minimal effort and maximum reward is Gravel Mountain. It must be in the game, as I managed to ride it last year due to a glitch, and it seems to be basically finished. Ok, I get it, lots of people are gravel averse, including myself, but at the same time lots of people don’t like climbing, or crits, or TT’s, or workouts, or racing, or steering, or RoboPacers, or even cycling. I know some who only use Zwift for running. So why not put a nearly finished map to use and let people ride it?

What About You?

What map expansions would you like to see? Share below!

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving is switching to a subscription-only service

Tesla will stop selling its $8,000 Full Self-Driving (FSD) option and make it strictly a monthly subscription service after February 14, CEO Elon Musk announced on his X platform. Musk didn’t reveal the price or why he’s making the switch, though FSD is already available by subscription for $99 per month or $999 per year. 

The shift could be advantageous for buyers, particularly if they decide to dump their new Tesla or trade it in. It will also allow prospective owners to hedge their bets, as Tesla has overpromised on the feature since it was first announced. 

Tesla will stop selling FSD after Feb 14.

FSD will only be available as a monthly subscription thereafter.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 14, 2026

Full Self-Driving has never done what the name suggests as humans must constantly supervise the system and frequently take control. Because of that, it’s more of a “driver assist” system and doesn’t even qualify as Level 3 self-driving (conditional automation), let alone as a truly autonomous Level 4 or Level 5 category. Musk has been touting self-driving capabilities on Tesla vehicles since 2015, promising at the time “complete autonomy” by 2018. 

Branding for the system as “Autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving” has been called out as false advertising by consumer watchdogs and government for years, but so far, regulators have yet to take action. A California judge recently ruled that Tesla used “deceptive language to market Autopilot and recommended suspending Tesla’s sales in the state for 30 days. However, the company has 90 days to comply and could still avoid punishment.  

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/teslas-full-self-driving-is-switching-to-a-subscription-only-service-120053137.html?src=rss

Intel Compute Runtime Updated With Initial Crescent Island & Nova Lake S Support

The Intel Compute Runtime 26.01.36711.4 was published today as their first release of 2026 for this open-source GPU compute stack providing Level Zero and OpenCL support across their range of graphics hardware going back to Tiger Lake. Notable with this new Compute Runtime release is having now production-ready Panther Lake support while also introducing early support for next-generation hardware…

Coolest Projects 2026: Opens for entries in January!

Coolest Projects is our global technology showcase for young people up to age 18. It’s a place where young creators share the brilliant things they’ve made using digital technology — from first-ever Scratch projects and coding for fun experiments to ambitious robotics builds — with a global audience. Everyone who takes part receives certificates and rewards to celebrate their achievements.

What you need to know about Coolest Projects 2026

Coolest Projects is open to any young person, anywhere in the world. Creators can submit their tech projects to our online showcase, explore the global project gallery, and join our special celebration livestream. There are in-person events in some countries for local creators, too (find out more below).

Young learner at Coolest Projects UK

By taking part in Coolest Projects, young people can:

  • Join an international community of digital makers
  • Represent their country on a global stage
  • Receive feedback on their creations
  • Earn certificates to recognise their achievements
  • Celebrate their progress at our livestream event on 24 June 2026

It is completely free to take part in Coolest Projects, and we welcome all kinds of digital technology projects — from first attempts to an ambitious STEM project or advanced build. Projects don’t need to be finished to be submitted. 

Creators can enter a project into one of seven categories: Scratch, Games, Hardware, Web, Mobile Apps, Advanced Programming, and the emergent category of AI.

How Coolest Projects makes a difference

The findings from the Coolest Projects 2025 Impact report offer clear, evidence-based insights into how Coolest Projects builds confidence, creativity, and a sense of belonging for young people around the world. In 2025, almost 12,000 young people from 41 countries took part in Coolest Projects online, a 57% increase on the previous year. This year, we’re excited to welcome even more creators to the Coolest Projects community.

Young learner with her project at Coolest Projects UK

Our annual evaluation shows that Coolest Projects continues to have a powerful impact on young digital creators worldwide. In 2025:

  • 100% of mentors and 72% of young people taking part in the online showcase said their confidence in digital making increased
  • 83% of young people felt inspired to continue learning and participating in computing after taking part
  • 74% of young creators and 100% of mentors said Coolest Projects helped them or their team feel a sense of belonging in computing
  • 80% of surveyed young people said seeing projects from around the world made them feel part of a larger community of makers

Creators told us how proud they felt sharing their work:

“It feels like I’m being noticed!” – Young creator, UK

 “I enjoyed presenting my project and seeing so many creative ideas from others.” – Young creator, India

With many early-stage makers joining for the first time, including 55% of young people at in-person events, Coolest Projects continues to be an accessible entry point into the world of digital creativity.

Young learner at Coolest Projects Ireland

We’re also proud to see growing participation from girls who code, who tell us they value the chance to share their ideas and be inspired by others. At in-person events, girls made up 63% of creators in India, 50% in the US, 39% in Ireland, and 37% in the UK.

Find out more about the incredible creativity and collaboration from mentors and makers worldwide in our 2025 Impact report: rpf.io/cp-impact-2025

How to take part in Coolest Projects

  1. Come up with an idea — or choose something you’ve already made for school or a science fair project. Whether it started as a small classroom task or a personal coding challenge, any tech creation can be part of Coolest Projects. Our projects site offers hundreds of free, step-by-step guides — ideal for beginners, mentors, and anyone looking for engaging STEM activities for kids. The 2025 online gallery is also a great place to find inspiration for your next cool coding project.
  2. Select your category. Our category pages break down each of the seven categories, including our AI category.
  3. Work on the project individually or with friends. Young people can take part individually or in teams of up to five.
  4. Submit it via the Coolest Projects website by 27 May 2026. We encourage creators to take part in both the online showcase and their local in-person event — find the dates below.
  5. See your project showcased in our online gallery.
  6. Join the celebration livestream to discover creations from around the world on 24 June 2026.
Presenter: Greg Foot interviewing a young learner at Coolest Projects

Group codes for mentors entering multiple projects online

If you’re entering several projects on behalf of your group, you can create a group code to link young people’s projects to your account.

Here’s a quick reminder of how it works:

  • Sign up or log in: Use your Raspberry Pi account or create a new one.
  • Create a group: Add your group details, including name and country.
  • Share your group code: Young people enter the code on their project submission form.
  • Review and submit: View all linked projects in your group dashboard.

There is no limit to the number of young people who can submit through one group code.

If you’d like a full walkthrough, watch our step-by-step group code ‘how-to’ video.

Whether your coders are beginners or experienced digital makers, there are lots of resources to support them. Visit the Coolest Projects guidance page for mentor guides, session plans, and more.

Coolest Projects in-person events in 2026

Alongside the global online showcase, Coolest Projects events will take place in several countries again this year. We encourage creators to take part in both their local in-person event and the global showcase.

Two young learner testing out a project at Coolest Projects UK

Save the date for:

  • Coolest Projects Belgium – 14 March
  • Coolest Projects Japan – 28 March
  • Coolest Projects USA (Minnesota) – 11 April
  • Coolest Projects Ireland – 25 April
  • Coolest Projects USA (Georgia) – 2 May
  • Coolest Projects UK – 16 May
  • Coolest Projects Sudan (held in Egypt) – 12 August
  • Coolest Projects Nigeria – 29 August

More dates coming soon for:

  • Coolest Projects Canada 
  • Coolest Projects India
  • Coolest Projects Indonesia
  • Coolest Projects Malaysia
  • Coolest Projects South Africa
  • Coolest Projects Sri Lanka

Sign up to the Coolest Projects newsletter to be the first to hear about events near you.

We can’t wait to see what your young people create

Whether your young people already have something they’re excited to share or they’re ready to start something new, Coolest Projects is the perfect place to celebrate their creativity, problem solving, and imagination.

We can’t wait to see the incredible projects they bring to Coolest Projects 2026.

The post Coolest Projects 2026: Opens for entries in January! appeared first on Raspberry Pi Foundation.

UK scraps digital ID requirement for workers

The UK government has backtracked on a plan to require all workers to have a digital ID following a backlash. It will no longer be mandatory to register with the digital ID program to prove one has the right to work in the country, as the BBC reports.

The government announced the now-scrapped digital ID requirement in September. “You will not be able to work in the United Kingdom if you do not have digital ID,” Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said at the time. “It’s as simple as that.” 

The government still plans to fully transition to digital right-to-work checks by 2029, using the likes of biometric passports, as it seeks to do away with paper-based systems. Those are “open to fraud and abuse,” a government spokesperson said. 

Officials have still not explained exactly how the digital ID program will work. The government originally framed digital IDs as a way to make it easier to identify immigrants who are working in the country without having the legal right to do so. It is now said to be focusing more on pressing home the message that digital IDs will help people access public services. 

A service called One Login will be part of the digital ID system — this currently can be used for things like applying for a veteran card and canceling a lost passport. More than 12 million people have signed up so far. Another service called Wallet will let people store their digital ID on their phone. This would contain their name, date of birth, nationality, residence status and a photo.

Almost 3 million people signed an official parliamentary petition to protest the introduction of digital IDs. “We think this would be a step towards mass surveillance and digital control, and that no one should be forced to register with a state-controlled ID system,” the petition states. “We oppose the creation of any national ID system.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/uk-scraps-digital-id-requirement-for-workers-105740207.html?src=rss