Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Little hope for breakthrough as Iran prepares new offer


Little hope for breakthrough as Iran prepares new offer


There is deep skepticism that Iran's proposal, set to be presented Tuesday to Oman's foreign minister, will include any substantive changes from previous offers, and a breakthrough at the upcoming meeting in Geneva appears unlikely, a regional diplomat familiar with the negotiations said.

According to the diplomat, Tehran has already signaled publicly that it intends to focus on technical issues, including oversight of its nuclear facilities and the timeframe after which it would be permitted to resume uranium enrichment. No Iranian concession is expected on the core issue of enrichment itself, nor is there any indication that Tehran will agree to discuss its ballistic missile program or its support for regional terrorism.

Reports in Israel and elsewhere that Saudi Arabia is quietly backing regime change in Iran have not been denied by the Saudi royal court. A Saudi source told Israel Hayom that Riyadh prefers to wait for the outcome of the negotiations and unfolding events, but made clear that any meaningful weakening of the ayatollah regime or its replacement would be welcome news for the kingdom.

US officials Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are expected to attend the Geneva meeting, along with Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN watchdog overseeing nuclear activity. Grossi's presence showcases the technical nature of the talks and their focus on enrichment levels and supervision of Iranian nuclear sites.

Meanwhile, Iran's rapid trials are continuing, most conducted remotely via video. Special tribunals established to prosecute participants in the protest movement handed down death sentences at the start of the week to dozens of young people accused of burning mosques and committing other offenses. It remains unclear whether the executions have been carried out, but families have received official notifications.

Iran previously assured the US that it would refrain from executing protesters. Israel Hayom has reported, however, that hundreds and possibly thousands of detained demonstrators were killed in custody, most often by gunshot or strangulation.


The Strong Delusion of AI


The Strong Delusion of AI
Rob Pue


Technology is advancing today at break-neck speed.  As I mentioned in a previous message, research now shows that by the end of this year, technology and human knowledge will be doubling every twelve hours!  I can’t comprehend that.  Can you?

Take the iPhone, for example, first released in 2007.  There was a new, upgraded model once a year from 2007 until 2015.  Then, from 2016 to 2019, three new models were released each year.  In 2020 and ‘21, four new models came out.  In 2022, there were five.  And four new models have been released every year since then.  Software updates are released every couple of months, with more advanced features and technology.  I’d venture to say that virtually no one reads the fine print in the User Agreements before downloading the latest operating systems.  Who knows what we’re agreeing to?  Thankfully, there are some researchers out there that do, and inform us of potentially invasive privacy risks, and they instruct us to turn off “permissions” that could put us in harm’s way.

Technology can be dangerous.  We know our phones listen to us, even when we’re not using them.  Have you ever had a private conversation with your spouse while driving in your car, and by the time you get home, you find advertisements for things you spoke about privately in your email inbox, popping up on YouTube or social media sites?  That’s not a coincidence.

Our phones are also watching us.  Unless you’re savvy enough to turn off permissions for your built-in camera, numerous apps will take advantage of the opportunity to read your facial expressions, watch what you’re doing while browsing the internet, and watch your reactions to articles you may read or videos you may be viewing.  These things also monitor and track our internet activity; capture our voices and even home videos we take at family gatherings and vacation trips.

All this information is being stored and archived somewhere, creating massive data bases on every user, then creating algorithms to feed us news, advertising and information based on our interests and activities.  Whether you want to believe it or not, this is not a simple modern “convenience,” it’s a massive intrusion of our private, personal lives, and unless you know how to disable some of these cell phone features, you’re exposing your personal, private information to the World Wide Web “internet of things.”


And some of the apps available for download also take the liberty to invade your private space, then exploit it for profit.  And most people tacitly agree to that, because just like the phone itself, they never bothered to read the User Agreement. Even apps you’ve downloaded, but barely ever use, can be harvesting your personal information in the background — quietly, stealthily.


But aside from information, the internet is now being used as a “virtual reality” for many people.  A virtual — or alternative — “world,” and many people now prefer the “virtual” to the real world, even though they go in knowing it’s fake.  They prefer the delusion.  Having never fallen prey to that virtual world, I was truly astounded to learn recently just how deep this all goes.  I probably shouldhave been aware, but like most people, because I have no interest in this stuff, I never looked into it.  What I found is alarming.


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Zuckerberg’s “Fix” for Child Safety Could End Anonymous Internet Access for Everyone


Zuckerberg’s “Fix” for Child Safety Could End Anonymous Internet Access for Everyone


Mark Zuckerberg spent more than five hours on the stand in Los Angeles Superior Court on Wednesday, testifying before a jury for the first time about claims that Meta deliberately designed Instagram to addict children.

The headline from most coverage was the spectacle: an annotated paper trail of internal emails, a 35-foot collage of the plaintiff’s Instagram posts unspooled across the courtroom, a CEO growing visibly agitated under cross-examination.

The more important story is what Wednesday’s proceedings are being used to build.

The trial is framed as a child safety case. What it is actually doing, especially through Zuckerberg’s own testimony, is laying the political and legal groundwork for mandatory identity verification across the internet.

And Zuckerberg, rather than pushing back on that outcome, offered the court his preferred implementation plan.

Zuckerberg was pressed with internal documents, including a 2015 estimate that 4 million users under 13 were on Instagram, roughly 30 percent of all American children aged 10 to 12. An old email from former public policy head Nick Clegg was read into the record: “The fact that we say we don’t allow under-13s on our platform, yet have no way of enforcing it, is just indefensible.” Zuckerberg acknowledged the slow progress: “I always wish that we could have gotten there sooner.”

He also told the jury: “I don’t see why this is so complicated,” when pressed on the company’s age verification policies. His proposed answer to that question is the core problem.

Multiple times during his testimony, Zuckerberg argued that age verification should be handled not by individual apps but at the operating system level, by Apple and Google. He told jurors that operating system providers “were better positioned to implement age verification tools, since they control the software that runs most smartphones.”

“Doing it at the level of the phone is just a lot cleaner than having every single app out there have to do this separately,” he said. He added that it “would be pretty easy for them” to implement.

Note that. Zuckerberg is not proposing that Instagram verify the ages of Instagram users. He is proposing that Apple and Google verify the identity of every smartphone user, for every app, at the OS level.

Once that infrastructure exists, it does not stay limited to social media. It applies to every app on the phone. Every website accessed through that phone’s browser. Every communication sent through any app on the device.

This is more than age verification. It is a national digital ID layer baked into the two operating systems that run the overwhelming majority of the world’s smartphones.

The proposal also solves Zuckerberg’s immediate legal problem. If Apple and Google own age enforcement, platforms like Meta are no longer responsible for enforcing it. The liability shifts. The company under lawsuit in Los Angeles deflects the core allegation by pointing at Cupertino and Mountain View.

Who decides which apps require ID verification once this infrastructure exists? Apple and Google do. They would be deputized as identity gatekeepers for the internet. Two private companies, already under serious antitrust scrutiny for their control of app distribution, handed new authority over who accesses what online and under what identity.


Zuckerberg’s OS-level verification proposal fits neatly into a legislative agenda that was moving before he took the stand Wednesday.

California’s SB 976, the Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act, mandates age verification systems for social media platforms in the state. The California Attorney General must finalize implementation rules by January 2027.

The Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), pending at the federal level, would direct agencies to develop age verification at the device or operating system level, the same framework Zuckerberg promoted from the stand.






Mexico's Cartel Decapitation Strike Fallout: "Not The End, Just The Beginning"


Mexico's Cartel Decapitation Strike Fallout: "Not The End, Just The Beginning"
TYLER DURDEN

Mexican journalist Luis Cárdenas, listed as a journalist at MVS Noticias and a contributor to El Universal and El Heraldo de México, spoke with security analyst Oscar Balmen about the Mexican Army Special Forces' decapitation strike against the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) by killing Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes.

Balmen explained to Cárdenas that CJNG "is designed to survive without El Mencho."

Cárdenas listed key takeaways from his discussion:

  • The fall of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes does not mean the end of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel: it is a transnational criminal structure with a franchise model and regional autonomy.

  • The more than 250 blockades after the operation were not aimed at rescuing him, but were a "criminal résumé": plaza bosses flexing muscle to dispute the leadership.


    • The risk is not immediate, warns Balmen: the rearrangement can take weeks or months to explode, as happened after the capture of Ismael Zambada García; an internal struggle is coming that could fragment or pulverize the cartel.


    Earlier, Mexico's Secretary of Defense, Ricardo Trevilla, revealed new details at a press conference about the Mexican Army Special Forces raid to capture El Mencho. He said, "El Mencho was captured in a cabin area near his hideout." However, El Mencho later died in a firefight with the military.


    Trevilla offered condolences to the families of military members who lost their lives in the mission to decapitate CJNG.


    He acknowledged that the operation against El Mencho can be viewed from "different perspectives," but he said the Mexican Army has completed its mission.


    "The government of Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum knew that the 'elimination' of El Mencho would trigger a massive terrorist reaction," research analyst Miguel Alfonso Meza of Defensorxs wrote on X.

    Meza continued:


    One day after the assassination of El Mencho, the repercussions are:

    • Collective trauma in the population and hundreds of deadly and economic victims.

    • A predictable internal dispute within the CJNG and the prolonged bleeding it will cause.

    • The elimination of El Mencho as a potential witness to point out all the politicians and businessmen who protected him, as well as a source of information to dismantle his cartel.

    • The establishment of a de facto (military) state of exception in several regions of the country.

    • The international perception that Mexico is at war and incapable of guaranteeing security against the cartels, just over 3 months before the World Cup.

    • And fuel for Trump's interventionist discourse (even though the operation was joint, Mexico will pay the political cost).


    More...



Iranian Students Protest for Third Day as US Pressure Mounts


Iranian Students Protest for Third Day as US Pressure Mounts


Iranian students defied authorities with protests for a third day on Monday, weeks after security forces crushed mass unrest with thousands killed and as the United States weighs possible air strikes against the Islamic Republic.

State media outlets reported students chanting anti-government slogans at Tehran University, burning flags at the all-women al-Zahra University, and scuffles at Amir Kabir University, all located in the capital.

Reuters also verified video showing students at al-Zahra University chanting slogans including “we’ll reclaim Iran,” but was not able to confirm when it was recorded.

In a new sign of the mounting tension in the Middle East, the United States began pulling non-essential personnel and family members from the embassy in Beirut, a senior State Department official said.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened Iran since major nationwide protests across the country in January, saying on Thursday that “really bad things will happen” if talks between the countries fail to produce a deal.

Washington wants Iran to give up much of its nuclear program, which it believes is aimed at building a bomb, limit the range of its missiles to short distances, and stop supporting terrorist groups it backs in the Middle East.

It has built up forces across the Middle East, putting increased pressure on Iran as it weighs its response to US demands amid ongoing talks.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei already faces the gravest crisis of his 36-year tenure, with an economy struggling under the weight of international sanctions and growing unrest that broke out into major protests in January.