20 Feb 2026

feedHacker News

FCC asks stations for "pro-America" programming, like daily Pledge of Allegiance

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20 Feb 2026 10:02pm GMT

feedArs Technica

FCC asks stations for "pro-America" programming, like daily Pledge of Allegiance

Brendan Carr wants "patriotic" shows for Trump's yearlong America 250 celebration.

20 Feb 2026 10:00pm GMT

feedSlashdot

Phil Spencer Retiring After 38 Years At Microsoft

Xbox chief and Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft after nearly 40 years at the company. "Meanwhile, Xbox President Sarah Bond, "long thought by many both inside and outside of Microsoft to be Spencer's heir apparent, has resigned," reports IGN. From the report: The new CEO of Microsoft Gaming will be Asha Sharma, currently the President of Microsoft's CoreAI product. Finally, Xbox Game Studios head Matt Booty is being promoted to Chief Content Officer and will work closely with Sharma. "I want to thank Phil for his extraordinary leadership and partnership," Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in an email sent to Microsoft staff. "Over 38 years at Microsoft, including 12 years leading Gaming, Phil helped transform what we do and how we do it." [...] Spencer was named Head of Xbox in March of 2014, when he was tasked with righting a ship that had made a number of product choices and policy decisions that rubbed core gamers the wrong way in the run-up to the launch of the Xbox One in Fall 2013. Long hailed by gamers as being one of their own, Spencer could frequently be found on Xbox Live, playing games regularly with fellow Xbox gamers and racking up a healthy Gamerscore. His first major move when put in charge was decoupling the Kinect 2.0 peripheral from the Xbox One package, thus immediately reducing the new console's price by $100 to $399, matching the day-one price of Sony's PlayStation 4. He spearheaded the much-heralded backwards compatibility movement within Xbox, the Xbox Game Pass service was born under his watch, and accessibility made major advances during his tenure in both hardware and software. Xbox Play Anywhere, which sought to let gamers play their Xbox games on any device, be it a PC, console, or handheld, isn't new but has been a big recent focal point. Spencer's time running Xbox will perhaps be most remembered for Microsoft's $69 billion acquisition of Activision-Blizzard-King in 2022, which took almost two years to achieve regulatory approval from various agencies around the world. But Spencer began trying to solve for Xbox's dearth of first-party games in 2018, when the first wave of studio acquisitions occurred. Prior to the Activision deal, Spencer's biggest move came with the $7.5 billion acquisition of ZeniMax, parent company of Bethesda, in 2020. The deal gave Xbox total ownership of Bethesda Game Studios and its Fallout and Elder Scrolls franchises along with id Software and its Doom and Quake IPs, among many others. Questions arose from there about whether or not that meant all of Xbox's new studios would produce games exclusively for Xbox consoles, and while some games were kept off of PlayStation platforms temporarily, many weren't and most now seem to come to PS5 eventually, if not on day one.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 10:00pm GMT

feedArs Technica

Meta's flagship metaverse service leaves VR behind

The company asserts it will continue to make VR headsets, though.

20 Feb 2026 9:49pm GMT

feedHacker News

Turn Dependabot Off

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20 Feb 2026 9:25pm GMT

Show HN: Mines.fyi – all the mines in the US in a leaflet visualization

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20 Feb 2026 9:22pm GMT

feedSlashdot

Microsoft Deletes Blog Telling Users To Train AI on Pirated Harry Potter Books

Microsoft pulled a year-old blog post this week after a Hacker News thread flagged that it had encouraged developers to download all seven Harry Potter books from a Kaggle dataset -- incorrectly marked as public domain -- and use them to train AI models on the company's Azure platform. The blog, written in November 2024 by senior product manager Pooja Kamath, walked users through building Q&A systems and generating fan fiction using the copyrighted texts, and even included a Microsoft-branded AI image of Harry Potter. The Kaggle dataset's uploader, data scientist Shubham Maindola, told Ars Technica the public domain label was "a mistake" and deleted the dataset after the outlet reached out.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 9:20pm GMT

OpenAI Has No Moat, No Tech Edge, No Lock-in and No Real Plan, Analyst Warns

OpenAI faces four fundamental strategic problems that no amount of fundraising or capex announcements can paper over, according to analyst Benedict Evans: it has no unique technology, its enormous user base is shallow and fragile, incumbents like Google and Meta are leveraging superior distribution to close the gap, and its product roadmap is dictated by whatever the research labs happen to discover rather than by deliberate product strategy. The company claims 800-900 million weekly active users, but 80% of them sent fewer than 1,000 messages across all of 2025, averaging fewer than three prompts a day, and only 5% pay. OpenAI has acknowledged what it calls a "capability gap" between what models can do and what people use them for -- a framing Evans reads as a polite way to avoid admitting the absence of product-market fit. Gemini and Meta AI are meanwhile gaining share rapidly because the products look nearly indistinguishable to typical users, and Google and Meta already have the distribution to push them. Evans compares ChatGPT to Netscape -- an early leader in a category where the products were hard to tell apart, overtaken by a competitor that used distribution as a crowbar. On capex, Evans argues that Altman's ambitions -- claiming $1.4 trillion and 30 gigawatts of future compute -- amount to an attempt to will OpenAI into a seat at a table where annual infrastructure spending may need to reach hundreds of billions. But a seat at the table is not leverage over it; he compares this to TSMC, which holds a de facto chip monopoly yet captures little value further up the stack. OpenAI's own strategy diagrams from late last year laid out a full-stack platform vision -- chips, models, developer tools, consumer products -- each layer reinforcing the others. Evans argues this borrows the language of Windows and iOS without possessing any of the underlying dynamics: no network effect, no lock-in preventing developers from calling a different model's API, and no reason customers would know or care which foundation model powers the product they are using.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 8:44pm GMT

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Controversial NIH director now in charge of CDC, too, in RFK Jr. shake-up

The unusual dual role has renewed criticism of Bhattacharya's lack of leadership.

20 Feb 2026 7:44pm GMT

feedLinuxiac

ProtonUp-Qt v2.15 Adds dwproton and Fixes Lutris Wine-GE Directory

ProtonUp-Qt v2.15 Adds dwproton and Fixes Lutris Wine-GE Directory

ProtonUp-Qt 2.15 introduces dwproton support, fixes Kron4ek amd64/wow64 selection, and corrects the GE-Proton install path for Lutris users.

20 Feb 2026 4:21pm GMT

Transmission 4.1.1 BitTorrent Client Released With Performance Improvements

Transmission 4.1.1 BitTorrent Client Released With Performance Improvements

Transmission 4.1.1 fixes over 20 bugs from version 4.1 and brings performance improvements to all platforms.

20 Feb 2026 7:43am GMT

Calibre 9.3 E-Book Manager Released with KEPUB Improvements

Calibre 9.3 E-Book Manager Released with KEPUB Improvements

Calibre 9.3 improves KEPUB cover handling, fixes Windows issues, addresses two CVEs, and resolves multiple regressions.

20 Feb 2026 6:40am GMT