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Chinese battery-storage supplier sees shipments doubling in 2026

ClimateWire News - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 6:24am
Beijing HyperStrong Technology's CEO said total deliveries are projected to reach 70 gigawatt-hours this year.

Polish power prices turn negative for some as renewables boom

ClimateWire News - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 6:23am
Bright, windy weather sparked a surge in renewable electricity supplies that overwhelmed demand over the weekend.

Deaths from storms, flooding in Afghanistan increase to 110

ClimateWire News - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 6:23am
Storms and heavy rainfall began across Afghanistan about 12 days ago, affecting most of the country's 34 provinces.

Hong Kong Police Can Force You to Reveal Your Encryption Keys

Schneier on Security - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 5:45am

According to a new law, the Hong Kong police can demand that you reveal the encryption keys protecting your computer, phone, hard drives, etc.—even if you are just transiting the airport.

In a security alert dated March 26, the U.S. Consulate General said that, on March 23, 2026, Hong Kong authorities changed the rules governing enforcement of the National Security Law. Under the revised framework, police can require individuals to provide passwords or other assistance to access personal electronic devices, including cellphones and laptops.

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MIT graduate engineering and business programs ranked highly by U.S. News for 2026-27

MIT Latest News - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 12:01am

U.S. News and World Report has again placed MIT’s graduate program in engineering at the top of its annual rankings, released today. The Institute has held the No. 1 spot since 1990, when the magazine first ranked such programs.

The MIT Sloan School of Management also placed highly, occupying the No. 6 spot for the best graduate business programs.

Among individual engineering disciplines, MIT placed first in six areas: aerospace/aeronautical/astronautical engineering, chemical engineering, computer engineering (tied with the University of California at Berkeley), electrical/electronic/communications engineering (tied with Stanford University and Berkeley), materials engineering, and mechanical engineering. It placed second in nuclear engineering.

In the rankings of individual MBA specialties, MIT placed first in four areas: business analytics, entrepreneurship (with Stanford), production/operations, and supply chain/logistics. It placed second in executive MBA programs (with the University of Chicago).

U.S. News bases its rankings of graduate schools of engineering and business on two types of data: reputational surveys of deans and other academic officials, and statistical indicators that measure the quality of a school’s faculty, research, and students. The magazine’s less-frequent rankings of graduate programs in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities are based solely on reputational surveys.

In the sciences, ranked by U.S. News for the first time in four years, MIT’s doctoral programs placed first in four areas: biology (with Scripps Research Institute), chemistry (with Berkeley and Caltech), computer science (with Carnegie Mellon University and Stanford), and physics (with Caltech, Princeton University, and Stanford). The Institute placed second in mathematics (with Harvard University, Stanford, and Berkeley).

Helping data centers deliver higher performance with less hardware

MIT Latest News - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 12:00am

To improve data center efficiency, multiple storage devices are often pooled together over a network so many applications can share them. But even with pooling, significant device capacity remains underutilized due to performance variability across the devices.

MIT researchers have now developed a system that boosts the performance of storage devices by handling three major sources of variability simultaneously. Their approach delivers significant speed improvements over traditional methods that tackle only one source of variability at a time.

The system uses a two-tier architecture, with a central controller that makes big-picture decisions about which tasks each storage device performs, and local controllers for each machine that rapidly reroute data if that device is struggling.

The method, which can adapt in real-time to shifting workloads, does not require specialized hardware. When the researchers tested this system on realistic tasks like AI model training and image compression, it nearly doubled the performance delivered by traditional approaches. By intelligently balancing the workloads of multiple storage devices, the system can increase overall data center efficiency.

“There is a tendency to want to throw more resources at a problem to solve it, but that is not sustainable in many ways. We want to be able to maximize the longevity of these very expensive and carbon-intensive resources,” says Gohar Chaudhry, an electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) graduate student and lead author of a paper on this technique. “With our adaptive software solution, you can still squeeze a lot of performance out of your existing devices before you need to throw them away and buy new ones.”

Chaudhry is joined on the paper by Ankit Bhardwaj, an assistant professor at Tufts University; Zhenyuan Ruan PhD ’24; and senior author Adam Belay, an associate professor of EECS and a member of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. The research will be presented at the USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation.

Leveraging untapped performance

Solid-state drives (SSDs) are high-performance digital storage devices that allow applications to read and write data. For instance, an SSD can store vast datasets and rapidly send data to a processor for machine-learning model training.   

Pooling multiple SSDs together so many applications can share them improves efficiency, since not every application needs to use the entire capacity of an SSD at a given time. But not all SSDs perform equally, and the slowest device can limit the overall performance of the pool.

These inefficiencies arise from variability in SSD hardware and the tasks they perform.

To utilize this untapped SSD performance, the researchers developed Sandook, a software-based system that tackles three major forms of performance-hampering variability simultaneously. “Sandook” is an Urdu word that means “box,” to signify “storage.”

One type of variability is caused by differences in the age, amount of wear, and capacity of SSDs that may have been purchased at different times from multiple vendors.

The second type of variability is due to the mismatch between read and write operations occurring on the same SSD. To write new data to the device, the SSD must erase some existing data. This process can slow down data reads, or retrievals, happening at the same time.

The third source of variability is garbage collection, a process of gathering and removing outdated data to free up space. This process, which slows SSD operations, is triggered at random intervals that a data center operator cannot control.

“I can’t assume all SSDs will behave identically through my entire deployment cycle. Even if I give them all the same workload, some of them will be stragglers, which hurts the net throughput I can achieve,” Chaudhry explains.

Plan globally, react locally

To handle all three sources of variability, Sandook utilizes a two-tier structure. A global schedular optimizes the distribution of tasks for the overall pool, while faster schedulers on each SSD react to urgent events and shift operations away from congested devices.

The system overcomes delays from read-write interference by rotating which SSDs an application can use for reads and writes. This reduces the chance reads and writes happen simultaneously on the same machine.

Sandook also profiles the typical performance of each SSD. It uses this information to detect when garbage collection is likely slowing operations down. Once detected, Sandook reduces the workload on that SSD by diverting some tasks until garbage collection is finished.

“If that SSD is doing garbage collection and can’t handle the same workload anymore, I want to give it a smaller workload and slowly ramp things back up. We want to find the sweet spot where it is still doing some work, and tap into that performance,” Chaudhry says.

The SSD profiles also allow Sandook’s global controller to assign workloads in a weighted fashion that considers the characteristics and capacity of each device.

Because the global controller sees the overall picture and the local controllers react on the fly, Sandook can simultaneously manage forms of variability that happen over different time scales. For instance, delays from garbage collection occur suddenly, while latency caused by wear and tear builds up over many months.

The researchers tested Sandook on a pool of 10 SSDs and evaluated the system on four tasks: running a database, training a machine-learning model, compressing images, and storing user data. Sandook boosted the throughput of each application between 12 and 94 percent when compared to static methods, and improved the overall utilization of SSD capacity by 23 percent.

The system enabled SSDs to achieve 95 percent of their theoretical maximum performance, without the need for specialized hardware or application-specific updates.

“Our dynamic solution can unlock more performance for all the SSDs and really push them to the limit. Every bit of capacity you can save really counts at this scale,” Chaudhry says.

In the future, the researchers want to incorporate new protocols available on the latest SSDs that give operators more control over data placement. They also want to leverage the predictability in AI workloads to increase the efficiency of SSD operations.

“Flash storage is a powerful technology that underpins modern datacenter applications, but sharing this resource across workloads with widely varying performance demands remains an outstanding challenge. This work moves the needle meaningfully forward with an elegant and practical solution ready for deployment, bringing flash storage closer to its full potential in production clouds,” says Josh Fried, a software engineer at Google and incoming assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved with this work.

This research was funded, in part, by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and the Semiconductor Research Corporation.

Lessons from the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion for Indigenous rights

Nature Climate Change - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 07 April 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02611-2

Lessons from the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion for Indigenous rights

From least-cost to SDG-optimal sectoral allocation of Paris Agreement-compatible mitigation efforts

Nature Climate Change - Tue, 04/07/2026 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 07 April 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02602-3

Meeting global temperature targets requires deep mitigation across sectors. Moving away from cost optimality when allocating mitigation by sector, the authors link integrated assessment models and portfolio analysis to identify and balance trade-offs between Sustainable Development Goal indicators.

New Mexico’s Meta Ruling and Encryption

Schneier on Security - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 3:09pm

Mike Masnick points out that the recent New Mexico court ruling against Meta has some bad implications for end-to-end encryption, and security in general:

If the “design choices create liability” framework seems worrying in the abstract, the New Mexico case provides a concrete example of where it leads in practice.

One of the key pieces of evidence the New Mexico attorney general used against Meta was the company’s 2023 decision to add end-to-end encryption to Facebook Messenger. The argument went like this: predators used Messenger to groom minors and exchange child sexual abuse material. By encrypting those messages, Meta made it harder for law enforcement to access evidence of those crimes. Therefore, the encryption was a design choice that enabled harm...

Google Wants to Transition to Post-Quantum Cryptography by 2029

Schneier on Security - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:52am

Google says that it will fully transition to post-quantum cryptography by 2029. I think this is a good move, not because I think we will have a useful quantum computer anywhere near that year, but because crypto-agility is always a good thing.

Slashdot thread.

These two laws give EPA authority to regulate CO2 — if it wants to

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:36am
Administrator Lee Zeldin says his agency can't regulate greenhouse gases without congressional approval. Some legal experts disagree.

Florida communities with highest climate risk face new Tallahassee hurdles

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:35am
A bill that passed Florida’s Legislature would prevent local governments from capping greenhouse gas emissions.

Climate lawsuit against insurance giant survives bid to dismiss

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:34am
A federal judge says litigation can continue over Chubb's decision to bar a proposal to study the benefits of suing companies responsible for climate change.

Texas attorney general targets rooftop solar

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:32am
Ken Paxton has accused four residential solar companies of engaging in “fraudulent and deceptive practices.” He's battling fellow Republican John Cornyn for a U.S. Senate seat.

Massachusetts cranberry bogs become sand mines for coastal projects

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:31am
As sand resources decline, hard-pressed cranberry bog owners are turning to sand mining for revenue. Their neighbors aren't happy.

Home mitigation bill heads to Mississippi governor in storm resilience push

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:29am
The program would offer grants of up to $10,000 to help homeowners to retrofit their properties for storm protection

How a company collapse is denting trust in carbon markets

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:29am
Koko Networks folded amid concerns it was issuing more carbon credits than its products warranted, a claim the company has denied.

Brazilian banks to verify satellite deforestation data for rural credit

ClimateWire News - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 6:28am
The Finance Ministry said the new requirements were intended to align rural credit with conservation and sustainability policies.

Wildfire risk for species under climate change

Nature Climate Change - Mon, 04/06/2026 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 06 April 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02600-5

The authors consider risks to global biodiversity from wildfire under climate change. They show increased risk to 83.9% of species pre-identified as wildfire vulnerable, with high risks for species with small ranges, high conservation concern and those in South America, Australia and South Asia.

Triple Header for Privacy’s Defender in New York

EFF: Updates - Fri, 04/03/2026 - 7:15pm

You’re invited on a journey inside the privacy battles that shaped the internet. EFF’s Executive Director Cindy Cohn has tangled with the feds, fought for your data security, and argued before judges to protect our access to science and knowledge on the internet.

Join Cindy at three events in New York discussing her bestselling new book: Privacy's Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance, on sale now. All proceeds from the book benefit EFF. Find the full event details below, and RSVP to let us know if you can make it.

April 20 - With Women in Security and Privacy (WISP)

Join Women in Security and Privacy (WISP) and EFF for a conversation featuring American University Senior Professorial Lecturer Chelsea Horne and EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn as they dive into data security, Federal access to data, and your digital rights.


Privacy's Defender with WISP
Kennedys
22 Vanderbilt Avenue, Suite 2400, New York, NY 10017
Monday, April 20, 2026
6:00 pm to 8:00 pm
REGISTER NOW


April 21 - With Julie Samuels at Civic Hall

Join Tech:NYC President and CEO Julie Samuels, in conversation with EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn for a discussion about Cindy's work, her new book, and what we're all wondering: Can have private conversations if we live our lives online?


Privacy's Defender at Civic Hall
Civic Hall
124 E 14th St, New York, NY 10003
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
REGISTER NOW


April 23 - With Anil Dash at Brooklyn Public Library

Join antitech Principal & Cofounder Anil Dash, in conversation with EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn to discuss Cindy's new book: Privacy's Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance.


Privacy's Defender at Brooklyn Public Library
Brooklyn Public Library - Central Library, Info Commons Lab
10 Grand Army Plz 1st floor, Brooklyn, NY 11238
Thursday, April 23, 2026
6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
REGISTER NOW


"Privacy’s Defender is a compelling account of a life well lived and an inspiring call to action for the next generation of civil liberties champions."
~Edward Snowden, whistleblower; author of Permanent Record

Can't make it? Look for Cindy at a city (or web connection) near you! Find the latest tour dates on the Privacy’s Defender hub or follow EFF for more.

Part memoir and part legal history for the general reader, Privacy’s Defender is a compelling testament to just how much privacy and free expression matter in our efforts to combat authoritarianism, grow democracy, and strengthen human rights. Thank you for being a part of that fight.

Want to support the cause and get a copy of the new book? New or renewing EFF members can preorder one as their annual gift!

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