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City type specifies carbon cycle
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02646-5
City type specifies carbon cycleLargest increase of carbon dioxide in 2024
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02647-4
Largest increase of carbon dioxide in 2024Food policy adaptation
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02645-6
Food policy adaptationDecreasing ice and colder winters
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02648-3
Decreasing ice and colder wintersScientists breed low-emission rice to fight climate change
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02614-z
New hybrid grains are expected to emit less than half of the methane that their natural counterparts emit.Carbon markets rule change would harm mitigation and Indigenous peoples
Nature Climate Change, Published online: 11 May 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02629-6
Carbon markets rule change would harm mitigation and Indigenous peoplesCongress Narrowed the GUARD Act, But Serious Problems Remain
Following criticism, lawmakers have narrowed the GUARD Act, a bill aimed at restricting minors’ access to certain AI systems. The earlier version could have applied broadly to nearly every AI-powered chatbot or search tool. The amended bill focuses more narrowly on so-called “AI companions”—conversational systems designed to simulate emotional or interpersonal interactions with users.
That change does address some of the broadest concerns raised about the original proposal, though some questions about the bill’s reach remain. Bottom line: the revised bill still creates serious problems for privacy, online speech, and parental choice.
Tell Congress: oppose the guard act
The new GUARD Act still requires companies offering AI companions to implement burdensome age-verification systems tied to users’ real-world identities. Even parents who specifically want their teenagers to use these systems would still face significant hurdles. A family might decide that a conversational AI tool helps an isolated teenager practice social interaction, or engage in harmless creative roleplay. A parent deployed in the military might set up a persistent AI storyteller for a younger child. Under the revised bill, those users could still face mandatory age checks tied to sensitive personal or financial information before they or their children can use these services.
The revised bill also leaves important definitions unclear while sharply increasing penalties for developers and companies that get those judgments wrong. Congress narrowed the GUARD Act. But it is still trying to solve a complicated social problem with vague legal standards, heavy liability, and privacy-invasive verification systems.
Intrusive Age-Verification Remains In The BillThe revised GUARD Act still requires companies offering AI companions to verify that users are adults through a “reasonable age verification” system. The bill allows a broader set of verification methods than the earlier version, but they are still tied to a user’s real-world identity—such as financial records, or age-verified accounts for a mobile operating system or app store.
That approach still raises serious privacy and access concerns. Millions of Americans do not have current government ID, accounts at major banks, or stable access to the kinds of digital identity systems the bill contemplates. Even for those who do, requiring identity-linked verification to access online speech tools creates real risks for privacy, anonymity, and data security. Many people are rightly creeped out by age-verification systems, and may simply forgo using these services rather than compromise their privacy and security.
The revised definition of “AI companion” is also narrower than before, but it’s unclear at the margins. The bill now focuses on systems that “engage in interactions involving emotional disclosures” from the user, or present a “persistent identity, persona or character.”
EFF appreciates that the authors recognized that the prior definition could reach a variety of AI systems that are not chatbots, including internet search engines. But the narrowed definition could be read to also apply to a variety of chat tools that are not AI companions. For example, many modern online conversational systems increasingly recognize and respond to users’ emotions. Customer service systems, including completely human-powered ones that existed long before AI chatbots, have long been designed to recognize frustration and respond empathetically. As conversational AI becomes more emotionally responsive, a customer service chatbot’s efforts to empathize may sweep it within the bill’s definition.
Bigger Penalties, Bigger Incentives To Restrict AccessThe revised bill also sharply increases penalties. Instead of $100,000 per violation, companies—including small developers—can face fines of up to $250,000 per violation, enforced by both federal and state officials.
That kind of liability creates incentives to over-restrict access, especially for minors. Smaller developers, in particular, may decide it is safer to block younger users entirely, disable conversational features, or avoid developing certain tools at all, rather than risk severe penalties under vague standards.
The concerns driving this bill are real. Some AI systems have engaged in troubling interactions with vulnerable users, including minors. But the right answer to that is targeted enforcement against bad actors, and privacy laws that protect us all. The revised GUARD Act instead responds with a privacy-invasive system that burdens the right to speak, read, and interact online.
Congress did improve this bill, but EFF’s core speech, privacy, and security issues remain.
Friday Squid Blogging: Giant Squid Live in the Waters of Western Australia
Insider Betting on Polymarket
Insider trading is rife on Polymarket:
Analysis by the Anti-Corruption Data Collective, a non-profit research and advocacy group, found that long-shot bets—defined as wagers of $2,500 or more at odds of 35 percent or less—on the platform had an average win rate of around 52 percent in markets on military and defense actions.
That compares with a win rate of 25 percent across all politics-focused markets and just 14 percent for all markets on the platform as a whole.
It is absolutely insane that this is legal. We already know how insider betting warps sports. Insider betting warping politics—and military actions—is orders of magnitude worse...
Free Signal Guide
EFF friend Guy Kawasaki* has written a book: Everybody Has Something to Hide: Why and How to Use Signal to Preserve Your Privacy, Security, and Well-Being. This guide is now available in Spanish and English as an ebook in the EPUB format that you can download here. Take a look and consider sharing it with anyone who you know who uses (or should use) Signal.
And don't forget: EFF has two short guides on using Signal on our Surveillance Self-Defense site. An intro How to Use Signal guide, and a guide on Managing Signal Groups.
Everybody Has Something to Hide: Why and How to Use Signal to Preserve Your Privacy, Security, and Well-Being courtesy of Guy Kawasaki.
*Guy Kawasaki is an EFF donor.
Trump gets his chance to upend FEMA
Virginia’s carbon market comeback risks a multistate affordability crunch
State judges rebuff oil industry bids to halt climate cases
Georgia residents seethe over 30M gallons of missing water
New York moves toward climate reset
EU floats making it easy for oil companies to break methane rules
Iran war shows EU must keep course on climate laws, Dutch minister says
Spanish government under fire over handling of hantavirus ship
Everest season opens late, with climbers undeterred by huge ice block
Mapping the ocean with autonomous sensors
In late October 2025, Tropical Storm Melissa moved through the Caribbean Sea with moderate winds that didn’t get much attention. But on Oct. 25, aided by a patch of warm ocean, the storm rapidly intensified. By the time it made landfall in Jamaica, it was one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record, uprooting trees, tearing the roofs from buildings, and causing catastrophic flooding and power outages.
Ravi Pappu SM ’95, PhD ’01 blames the surprise on our inability to gather high-quality ocean data.
“The storm intensified because of a small pool of hot water in the Caribbean Ocean that fed it energy,” Pappu explains. “These pools are everywhere. They can be hundreds of kilometers wide and are literally invisible to us. If we knew about that pool, we could say very precisely how the hurricane would intensify and better deal with it.”
Pappu thinks he has a way to solve that problem. He is the founder of Apeiron Labs, a company deploying low-cost autonomous ocean sensors to capture more data, in more places, and at a lower cost than is possible today. The company’s devices roam the ocean up to a quarter mile below the surface and continuously gather data on temperature, acoustics, salinity, and more, providing a real-time look at one of the planet’s last known mysteries. He says the sensors can do for the ocean what small, modular CubeSat satellites did for Earth observation from space.
When the devices are ready to be recharged, trackers make it easy to scoop them from the ocean surface. Pappu envisions the recovery process being done by autonomous boats in the future.
“Humanity needs ocean measurements, and we need them at a scale that has never been attempted before,” Pappu says. “It’s a massively hard problem. In the last century, oceanographers resigned themselves to calling it the century of undersampling. If we are successful, we will have a much more fine-grained understanding of our oceans and how they impact humans. That’s what drives us.”
Homework
Pappu came to MIT after completing a 10-year homework assignment. It started when he was a child in India in the 1980s, when he saw a hologram on the cover of National Geographic for the first time.
“I was so taken by it that I decided I needed to learn how to make those three-dimensional images,” Pappu recalls. “I learned what I could by reading books and papers. I didn’t know who invented the hologram until I read a book about MIT’s Media Lab. The book named the person who invented the rainbow hologram, so I wrote him a letter. I didn’t know his address, so I just wrote on the envelope, ‘Steve Benton, holography researcher, MIT, USA.’”
To Pappu’s surprise, the letter reached Benton, and the former Media Lab professor even wrote back with some further topics he needed to learn about.
Pappu never forgot that. He earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering in India, then earned his master’s degree at Villanova University, taking all the optics classes he could.
“Eventually, about 10 years after I saw my first hologram, I wrote to Steve and I said, ‘I did all these things you asked me, now I want to study with you,’” Pappu says. “That’s how I got into MIT.”
Pappu studied under Benton for the next three years. He also studied under Professor Neil Gershenfeld as part of his PhD. Following graduation, Pappu and four classmates started ThingMagic, a consulting company that eventually sold RFID readers. ThingMagic was acquired 2010. Pappu returned to MIT for two years as a visiting scientist around the time of the acquisition.
Following that experience, Pappu worked at In-Q-Tel, an organization that invested in ThingMagic and other companies with potential to advance national security. It was there that Pappu realized how badly the world needed large-scale, inexpensive ocean sensing.
“All of the ocean sensing up to that point, and even today, was about making a really expensive thing that cost $20 million, goes to the bottom of the ocean, and stays there for five years,” Pappu says. “We needed things that are cheap and scalable to deploy wherever you need them for as long as you want.”
Pappu officially founded Apeiron Labs in 2022.
“What we’re focused on is figuring out how the ocean works,” Pappu says. “How warm is it? What is the pH? How salty is it? These things vary from place to place every 10 kilometers or so. It varies over time, and it varies by season. If we knew the details of the ocean with the same fidelity we have for the atmosphere, we would be able to tell exactly when and where hurricanes hit. It would mean less uncertainty.”
Apeiron’s ocean-sensing devices are each 3 feet long and about 20 pounds. They’re designed to be dropped off a boat or plane with biodegradable parachutes and stay in the ocean for six months. Each device continuously sends data to the cloud, is controllable through a cloud-based ocean operating system, and is accessible on a mobile phone.
“We lower the carbon footprint and cost of gathering ocean data because everything else needs a diesel ship — and a fully crewed ship costs $100,000 a day,” Rappu says. “By the time you collect the first data in the old model, you’ve already committed to a lot of money in addition to millions of dollars for the sensors. “
The company’s devices currently have two types of sensors: one for measuring salinity, temperature, and depth, and the other that uses a hydrophone to passively listen for things like submarines and whales.
That could be used to detect the low-frequency calls and clicks of endangered whales and other fish species. Currently, fishermen must look for whales manually with spotters on ships or planes. The data could also be used to improve weather forecasts, monitor noise from offshore energy projects, and track currents.
“Currents are determined by temperature and salinity, so if there’s an oil spill, our data could help determine where that spill is going,” Pappu says. “Or if you’re a fisherman, knowing where the water changes from warm to cold, which is where the fish hang out, is very useful.”
An ocean of possibilities
Apeiron Labs has worked with government defense agencies including the U.S. Navy over the last two years. The company has also tested its devices off the coast of California and in the Boston Harbor.
“The most important thing is, when we show people our approach and what we’ve demonstrated so far, they are no longer asking, ‘Can it be done?’ they’re asking, ‘What can we do with it?’” Pappu says. “Our customers have spent decades working in the ocean and they understand how novel these capabilities are.”
Of all the possibilities, improved storm forecasting could be the one Pappu is most excited about.
“Our mission is to lower the barriers to ocean data,” Pappu says. “The ocean is a huge determinant of weather, climate, and short-term forecasting. Despite our best efforts to predict the intensity of storms, sudden changes are still the norm, and much of that comes down to a lack of understanding of our oceans. If we were monitoring these things over long periods of time and finer spatial scales, we could see these storms coming much earlier with more certainty.”
