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New York Jets legend Nick Mangold dies aged 41 while seeking kidney transplant

about 8 hours ago
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Nick Mangold, a hugely popular player during his 11-season career with the New York Jets, has died at the age of 41.Earlier this month, Mangold said he had been undergoing dialysis and needed a kidney transplant.He sought help from fans of the Jets and Ohio State, where he was a star in college.“In 2006, I was diagnosed with a genetic defect that has led to chronic kidney disease.After a rough summer, I’m undergoing dialysis as we look for a kidney transplant,” he wrote at the time.

“I always knew this day would come, but I thought I would have had more time.“Unfortunately, I do not have any family able to donate at this time, so this is why I’m reaching out to you, our NY Jets and Ohio State communities.I am in need of a kidney donor with type O blood.”Mangold was a first-round pick out of Ohio State for the Jets in 2006.He spent his entire NFL career with team, earning seven trips to the Pro Bowl and was an All-Pro twice before he retired in 2016.

During that time, the center anchored an offensive line alongside D’Brickashaw Ferguson that helped the Jets reach two AFC championship games.He is currently a nominee for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.Mangold’s toughness was widely admired and he missed only four games in his first 10 seasons in the NFL.“Nick was more than a legendary center,” Jets owner Woody Johnson said in a statement.“He was the heartbeat of our offensive line for a decade and a beloved teammate whose leadership and toughness defined an era of Jets football.

Off the field, Nick’s wit, warmth, and unwavering loyalty made him a cherished member of our extended Jets family,”Mangold was a huge favorite with fans, known for his long hair, beard, charitable work and outgoing personality,He was active on social media and was rarely seen without his backwards baseball cap,He was a regular visitor to Jets game after his retirement – he chugged a beer while being inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor in 2022 – and stayed in the area when his playing days were over, becoming an assistant coach for Delbarton High School in Morristown, New Jersey,“You get to mold boys into men and teach the game of football, but also teach them a little bit about life as you go along,” Mangold told the New York Post in 2024.

Rex Ryan, who coached Mangold at the Jets, was in tears as he remembered his former player on ESPN’s Sunday NFL Countdown.“It’s brutal,” Ryan said.“Such a great young man.I had the pleasure of coaching him for all six years with the Jets [from 2009 to 2014].I remember it was obvious I was getting fired, my last game, Mangold’s injured – like, injured – and he comes to me and says, ‘I’m playing this game.

’ And he wanted to play for me,”Hall of fame cornerback Darrelle Revis, who was Mangold’s teammate for eight years, paid tribute on X,“I was fortunate to have the opportunity to lace them up with you every Sunday,” Revis wrote,“I will miss you and forever cherish our moments in the locker room,Love you buddy.

”Mangold was married to his childhood sweetheart, Jenny, with whom he had four children, Matthew, Eloise, Thomas, and Charlotte,His sister, Holley, represented USA at the 2012 Olympics in weightlifting,When he announced his illness he paid tribute to his family, saying they had “been my rock every step of the way,This situation has reminded me how lucky I am to have such an amazing family, friends, and community behind me,”
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AI models may be developing their own ‘survival drive’, researchers say

When HAL 9000, the artificial intelligence supercomputer in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, works out that the astronauts onboard a mission to Jupiter are planning to shut it down, it plots to kill them in an attempt to survive.Now, in a somewhat less deadly case (so far) of life imitating art, an AI safety research company has said that AI models may be developing their own “survival drive”.After Palisade Research released a paper last month which found that certain advanced AI models appear resistant to being turned off, at times even sabotaging shutdown mechanisms, it wrote an update attempting to clarify why this is – and answer critics who argued that its initial work was flawed.In an update this week, Palisade, which is part of a niche ecosystem of companies trying to evaluate the possibility of AI developing dangerous capabilities, described scenarios it ran in which leading AI models – including Google’s Gemini 2.5, xAI’s Grok 4, and OpenAI’s GPT-o3 and GPT-5 – were given a task, but afterwards given explicit instructions to shut themselves down

1 day ago
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‘He’s one of the few politicians who likes crypto’: my day with the UK tech bros hosting Nigel Farage

It is a grey morning in Shadwell, east London. But inside the old shell of Tobacco Dock, the gloom gives way to pulsating neon lights, flashy cars and cryptocurrency chatter.Evangelists for Web3, a vision for the next era of the internet, have descended on the old trading dock to network for two days. For many, the main event is one man: Nigel Farage.“Whether you like me or don’t like me is irrelevant, I’m actually a champion for this space,” the leader of Reform UK tells the audience of largely male crypto fanatics at the Zebu Live conference

1 day ago
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‘Sycophantic’ AI chatbots tell users what they want to hear, study shows

Turning to AI chatbots for personal advice poses “insidious risks”, according to a study showing the technology consistently affirms a user’s actions and opinions even when harmful.Scientists said the findings raised urgent concerns over the power of chatbots to distort people’s self-perceptions and make them less willing to patch things up after a row.With chatbots becoming a major source of advice on relationships and other personal issues, they could “reshape social interactions at scale”, the researchers added, calling on developers to address this risk.Myra Cheng, a computer scientist at Stanford University in California, said “social sycophancy” in AI chatbots was a huge problem: “Our key concern is that if models are always affirming people, then this may distort people’s judgments of themselves, their relationships, and the world around them. It can be hard to even realise that models are subtly, or not-so-subtly, reinforcing their existing beliefs, assumptions, and decisions

2 days ago
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Meta found in breach of EU law over ‘ineffective’ complaints system for flagging illegal content

Instagram and Facebook have breached EU law by failing to provide users with simple ways to complain or flag illegal content, including child sexual abuse material and terrorist content, the European Commission has said.In a preliminary finding on Friday, the EU’s executive body said Meta, the $1.8tn (£1.4tn) California company that runs Instagram and Facebook, had introduced unnecessary steps in processes for users to submit reports.It said both platforms appeared to use deceptive design – known as “dark patterns” – in the reporting mechanism in a way that could be “confusing and dissuading” to users

3 days ago
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Amazon reveals cause of AWS outage that took everything from banks to smart beds offline

Amazon has revealed the cause of this week’s hours-long AWS outage, which took everything from Signal to smart beds offline, was a bug in automation software that had widespread consequences.In a lengthy outline of the cause of the outage published on Thursday, AWS revealed a cascading set of events brought down thousands of sites and applications that host their services with the company.AWS said customers were unable to connect to DynamoDB, its database system where AWS customers store their data, due to “a latent defect within the service’s automated DNS [domain name system] management system”.DynamoDB maintains hundreds of thousands of DNS records. It uses automation to monitor the system to ensure records are updated frequently to ensure additional capacity is added as required, hardware failures are handled and traffic is distributed efficiently

3 days ago
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Trump pardons founder of Binance, world’s largest crypto exchange

Donald Trump issued a pardon for the founder of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange on Thursday.“President Trump exercised his constitutional authority by issuing a pardon for Mr Zhao, who was prosecuted by the Biden administration in their war on cryptocurrency,” a White House statement said. “The war on crypto is over.”Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty in late 2023 to one count of failing to maintain an anti-money laundering program and stepped down as CEO of Binance, which paid $4.3bn to settle related allegations

3 days ago
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Supermarkets tell Reeves tax rises could push food prices higher

about 9 hours ago
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Does your boss have the right to time your bathroom breaks when you work from home? | Gene Marks

about 10 hours ago
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US and China reach ‘final deal’ on TikTok sale, treasury secretary says

about 7 hours ago
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Could the internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern world together

about 9 hours ago
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NFL week eight: Ravens v Bears, Eagles v Giants, Panthers v Bills and more – live

about 4 hours ago
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Mexican Grand Prix: Formula One – live updates

about 4 hours ago