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HS2 Rewrites £2bn Train Deal After Wrong-Length Trains; Scotland Outclass France; Iran War Hits Week Two, Spiking Oil & Gas; Claude Flags Firefox Bugs as AP Boss Declares AI Resistance “Futile”
HS2 renegotiates £2 billion train contract after trains are found to be the wrong length
Ministers are preparing to revise a £2 billion contract awarded in 2021 to Hitachi and Alstom for 54 HS2 trains after it emerged the specified 400-metre configuration would not fit platforms at Manchester Piccadilly. The issue has become more acute since the HS2 route north of Birmingham was cancelled, meaning the trains must run on existing West Coast Main Line infrastructure to reach Manchester. Officials are discussing options including shorter trains, longer trains, or a mixed fleet, with the final train numbers still undecided. The Department for Transport says changes should not affect manufacturing jobs, while HS2 works on updated cost and timetable forecasts for the remaining London–Birmingham line.
France subdued as Scotland deliver a coming-of-age performance
A brilliant France side was made to look ordinary as Scotland produced arguably their best display in nearly 40 years, earning themselves an unlikely but real chance of winning the Six Nations title.
Oil and Gas Prices Rise Sharply as War with Iran Continues
Oil prices jumped again and continued climbing a week after U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran escalated into a wider Middle East war, fueling fears of prolonged disruption and higher energy costs.
Gas and Oil Prices Rise as Conflict in Iran Continues
Gas and oil prices are climbing as the conflict involving Iran escalates, following U.S. and Israeli strikes and Iran’s retaliatory attacks on Gulf partners. In the United States, the national average price of regular gasoline rose 14% in a week to $3.41 per gallon as of Saturday, according to reported data.
Anthropic’s Claude Found Security Bugs That Helped Mozilla Strengthen Firefox
Anthropic tested its Claude Opus 4.6 model against Firefox and found its first bug in about 20 minutes, prompting Mozilla engineers to request more findings. Over two weeks in January, Mozilla says the model identified more than 100 bugs in Firefox, including 14 high-severity issues—more high-severity reports than Firefox typically receives globally in two months. Mozilla credited Anthropic’s detailed test cases for speeding verification and fixes, and noted the model surfaced both fuzzing-like crashes and logic errors that existing fuzzing and long-running security reviews had not uncovered, underscoring AI-assisted analysis as a growing tool for software security.
Air Campaign Against Iran Enters Its Second Week
The air campaign against Iran has moved into a second week, with U.S. and Israeli strikes expanding across Iran and Iranian missile and drone attacks continuing at a lower rate but still causing significant damage, including to energy infrastructure and sites in Gulf states. Fighting has raised concerns about dwindling interceptor stocks, disruptions and risks to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, and spillover across the region, including reported strikes affecting Dubai and continued tensions in Iraq and Lebanon. Uncertainty is growing over the conflict’s duration and objectives, as well as Iran’s internal stability amid reports of a leadership vacuum and fears of increased influence by the IRGC.
Associated Press Manager Tells Journalists That Resistance to AI Is Futile
Associated Press AI strategy product manager Aimee Rinehart drew internal backlash after telling colleagues that “resistance to AI is futile,” praising newsroom moves like The Plain Dealer’s use of an “AI rewrite specialist” to turn notes into articles and suggesting many editors would rather run AI-drafted copy than human-written stories. AP staffers pushed back, arguing that strong reporting and clear writing are central to journalism and warning that AI hype is disconnected from day-to-day newsroom realities, especially given recent AI-related errors elsewhere. The AP said the Slack debate did not reflect its overall stance and emphasized its standards-focused approach to limited AI uses such as translation, summarization, transcription, and tagging.
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