Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Photo: Kevin Mazur (Getty Images), oby Sessions/T3 Magazine/Future (Getty Images), Win McNamee (Getty Images), Mark Peterson – Pool (Getty Images), Gregorio Borgia (AP), Manuel Balce Ceneta (AP), Screenshot: FOX5 / Kotaku, Image: OsakaWayne Studios (Getty Images), Drew Angerer (Getty Images)

The federal government made some interesting moves by making private jets owned by celebrities such as Elon Musk and Taylor Swift harder to track, but at the same time, advancing legislation to make agencies share more info about UFOs. Back on the ground, AI is coming for your voice if you’re Scarlet Johansson, you’re wallet if you use Alexa, and everything you do on your computer if it runs Windows. Check out the rest of the big stories for the week.

Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Photo: Kevin Mazur (Getty Images)

Celebrities and billionaires have long complained that it’s just way too easy for random people on the internet to monitor how much fuel exhaust they waste as they flit through the skies via their private jets. Well, it appears that our government’s legislators have heard these complaints and, unlike when the rest of us whine about stuff, actually done something. – Lucas Ropek Read More

A man in a Bluey costume disappoints patrons.

A man in a Bluey tracks suit disappointing patrons at Dirt Dog made the nightly news in Las Vegas, NV.
Screenshot: FOX5 / Kotaku

This is a free country, or so I’m told. While that doesn’t mean you’re entitled to lifesaving healthcare without going bankrupt, it does mean that if you own a hot dog bar in Las Vegas, Nevada, you can host an unofficial meet-and-greet with world famous cartoon pup Bluey and piss off hundreds of children and their parents in the process. – Ethan Gach, Kotaku Read More

Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Image: OsakaWayne Studios (Getty Images)

It’s very possible we’ll know more about UFOs soon. Due to a stipulation inside the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, the federal government is now required to share any and all internal reports on the subject of unidentified flying objects with the National Archives, which will then (eventually) share those reports with the public. – Lucas Ropek Read More

Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Photo: oby Sessions/T3 Magazine/Future (Getty Images)

Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Photo: Win McNamee (Getty Images)

When OpenAI’s board fired Sam Altman in late 2023, the board members said he “was not consistently candid in his communications.” The statement raised more questions than answers, indirectly calling Sam Altman a liar, but about what exactly? Six months later, creatives and former employees are once again asking the public to question OpenAI’s trustworthiness. – Maxwell Zeff Read More

Video captured by a Tesla on May 8, 2024 purporting to show the vehicle attempting to drive directly into a crossing train
Gif: Tesla Motors Club

A Tesla owner in Ohio had a terrifying experience recently when his car tried to drive him right into a crossing train, according to multiple videos posted to the Tesla Motors Club forum. The vehicle was in Full Self-Driving (FSD) mode and allegedly, this isn’t the first time the driver has experienced a disturbing incident at a railroad crossing. – Matt Novak Read More

Image for article titled Taylor Swift's Private Jet Will Be Harder to Track While Info About UFOs Might Be Easier to Get

Photo: Mark Peterson – Pool (Getty Images)

Former President Donald Trump shared a video on Truth Social Monday afternoon referencing “the creation of a unified Reich” among possible headlines that would read if he wins re-election in November. Trump deleted the video sometime around 8:30 a.m. ET on Tuesday after receiving stark criticism. – Maxwell Zeff Read More

Cardinal Agostino Vallini, left, holds a relic of 15-year-old Carlo  Acutis, an Italian boy who died in 2006 of leukemia, during his  beatification ceremony celebrated in the St. Francis Basilica, in  Assisi, Italy on Oct. 10, 2020.

Cardinal Agostino Vallini, left, holds a relic of 15-year-old Carlo Acutis, an Italian boy who died in 2006 of leukemia, during his beatification ceremony celebrated in the St. Francis Basilica, in Assisi, Italy on Oct. 10, 2020.
Photo: Gregorio Borgia (AP)

Carlo Acutis, a 15-year-old programmer who died of leukemia in 2006, is set to be the first millennial saint, according to a new report from the Catholic News Agency Thursday. Acutis created websites documenting purported miracles and has been dubbed “God’s influencer” since his death. – Matt Novak Read More

Scarlett Johansson and Lorne Michaels attend the White House Correspondents’ Association  Dinner at the Washington Hilton, Saturday, April 27, 2024, in  Washington.

Scarlett Johansson and Lorne Michaels attend the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton, Saturday, April 27, 2024, in Washington.
Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta (AP)

OpenAI asked Scarlett Johansson to provide voice acting that would be used in the company’s new AI voice assistant, but the actress declined, according to a statement obtained by NPR on Monday. And after last week’s demo, Johansson says she was shocked to hear a voice that was identical to her own. Especially since OpenAI was asking for Johansson’s help as recently as two days before the event. – Matt Novak Read More

Microsoft has heavily invested in artificial intelligence technology.

Microsoft has heavily invested in artificial intelligence technology.
Image: Drew Angerer (Getty Images)

Microsoft’s full-throttle push into artificial intelligence technology is getting more scrutiny by regulators worried that the conglomerate is invading consumers’ privacy. – William Gavin, Quartz Read More

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