An advocacy group is accusing the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of withholding information related to the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), according to The Verge. Meanwhile, Riot Games is reducing the team working on its recently-released fighting game, 2XKO, and Discord is facing backlash over new age verification measures. In other news, the family of Nancy Guthrie is facing a $6 million Bitcoin ransom demand, and experts are highlighting a data delivery problem hindering AI performance.
The advocacy group is seeking discovery to collect documents it says the FCC has wrongfully kept private, The Verge reported. This comes after the group spent a year and nearly 2,000 pages of documents trying to uncover what DOGE was doing at the FCC.
Riot Games is cutting staff on 2XKO, a free-to-play fighting game set in the League of Legends universe, which launched in early access on PC in October and hit consoles recently, according to The Verge. Executive producer Tom Cannon announced the team reduction.
Discord announced that all users will soon be required to verify their ages to access adult content, Ars Technica reported. This will involve sharing video selfies or uploading government IDs. Discord stated it is relying on AI technology to verify age, either by evaluating a user's facial structure or by comparing a selfie to a government ID. The company emphasized that selfie data will never leave the user's device, and both forms of data will be promptly deleted after age estimation. A phased global rollout is scheduled to begin in early March. This announcement followed a data breach that exposed 70,000 IDs.
The search for Nancy Guthrie continues into a second week, with details emerging about an alleged ransom note demanding a crypto payment, Fortune reported. Alleged kidnappers have demanded a $6 million Bitcoin payment, according to a local Arizona TV station, KGUN9. The purported captors demanded the payment be made by 5 p.m. on Monday, on pain of Guthrie's life. Savannah Guthrie and her siblings said they would pay a ransom in a video posted to Instagram over the weekend. The deadline passed without further contact from the alleged kidnappers as of Monday evening. Law enforcement has not confirmed the ransom letter's legitimacy.
Finally, as enterprises pour billions into GPU infrastructure for AI workloads, many are discovering that their expensive compute resources sit idle more than expected, VentureBeat reported. The culprit isn't the hardware, but the data delivery layer between storage and compute. "While people are focusing their attention, justifiably so, on GPUs, because they're very significant investments, those are rarely the limiting factor," said Mark Menger, solutions architect at F5. "They're capable of more work. They're waiting on data."
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