Soccer star Abby Wambach has left the Wasserman Agency due to ties to the Epstein files, while actor-singer Bijou Phillips is hospitalized and urgently seeking a kidney donor, according to reports from Variety. Meanwhile, a campaign called "QuitGPT" is urging users to cancel their ChatGPT subscriptions, as reported by MIT Technology Review, and NetNewsWire celebrated its 23rd anniversary, as detailed on Hacker News. Additionally, Amazon's Ring is facing backlash over its new AI-powered "Search Party" feature, as reported by Hacker News.
Wambach announced her departure from the Wasserman Agency on Instagram, citing Casey Wasserman's name appearing in the Epstein files. "I have left the Wasserman Agency," she wrote in her post, according to Variety. Phillips, who had a previous unsuccessful kidney transplant in 2017, is currently in stable but fragile condition, and is urgently seeking a donor, a representative told Variety.
The "QuitGPT" campaign, highlighted by MIT Technology Review, is fueled by concerns over OpenAI president Greg Brockman's contribution to Donald Trump's super PAC MAGA Inc., and the use of ChatGPT-4 by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Alfred Stephen, a freelance software developer, expressed frustration with ChatGPT's coding abilities and meandering replies, leading him to support the campaign. The campaign's call to action is to cancel ChatGPT subscriptions.
NetNewsWire, a news reader application, marked its 23rd anniversary on February 11, 2026. The team is currently working on NetNewsWire 7.0.1, focusing on syncing fixes and improvements for version 7.1, according to Hacker News.
Amazon's Ring is facing criticism over its new "Search Party" feature, which uses AI to scan footage from neighborhood cameras to find lost dogs. Critics worry this feature could be used for mass surveillance and to search for people, according to Hacker News.
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