Wednesday, March 25, 2026

News roundup, 25 March 2026

- The investigation into the fatal accident at New York's LaGuardia Airport is focusing on the role of ATC, specifically how a controller could have cleared a fire truck to cross an active runway shortly after clearing an airliner to land on it. The fire truck was responding to a previously declared emergency, namely a report of fumes in the cabin of another aircraft; there are reports that the same controller was handling both ground and tower communications. No doubt investigators will be looking at the role of fatigue and understaffing here.

- The Trump regime is warning the EU not to delay passage of a trade deal, lest they lose "favourable access" to liquefied natural gas from the US. Europeans are naturally a bit suspicious of signing such a deal with a regime that keeps threatening to steal territory from one of their member states, of course. One hopes that this spurs Europe to abandon their reluctance to electrify transportation and heating, rather than just kowtow to the Americans, but this remains to be seen.

- The Public Service Alliance of Canada is calling on the federal government to allow its employees to work from home in order to dampen the impact of rising fuel prices resulting from the war in Iran. Several countries are already doing this; whether the obvious benefits will be enough to outweigh concerns in this country about commercial real estate values, the desire of middle managers to micromanage, and the fear of populist fury from people who don't have the option of working from home remains to be seen.

- The Federal Communications Commission has prohibited the import of new routers for home internet use. Existing models are grandfathered in, but any new model to hit the market must be designed and made in the US. This move is being justified on the grounds of security, with fears that foreign-made products might grant hostile governments (such as China) undue access; presumably the grandfathering is necessary because there aren't enough domestic-made routers to satisfy the market.

- A jury in New Mexico has found Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, liable for $375 million in damages for its failure to protect children from sexual predators and warn users about hazards of that sort. The company plans to appeal of course, presumably hoping that they'll get a judge who's friendly to the tech industry.

- Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, who was the technical genius in the early days of the company while Steve Jobs served as the marketing guy, says he seldom uses AI, and generally is disappointed with the results when he does.

- Crispin Blunt, who served as the UK's parliamentary undersecretary of state for prisons and youth justice under David Cameron, has pleaded guilty to possession of several illegal drugs, including methamphetamine (as well as cannabis, as befits someone named Blunt).

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