AI just designed a ‘fundamental new vaccine’ for viruses, researchers say




Apple veut ouvrir à Berlin un centre destiné aux développeurs, afin d’aider les entreprises européennes à créer et améliorer des applications pour ses appareils.
Ce centre sera le premier du genre ouvert par Apple en Europe. La société gère des installations similaires à Singapour, Shanghai, Cupertino et Bengaluru.
Le centre accueillera des ateliers pour développeurs d’applications, des rendez-vous individuels et d’autres sessions en présentiel, afin d’aider les entreprises à améliorer la conception et les performances de leurs applications pour iPhone, iPad, Mac et autres appareils. Apple précise que des laboratoires dédiés proposeront également un accompagnement pratique dans plusieurs langues.
Pour Susan Prescott, vice-présidente en charge des relations avec les développeurs à l’échelle mondiale, l’Europe est « le foyer d’une communauté extraordinaire de développeurs qui créent des applications générant des liens, stimulant la créativité et façonnant l’innovation ».
« Nous avons toujours cru que lorsque les développeurs disposent des bons outils et ressources pour donner le meilleur d’eux-mêmes, des choses remarquables en découlent, a ajouté Susan Prescott. Cette conviction est au fondement de ce centre, et nous avons hâte de voir ce que la communauté continuera de développer. »
Situé dans le quartier berlinois de Mitte, le centre doit ouvrir ses portes plus tard dans l’année.
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Marc Murtra, président-directeur général de Telefónica, affirme que la souveraineté européenne ne sera possible qu’avec une réglementation simplifiée et un engagement ferme à construire des technologies sur le continent, tout en soulignant que l’autonomie stratégique ne signifie pas l’isolement.
S’exprimant dans le cadre d’une table ronde sur l’IA et la souveraineté technologique européenne organisée lors de la réunion du Cercle d’Economia 2026 à Barcelone, Marc Murtra a soutenu que l’Europe doit accélérer le développement de ses propres technologies pour rester dans la course dans un monde façonné par l’IA, le calcul quantique et les nouveaux systèmes autonomes.
Marc Murtra a expliqué que le développement technologique était devenu un facteur déterminant pour la compétitivité économique, la productivité, la résilience et la « capacité de décision »des pays.
Dans ce contexte, il ne croit pas pour autant que cette approche conduira à un isolement sur la scène mondiale : elle donne au contraire à l’Europe la capacité de développer et de contrôler des compétences critiques dans des domaines tels que l’énergie, les infrastructures numériques, les semi-conducteurs et l’IA.
« L’autonomie stratégique est le concept pertinent. Aucune économie n’est totalement indépendante, mais l’Europe doit renforcer ses capacités pour réduire ses dépendances excessives dans les technologies clés », a-t-il déclaré.
Valeurs européennes
Pour Marc Murtra, l’autonomie stratégique implique de combiner investissement, capacité industrielle, innovation, talent et « une vision commune de long terme », centrée sur la défense de « valeurs très importantes liées à la démocratie, la dignité humaine et la liberté d’expression ».
Sur le volet réglementaire, Marc Murtra estime que simplifier les règles ne signifie pas les supprimer, mais « plutôt privilégier ce qui favorise l’innovation, la compétitivité et l’autonomie stratégique ».
« L’Europe dispose du PIB, des talents, des ingénieurs, des entreprises et des institutions » pour mener la prochaine révolution technologique, a-t-il conclu.
Ces déclarations coïncident avec la présentation par la Commission européenne d’un nouveau paquet visant à renforcer la souveraineté du continent, avec attention portée notamment sur les semi-conducteurs, l’IA, le cloud et l’open source.
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Orange Business va déployer une plateforme d’IA générative au sein du Groupement hospitalier public (GHT) Rouen Cœur de Seine. Environ 15 000 professionnels de santé vont pouvoir ainsi bénéficier d’outils d’IA souverains et sécurisés.
La division entreprises de l’opérateur français déploiera Live Intelligence, sa plateforme d’IA générative pour les entreprises, sur l’ensemble du groupement hospitalier, afin de proposer une alternative maîtrisée aux outils publics d’IA non vérifiés. Le partenariat de long terme couvre l’infrastructure, la stratégie et le soutien opérationnel.
« Nous avons choisi Live Intelligence pour proposer à l’ensemble des équipes du GHT Rouen Cœur de Seine une solution d’IA générative accessible, sécurisée et adaptée aux besoins de nos établissements, explique Stéphanie Decoopman, directrice générale du CHU de Rouen. Notre objectif est d’offrir un cadre de confiance pour développer des usages utiles au quotidien, au service de tous les métiers, des médecins et soignants aux équipes administratives et techniques. »
« Aujourd’hui, une partie importante du temps des professionnels est absorbée par des tâches de documentation, de recherche d’information ou de coordination, les solutions d’IA agentique peuvent alléger cette charge, ajoute Claire Scotton, Vice-Présidente Santé et Life Sciences chez Orange Business. Quand une équipe subit moins de désorganisation et moins de surcharge imprévisible, cela a un impact direct sur la qualité de vie au travail. »
Hébergée en France, la plateforme peut être connectée aux systèmes d’information du groupement hospitalier. Des premiers cas d’usage sont déjà opérationnels : au CHU de Rouen, les équipes de recherche utilisent l’IA générative pour accélérer la préparation des dossiers de subventions, ramenant certaines étapes de trois semaines à deux jours. Pour les achats, la rédaction des cahiers des charges et critères d’évaluation pourrait être ramenée de deux semaines à une journée. Dans le cadre de ce partenariat, les deux parties prévoient également de développer un programme d’innovation de long terme avec d’autres hôpitaux universitaires, pour construire des cas d’usage pertinents pour l’ensemble du secteur de la santé.
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ChatGPT atteint le milliard d’utilisateurs en un temps record
3 juin 2026
Selon la société d’études Sensor Tower, ChatGPT d’OpenAI a franchi le cap du milliard d’utilisateurs actifs mensuels (UAM) sur son application en mai 2026, devenant ainsi la plus rapide de l’histoire à atteindre ce seuil.
Dans son rapport State of Mobile 2026, Sensor Tower constate que ChatGPT a été plus rapide que d’autres applications populaires – dont Google Maps, TikTok, Instagram et YouTube – pour franchir le seuil du milliard d’utilisateurs, un jalon atteint trois ans seulement après son lancement.
Ce chiffre confirme la position dominante d’OpenAI dans la bataille pour la suprématie des chatbots IA, où ChatGPT affronte notamment Claude d’Anthropic et Grok de X.
En avril, OpenAI avait annoncé atteindre 900 millions d’utilisateurs actifs hebdomadaires fin décembre 2025 et un débit API supérieur à 15 milliards de tokens par minute. La société n’a toutefois pas publié de statistiques officielles pour 2026.
Claude dans la course
Sensor Tower relève que Claude commence à gagner du terrain. Au deuxième trimestre 2026, la plateforme d’Anthropic atteint 56 millions d’UAM pour son application, soit une croissance de 640 % sur un an, à comparer aux 62 % affichés par ChatGPT.
Sensor Tower note également que les utilisateurs américains de ChatGPT ayant installé Claude au cours des trois premiers mois de 2026 ont utilisé l’ancienne application 5 % moins fréquemment dans le mois suivant l’installation, par rapport à leur usage moyen au cours des huit mois précédents.
« La croissance de Claude pourrait être portée par d’importantes avancées modèles au cours de l’année écoulée, ou par la montée en puissance du sentiment des consommateurs après l’annonce du partenariat d’OpenAI avec le département de la Guerre au premier trimestre 2026 », commente Sensor Tower.
Anthropic a déposé cette semaine un dossier d’introduction en Bourse aux États-Unis. OpenAI devrait très prochainement faire de même.
Sensor Tower estime que Grok, le chatbot d’Elon Musk, comptait 50 millions d’UAM.
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Convaincue qu’il faut renforcer l’autonomie numérique du Vieux Continent, la Commission européenne (CE) dévoile un vaste train de mesures visant à renforcer les ambitions locales en matière de semi-conducteurs, d’IA, de cloud et d’open source.
La CE indique que les mesures adoptées dans ces quatre domaines aideront l’Europe à « devenir un continent de l’IA », s’imposant comme un leader en matière de recherche, de développement et d’adoption de la nouvelle technologie.
La Commission espère que ce nouveau paquet accélérera les ambitions autour de la souveraineté technologique et protégera l’indépendance numérique européenne, dans le cadre de l’objectif de long terme de réduction de la dépendance vis-à-vis des États-Unis et de l’Asie.
Sur le volet silicium, la CE souhaite sécuriser la base de semi-conducteurs nécessaire aux ambitions IA de l’Europe via le Règlement européen sur les semi-conducteurs 2.0, conçu pour accélérer les procédures d’autorisation, renforcer la coopération avec des « partenaires partageant les mêmes valeurs » et créer un nouveau label d’excellence pour les régions européennes du semi-conducteur. Il s’agit d’une mise à jour du « Chips Act » original, en vigueur depuis 2023, qui constituait la réponse européenne aux vulnérabilités de la chaîne d’approvisionnement en semi-conducteurs.
Le deuxième volet prévoit un nouveau Règlement sur le développement de l’informatique en nuage et de l’intelligence artificielle (Cloud and AI Development Act, ou CADA). Il est conçu pour faciliter la construction de nouveaux centres de données, simplifier les conditions de déploiement des installations à travers l’UE et introduire un cadre à l’échelle européenne pour évaluer la souveraineté cloud et IA. L’objectif global est de tripler la capacité en centres de données de la région au cours des cinq à sept prochaines années.
Via l’open source, la CE entend renforcer l’autonomie numérique en développant des alternatives dans les domaines prioritaires, en investissant dans les compétences, les start-ups et les infrastructures numériques, et en encourageant un recours accru à l’open source dans les administrations publiques.
Enfin, la CE met l’accent sur la numérisation du système énergétique européen : elle s’engage à définir une feuille de route garantissant l’intégration des centres de données, tout en développant des modèles d’IA souverains et sécurisés.
Souveraineté technologique
« Nous ne pouvons pas nous permettre de dépendre d’autres acteurs pour les technologies qui assurent le fonctionnement de nos hôpitaux, la stabilité de nos réseaux énergétiques et la sécurité de nos services, a insisté Ursula von der Leyen, présidente de la Commission. Il s’agit de protéger nos citoyens, de défendre nos intérêts et de préserver notre capacité à faire nos propres choix. L’Europe dispose des talents, de l’excellence scientifique, de la base industrielle et du marché unique nécessaires. Ensemble, nous devons transformer ces atouts en souveraineté technologique. »
Avant son entrée en vigueur, le paquet devra être négocié par le Parlement européen et le Conseil de l’UE. La Commission lancera également un processus de consultation avec les États membres.
Les investissements seront réalisés via les subventions existantes jusqu’en 2028, les financements ultérieurs devant être confirmés dans le prochain budget européen. La CE a précédemment estimé à 120 milliards d’euros les investissements publics-privés combinés d’ici 2035 pour revitaliser l’industrie des semi-conducteurs du continent.
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Amazon committed to invest more than €10 billion on upgrading its facilities in Europe with next-generation robotics, part of a wider push to modernise and expand its operations network in the continent.
Announced at the company’s Delivering the Future event in London, the technology giant stated it plans to create more jobs across the region, while using robotics to expand ultra-fast delivery options to more international cities and invest in employee upskilling.
Its pledge reflects a broader push to use AI and robotics to support its workforce, taking aim at “repetitive and physically demanding tasks”, freeing up employees to focus on higher skilled roles while customers get better service.
As part of its next-generation robotics development, Amazon introduced Proteus, an upgraded autonomous robot that is able to move items across different sites. Through AI advances, employees can apparently direct Proteus with plain, conversational text-based prompts without the need for technical commands or programming interfaces.
According to Amazon, once an employee instructs Proteus on what needs to be done, the robot figures out the priority, route and timing.
Proteus is designed to take on physically demanding tasks, move heavy carts and cover long distances. It is currently being piloted in Amazon labs, with deployment planned for the first half of 2027.
Through its €10 billion commitment, Amazon added it will expand Vulcan, its first robot with a sense of touch and STARK, a new robotics system that works alongside employees. STARK will be deployed across 15 sites in Europe by 2027.
This week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang also talked up the robotics opportunity within industry, as he unveiled work on a new model for academics using hardware from Unitree and Sharpa.
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T-Mobile US unveiled an AI-enhanced network optimisation capability aimed at keeping customers connected during high-density events including at packed stadiums, festival grounds and in post-concert taxi queues.
The mobile operator’s Dynamic CX is built on its self-organising network (SON) platform, which is also used to allocate network resources during natural disasters.
Operators have been using centralised self-organising network (C-SON) tools since 2010. In 2015, machine learning algorithms were introduced and blended with SON algorithms, which led to the first iteration of AI-for-RAN.
It is another feature built on the operator’s nationwide 5G-Advanced network which sits on its standalone 5G architecture.
Dynamic CX’s AI-driven automation adapts to network conditions in near real time, marking a meaningful step beyond traditional SON optimisation, which has historically been more reactive in nature.
The AI-enabled network optimisation capability continuously monitors and tunes network performance.
Dynamic CX scans publicly available event information, schedules and online activity to identify upcoming mass gatherings before they happen, allowing the network to begin preparing capacity adjustments in advance rather than scrambling to react once congestion hits.
Once an event is underway, Dynamic CX shifts into continuous monitoring mode, tracking how demand evolves as crowds move, stream and share throughout venues and surrounding areas.
T-Mobile is positioning the launch ahead of the FIFA World Cup, which starts this month and uses 11 US host cities. It is expected to draw millions of international visitors over several weeks.
CTO John Saw framed Dynamic CX as part of a longer arc of event-readiness investment to improve customer experience.
T-Mobile pointed to broader World Cup operational preparations including coordination with public safety agencies, staged deployable network assets and heightened cybersecurity posture across event-related infrastructure.
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Apple ha anunciado la apertura de un centro para desarrolladores en Berlín, el primero de la empresa en Europa, destinado a ayudar a las empresas del continente a crear y mejorar aplicaciones para sus dispositivos. La firma cuenta ya con instalaciones similares en Singapur, Shanghái, Cupertino y Bengaluru.
El centro, ubicado en el distrito de Mitte de la capital alemana, tiene previsto abrir sus puertas a finales de este año. Acogerá talleres, citas individuales y otras sesiones presenciales orientadas a mejorar el diseño y el rendimiento de las aplicaciones para iPhone, iPad, Mac y otros dispositivos de Apple, con asistencia práctica disponible en varios idiomas.
Susan Prescott, vicepresidenta de relaciones con desarrolladores a nivel mundial de la empresa, ha señalado que Europa alberga “una comunidad de desarrolladores que está creando aplicaciones que generan conexiones, fomentan la creatividad e impulsan la innovación”.
“Siempre hemos creído que cuando los desarrolladores cuentan con las herramientas y los recursos adecuados, se logran cosas notables. Esta creencia es la base de este centro, y esperamos ver lo que la comunidad seguirá desarrollando.”
Con información de Chris Donkin.
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En la reunión anual del Cercle d’Economia 2026, celebrada en Barcelona, el presidente ejecutivo de Telefónica, Marc Murtra, ha vuelto a reclamar una mayor autonomía tecnológica para Europa.
En la sesión sobre “IA y soberanía tecnológica europea”, Murtra sostuvo que el futuro del continente depende de que sea capaz de desarrollar capacidades industriales y tecnológicas propias para reducir su dependencia en sectores como la energía, los semiconductores y la inteligencia artificial.
La apuesta por los Small Language Models (SLM)
Murtra anunció que Telefónica estudia desarrollar aplicaciones de inteligencia artificial propias.
Frente a los grandes modelos de lenguaje generalistas (LLM) que predominan en el mercado, la compañía se inclina por los Modelos de Lenguaje Pequeños (SLM), concebidos para automatizar tareas industriales específicas: desde el diseño de moléculas en el sector farmacéutico hasta soluciones aplicadas a las telecomunicaciones.
El directivo situó esta orientación en un contexto de marcada concentración: 49 de los 50 modelos de lenguaje más utilizados son de origen estadounidense o chino, y la francesa Mistral AI es la única empresa europea entre ellos.
El reto de la escala
En su análisis de la posición europea, Murtra reconoció que el continente cuenta con bases sólidas —PIB, talento, ingenieros cualificados, grandes empresas e instituciones estables— pero identificó en la falta de escala su principal carencia.
Según los datos que aportó, el valor conjunto de las cinco mayores tecnológicas estadounidenses multiplica entre 68 y 69 veces el de todo el sector de las telecomunicaciones europeo, una brecha que se ha ensanchado de forma considerable en la última década.
Murtra señaló el sector de las telecomunicaciones como el único segmento europeo con capacidad real de generar esa escala.
Regulación, riesgos y valores europeos
En materia normativa, Murtra abogó por simplificar la regulación, construir tecnología propia y aceptar el riesgo de cometer errores.
Aclaró que simplificar no equivale a desregular, sino a priorizar las normas que favorezcan la innovación y la competitividad.
A su juicio, el exceso regulatorio encarece los costes operativos y limita la capacidad de inversión de las empresas, por lo que instó a los reguladores a no temer la posibilidad de equivocarse.
Para cerrar su intervención, Murtra argumentó que disponer de tecnología propia es una condición necesaria para preservar valores como la democracia, la dignidad de las personas o la libertad de expresión.
En su planteamiento, Europa debe aspirar a ser un agente con capacidad de decisión sobre su futuro tecnológico, y no limitarse a consumir lo que otros desarrollan.
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Wirtgen Group trabaja activamente en el desarrollo de vehículos automatizados para la construcción de carreteras como paso previo hacia la autonomía total, recurriendo en parte a la misma tecnología que su empresa matriz, John Deere.
Durante una reciente demostración de maquinaria celebrada en la sede de la firma en Tennessee, sus directivos pusieron en valor las ventajas de su equipamiento pesado especializado para la construcción de carreteras.
La demanda de carreteras e infraestructuras no cesa de crecer, mientras los contratistas hacen frente a la escasez de mano de obra, el encarecimiento de los materiales, plazos más apretados y temporadas de pavimentación más cortas.
Solo en Estados Unidos, el sector de la construcción necesitará cerca de 700.000 trabajadores adicionales de aquí a 2031 para poder atender la demanda. A ello se suma que alrededor del 40% de los cuatro millones de millas de carreteras del país se encuentran en mal estado o en condiciones deficientes.
“Al hablar con nuestros clientes, aprendimos algunas cosas sobre sus retos empresariales, que se resumen en hacer más con menos”, ha dicho Craig Lamarque, vicepresidente y director de productos digitales de Wirtgen America. “Cada día, nuestros clientes son responsables de garantizar la seguridad en absolutamente todos sus lugares de trabajo, y tienen que lograrlo con personal cada vez menos cualificado y con menos experiencia.”
Lamarque ha señalado que los clientes deben completar más proyectos en plazos más ajustados para mantener la rentabilidad, al tiempo que gestionan problemas de materiales, presiones de sostenibilidad, escasez de mano de obra y la necesidad de ajustarse al presupuesto y a los plazos previstos. La respuesta de Wirtgen Group ha sido el desarrollo de herramientas digitales para afrontar estos retos.
La estrategia digital de la empresa se articula en torno a tres pilares: soporte conectado para maximizar el tiempo de actividad, inteligencia en el lugar de trabajo para detectar ineficiencias y mejorar la toma de decisiones, y automatización inteligente para mejorar el rendimiento de las máquinas. Todas estas capacidades están integradas en su gama de equipos para la construcción de carreteras y cuentan con el respaldo de hardware y software desarrollados en colaboración con John Deere.
Un legado construido sobre apellidos familiares
El Grupo Wirtgen era una empresa alemana de capital privado antes de ser adquirida por John Deere en 2017. En 1996 había incorporado ya la empresa de pavimentación asfáltica Vogele, y tres años después la firma de compactación de suelos y asfalto Hamm —fundada en 1836, un año antes que John Deere—. Kleemann se sumó al grupo en 2006, ampliando su presencia en el procesamiento de minerales con plantas móviles de trituración y cribado.
En 2014, el Grupo Wirtgen adquirió una participación del 70% en Benninghoven, incorporando plantas de mezcla de asfalto al ecosistema y completando así el ciclo de equipos para la construcción de carreteras, desde la mezcla y el pavimentado hasta el fresado y el reciclaje. Wirtgen America, fundada en 1984, cuenta actualmente con 300 empleados en su campus de Tennessee.
“Cada una de esas marcas lleva el nombre de una familia, igual que Deere”, ha dicho Jim McEvoy, CEO de Wirtgen America. “Contamos con una larga trayectoria de haber abierto camino en estos mercados, de encabezar su desarrollo y de ser muy innovadores en estos segmentos de productos.”
Tres máquinas en demostración
La demostración de Tennessee incluyó maquinaria y tecnologías en tres áreas: fresado, pavimentación y compactación de asfalto.
Fresadora Wirtgen
La fresadora elimina superficies antiguas de asfalto u hormigón mediante tecnologías de automatización y guiado digital que mejoran la precisión, la eficiencia y el seguimiento del rendimiento. El modelo W210XF dispone de un tambor de corte de 2,5 metros de ancho y ocho cámaras que refuerzan el control de la operación.
“Los diagnósticos sencillos, las instrucciones intuitivas en pantalla y los componentes de respaldo integrados en la máquina facilitan su funcionamiento continuo”, ha explicado Lamarque.
El sistema WPT Milling registra los datos de trabajo y de la máquina para la facturación y el seguimiento de las emisiones. Por su parte, Smart Level Pro es un sistema de fresado diferencial integrado que escanea la superficie antes de actuar.
El proceso comienza con un escaneo de alta velocidad de la carretera existente, sin necesidad de cortarla al tráfico, a cargo del propio cliente o de un topógrafo externo. El modelo digital resultante se georreferencia mediante GNSS. A partir de ahí, el perfil se ajusta a las especificaciones y se carga en el Centro de Operaciones y Planificador de Trabajo de John Deere, lo que permite verificar las profundidades de corte con antelación y ahorrar tiempo frente al fresado de prueba tradicional.
Con dos receptores John Deere StarFire conectados por red móvil, la fresadora opera con precisión sobre la profundidad y la pendiente de diseño previstas. El sistema de guiado GNSS StarFire es la tecnología satelital de Deere que garantiza el posicionamiento, la alineación y el guiado de alta precisión durante todo el proceso. Mill Assist, por su parte, optimiza el rendimiento de la máquina en tiempo real, con el consiguiente ahorro de combustible y reducción de emisiones.
Pavimentadora de asfalto Vogele
Las extendedoras de asfalto de Vogele incorporan tecnologías de automatización, nivelación y manipulación de materiales de alta especialización. Smart Pave es su sistema digital de control y automatización, mientras que AutoTrac mantiene con precisión la dirección de desplazamiento y el ancho de pavimentación. RoadScan, por su parte, es el sistema de imágenes térmicas y medición de temperatura sin contacto que se instala directamente sobre la pavimentadora.
Rodillo compactador de asfalto Hamm
El rodillo de doble tambor de Hamm compacta el asfalto fresco hasta alcanzar la densidad objetivo necesaria para su durabilidad a largo plazo, con un sistema de monitorización en tiempo real y tecnología de compactación inteligente que previene la compactación excesiva. El equipo combina vibración y oscilación, y los sistemas Smart Compact Pro y Track Assist permiten a los operarios trabajar de forma más eficiente y segura, con la documentación necesaria para acreditar el cumplimiento de las especificaciones ante contratistas y autoridades.
La compactación inteligente integra mapeo por GPS, sensores de temperatura de la superficie del asfalto y un acelerómetro que mide la rigidez del material.
De la automatización a la autonomía
Jason Ambroson, vicepresidente y director general de Wirtgen International, ha subrayado que la integración de las mismas tecnologías, conectividad y sensores en las distintas máquinas permite a los clientes ser más productivos con menos personal y menos recursos.
“Estamos pasando de la automatización a la autonomía”, ha afirmado.
La demostración de Tennessee pretendía ilustrar precisamente ese recorrido: la conexión de máquinas, datos y operadores en un único sistema integrado.
Con información de Michael Robuck.
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La industria del automóvil vive una transformación de fondo impulsada por la conectividad digital, a medida que el vehículo eléctrico (EV) se afianza como nuevo estándar.
Alianzas como las de Geely con Vodafone y Rivian con AT&T ponen de manifiesto que el valor de un coche ya no depende solo de su mecánica, sino también de su capacidad para estar siempre conectado.
Geely y Vodafone: conectividad en Europa
La división europea de I+D del grupo chino Geely ha ampliado su colaboración con Vodafone Business para incorporar varias plataformas de conectividad.
El acuerdo abarca servicios como Internet in the Car, redes móviles privadas y Cloud Connect, dirigidos a mejorar la monitorización de los vehículos y la experiencia de conducción en mercados como Alemania y Suecia.
Giovanni Lanfranchi, consejero delegado de Geely Technology Europe, defiende que los vehículos de hoy han dejado de ser simples medios de transporte para convertirse en máquinas que mejoran de forma continua a través del software.
Vodafone calcula que en 2030 el 98 % de los turismos nuevos vendidos en el mundo contarán con algún tipo de conectividad.
Rivian y AT&T: el salto al 5G con el modelo R2
El fabricante estadounidense Rivian ha reforzado su acuerdo con AT&T para integrar tecnología 5G en el modelo R2, su próximo vehículo de acceso. La colaboración arrancó en 2023 para los mercados de Estados Unidos y Canadá, y se extiende ahora para dotar a esta plataforma de una infraestructura de red sólida y continua.
El 5G permitirá al R2 recibir actualizaciones de software inalámbricas (OTA) con mayor rapidez, acceder a servicios en tiempo real y ofrecer una propuesta de entretenimiento más completa. AT&T señala que la conectividad se ha convertido en el eje sobre el que se diseñan, distribuyen y mejoran los vehículos modernos.
La operadora ha anunciado además una colaboración con Cisco y LiveOne para simplificar la integración de contenidos de audio y los sistemas de facturación en los coches conectados.
Las ventajas de las colaboraciones tecnológicas
Estas alianzas van más allá de lo meramente comercial y tienen consecuencias prácticas para fabricantes y conductores.
Las actualizaciones OTA permiten mejorar el rendimiento, la seguridad y las funciones del vehículo con el paso del tiempo, sin necesidad de pasar por el taller.
La conectividad facilita también los diagnósticos remotos y el intercambio de datos entre el coche y la nube, lo que redunda en una mayor eficiencia para las flotas y en una mejor seguridad para los ocupantes.
Las redes 5G, por su parte, hacen posible servicios de infoentretenimiento como audio personalizado o contenidos multimedia en streaming. Y acuerdos como el de AT&T con Cisco actúan como una capa de integración que libera a los fabricantes de tener que negociar por separado con cada proveedor de contenidos.
La confluencia entre automoción y telecomunicaciones avanza hacia un modelo en el que el vehículo eléctrico opera como un dispositivo conectado, capaz de evolucionar a lo largo de toda su vida útil.
Con información de Chris Donkin y Michael Robuck.
The post La automoción eléctrica se alía con las grandes operadoras de telecomunicaciones para definir el coche del futuro appeared first on Mobile World Live.
ChatGPT, de OpenAI, ha superado los 1.000 millones de usuarios activos mensuales en mayo de 2026, convirtiéndose en la aplicación que más rápido ha logrado ese hito en la historia, según ha estimado la empresa de análisis Sensor Tower.
En su informe State of Mobile Report 2026, Sensor Tower ha constatado que ChatGPT ha llegado a ese umbral en solo tres años desde su lanzamiento, por delante del ritmo que marcaron en su momento aplicaciones como Google Maps, TikTok, Instagram o YouTube. La cifra supone un respaldo notable para OpenAI en la pugna por la supremacía de los chatbots de IA, en la que compite con Claude, de Anthropic, y Grok, de X.
En abril, OpenAI reveló que había alcanzado los 900 millones de usuarios activos semanales en diciembre de 2025 y que el uso de su API supera los 15.000 millones de tokens por minuto, aunque la firma no ha publicado estadísticas oficiales para 2026.
Claude gana terreno
Sensor Tower también ha destacado el avance de Claude. A finales del segundo trimestre de 2026, la aplicación de Anthropic ha alcanzado los 56 millones de usuarios activos mensuales, un crecimiento interanual del 640% que contrasta con el 62% registrado por ChatGPT en el mismo período.
El informe también recoge que los usuarios estadounidenses de ChatGPT que instalaron Claude en los tres primeros meses de 2026 redujeron su uso de la aplicación de OpenAI en un 5% al mes de la instalación, respecto al promedio de los ocho meses anteriores.
“El crecimiento de Claude podría deberse a los avances en el modelo registrados durante el último año, o al aumento de la confianza del consumidor tras el anuncio de la asociación de OpenAI con el Departamento de Guerra en el primer trimestre de 2026″, ha señalado Sensor Tower.
Anthropic ha presentado esta semana su solicitud para salir a bolsa en Estados Unidos; se espera que OpenAI haga lo propio próximamente. Grok, la aplicación de Elon Musk, contaba con 50 millones de usuarios activos mensuales, según los mismos datos.
Con información de Kavit Majithia.
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La Comisión Europea (CE) ha presentado un paquete de medidas destinado a impulsar las ambiciones del continente en torno a los semiconductores, la inteligencia artificial, la nube y el código abierto, con el objetivo de reforzar la autonomía digital del bloque.
La CE sostiene que estas medidas ayudarán a Europa a consolidarse como referente en investigación, desarrollo y adopción de la inteligencia artificial, reduciendo al mismo tiempo su dependencia tecnológica de Estados Unidos y Asia.
El paquete se articula en cuatro áreas. La primera es la Ley de Chips 2.0, actualización de la norma en vigor desde 2023, que pretende asegurar la base de semiconductores para las ambiciones europeas en materia de IA agilizando la concesión de permisos, profundizando la cooperación con socios afines e introduciendo un sello de excelencia para las regiones europeas de semiconductores.
La segunda es una nueva Ley de Desarrollo de la Nube y la IA, orientada a facilitar la construcción de centros de datos, simplificar los requisitos para su despliegue en toda la Unión Europea (UE) e introducir un marco único para evaluar la soberanía en materia de nube e IA. El objetivo es triplicar la capacidad de los centros de datos europeos en los próximos cinco a siete años.
La tercera área es el código abierto: la CE quiere reforzar la autonomía digital ampliando las alternativas en áreas prioritarias, invirtiendo en competencias, empresas emergentes e infraestructura digital, y promoviendo un mayor uso del código abierto en la administración pública.
La cuarta y última se centra en la digitalización del sistema energético europeo, con el compromiso de definir una hoja de ruta que garantice la integración de los centros de datos al tiempo que se desarrollan modelos de IA soberanos y seguros.
Soberanía tecnológica
Ursula von der Leyen, presidenta de la Comisión, ha advertido de que Europa “no puede permitirse depender de otros para las tecnologías que mantienen en funcionamiento nuestros hospitales, estables nuestras redes energéticas y seguros nuestros servicios”.
“Se trata de proteger a nuestros ciudadanos, defender nuestros intereses y tomar nuestras propias decisiones. Europa cuenta con el talento, la excelencia en investigación, la base industrial y el Mercado Único. Juntos, debemos transformar estas fortalezas en soberanía tecnológica.”
La propuesta deberá ser negociada por el Parlamento Europeo y el Consejo de la UE antes de entrar en vigor. La Comisión también iniciará un proceso de consulta con los Estados miembros.
La financiación hasta 2028 se canalizará a través de las subvenciones existentes, mientras que la correspondiente a períodos posteriores quedará sujeta al próximo presupuesto de la UE.
La CE había estimado previamente una inversión combinada público-privada de 120.000 millones de euros para 2035 destinada a revitalizar la industria de semiconductores del continente.
Con información de Kavit Majithia.
The post La UE apunta a la IA y los chips en una nueva iniciativa de soberanía digital appeared first on Mobile World Live.

MICHAEL FOX: OK. One, two. OK. Yeah, we’re good. All right, I will start it off.
MARC STEINER: OK, you want to start it off? Oh yeah. Then I’ll throw this out.
MICHAEL FOX: Yeah, exactly.
MARC STEINER: All right.
SPEAKER 1 [CLIP]: …Under arrest.
SPEAKER 2 [CLIP]: Turn around, turn around, turn around. Turn around [crosstalk].
SPEAKER 3 [CLIP]: OK, let’s not — OK, OK. He’s not resisting.
SPEAKER 2 [CLIP]: Stop resisting, stop resisting.
MICHAEL FOX: Mahmoud Khalil was detained and arrested on March 8, 2025, outside of his Manhattan apartment. It’s a chilling video. Plainclothes agents are there. They refuse to give their names. He’s handcuffed and shoved into the back of a car. His wife, eight months pregnant, watches and tries to understand what’s happening.
This is not a scene from some dark chapter of a distant past filled with black and white photos of bygone dictatorships. This happened here in the United States of America. Mahmoud Khalil is a graduate student from Columbia University. He led protests in 2024 against Israel’s US-backed occupation of Palestine and the genocide there.
But speaking out today has a high price. Mahmoud Khalil is a US resident, born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Syria, but Trump officials said they stripped him of his green card. They held him for months at an ICE jail in Louisiana, far from his home in New York, far from his wife and newborn son.
He was finally released after 100 days in prison and widespread condemnation, just one highly visible victim of so many attacks on free speech in the United States today. And it’s getting worse.
MARC STEINER: This is The Battle for Free Speech, a new multipart narrative podcast series brought to you by The Real News. We’re your hosts. I’m Marc Steiner.
MICHAEL FOX: And I’m Michael Fox. Over the coming weeks, we’re going to take you on a journey to understand the important role free speech has played in US history.
MARC STEINER: From the abolitionist movement and the Civil Rights organizing to the threats facing free speech today and how battles are being waged over free speech at home and abroad.
Today, we want to set the scene by beginning in the present. We met a pretty disturbing assault on First Amendment rights here in the United States. Mike is taking lead in reporting here, so why don’t you take off?
MICHAEL FOX: Excellent, Marc. Thank you so much. So I wanted to start off today. I’ve been speaking to a lot of people in recent weeks, victims and lawyers about this current moment and the attacks on free speech rights. It’s harrowing hearing their stories, but also the context of looking at where we are today. And I wanted to kick us off with a conversation I had with a woman named Lisa Femia.
LISA FEMIA: I am a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is a nonprofit dedicated to protecting civil liberties and civil rights online and in the face of new and emerging technologies.
MICHAEL FOX: And she’s been looking at all of this stuff, and in particular the Trump crackdown on noncitizens, residents within the United States, stripping them of their visas, the same thing we saw with Mahmoud Khalil.
Just for context, she said that obviously we’ve seen this increasing attack on free speech rights in recent years, but this massive uptick within Trump’s second administration, and that’s not a surprise to anyone.
But she in particular underscored this question of Trump targeting noncitizens, visa holders, and how they’re clearly trying to censor and deport noncitizens for speaking out, particularly around the question of Palestine.
LISA FEMIA: Yeah. I mean, in terms of specific numbers, it’s broad reaching because you have both people who have been arrested, been deported, had other negative actions taken against them, and some of them have been quite public, like Mahmoud Khalil, for example. But then you also have the mass chilling effect that happens for everybody’s speech.
MICHAEL FOX: So, her organization has launched a lawsuit with the support of three different unions.
LISA FEMIA: United Auto Workers, Communication Workers of America, and American Federation of Teachers.
MICHAEL FOX: And what’s interesting here is that it’s specifically looking at the administration’s social media surveillance program against noncitizens.
LISA FEMIA: And they each surveyed their members before we filed about how has this surveillance program affected your activity online and your willingness to express yourself? And overwhelming amounts of members said, yes, I have changed my behavior, especially the noncitizen members, but citizen members as well. Of the respondents aware of the surveillance program of the UAW, 85% of the visa holders said that they had changed their activity online, including just eliminating their presence online entirely.
MICHAEL FOX: So, what does that mean? That means that, in some cases, they’ve just gotten offline altogether. They’ve deleted accounts. In other cases, they’ve changed the way they communicate online, what they post, what they don’t post, who they communicate with, who they retweet, how they talk about things. And this is interesting because oftentimes we hear about the high-profile cases and the situations which we’re going to dig into today, but this looks at the minutia of what happens when you’re censoring people, when you’re attempting to deport people or lock them up, when you’re firing teachers.
LISA FEMIA: And I think maybe some people hear this and like, OK, but that’s just online speech. But you have to remember how much speech happens online now, how much political organizing happens online now. For the unions, how much labor organizing and being able to literally just communicate with their members happens online now. And people are just shutting down. They’re just locking down and keeping quiet because they’re scared. So, it’s almost hard to measure the effect of this because there’s so many people that are chilled even if they haven’t had a direct action against them yet.
MICHAEL FOX: And what that means is then what we see online and what we see, the speech that becomes online and the speech that’s allowed to remain the way it is or becomes even more viral or becomes even more outspoken are those people who are in support of Donald Trump and far-right policies. And the other speech, say it’s in defense of Palestine or speaking out about Trump’s policies, becomes minimized because people are afraid to speak out. That’s literally what this one lawsuit is talking about. I just thought that was so fascinating because it’s not something that we’re hearing at all. It’s just this unprecedented moment that we’re seeing in the United States right now.
MARC STEINER: I’m a huge student of what happened in Germany in World War II in the Third Reich. I’ve covered it a lot, done podcasts about the history, and it feels as if we are in 1930, as an analogous period, where the authoritarian forces of the right are really gaining strength. They have their figurehead at the top in Donald Trump, and he is mouthing the words that they want him to say so they can begin this authoritarian push in America to shut opposition down, to shut voices down, to kill the independent press, and to bring everybody in line to where they want to take America.
I think we are in the most dangerous place we’ve been in the history of this country, unless you happen to be Indigenous or Black and living in the 19th century, even the 20th century in this country.
I think that we can take lessons from Reconstruction. The lessons when there was this huge gasp of fresh air and people believing in freedom and building a new kind of democracy that was absolutely crushed by the forces in Washington, DC, and former Confederates that killed the rights of Black people in America and changed America for the next 90 years, became an oppressive nation for Black people in this country, and Indigenous and other people.
And what we’re facing now is broader, even. We’re facing a threat to the democracy that we have, and we’re facing a threat to freedom in general, and it’s building slowly. As a father and a grandfather and a great-grandfather, I am absolutely worried for all of my children and their friends and their peers and what they’re going to face because I see the right growing in power and I see the oppositional forces in absolute disarray. I don’t want to go down that rabbit hole now. I just wanted to lay that out, but I think we’re in a very dangerous moment.
MICHAEL FOX: Yeah. You know what’s fascinating, Marc, is obviously I agree with you and I see the question of free speech and I think that’s why this podcast that we’re embarking on is so important, because it’s almost as if this is the canary in the coal mine in a lot of ways with people being silenced, with people being fired, with people being deported for speaking out and the increasing attacks on this.
MARC STEINER: For context, just to put it in everybody’s head who’s listening right now, because we take for granted the founding documents of our country — And those founding documents, yes, they were written by a slave owner, no question. He wrote them for white people, but they’re universal in terms of what they mean. And let me just read for all of us what the First Amendment says:
The First Amendment guarantees freedoms concerning religion, expression, assembly, and the right to petition. It forbids Congress from promoting one religion over others and also restricting an individual’s religious practices. It guarantees freedom of expression by prohibiting Congress from restricting the press and the rights of individuals to speak freely. It also guarantees the right of citizens to assemble peaceably and to petition their government. Our democracy has flaws, but it has helped make the democracy we have what it is. The right to speak your mind, say what you want, assemble and fight for your rights, assemble to protest is fundamental to this country. That’s what they’re eroding. That’s what they want to take away. That’s my fear.
MICHAEL FOX: It’s a perfect segue into this next world I want to take you. Because one of the places they have been most trying to silence people from speaking out and from standing up is around Palestine. And so I spoke recently with a woman named Corinna Mullin. She is a professor at CUNY, the City University of New York, or at least she was.
CORINNA MULLIN: I’ve been teaching at CUNY for eight years, and also I teach about Palestine. I teach about settler colonialism. I teach about US imperialism. And the two Title VI investigations I was subjected to had to do with false accusations of antisemitism. And the university, rather than defend me from these accusations — And not only that, from the doxxing — And instead of defending us, they have contributed to it. They’ve thrown us under the bus.
MICHAEL FOX: She is currently a member of the Fired Four. So, she and three colleagues were all fired for very similar situations. They all were very active in the pro-Palestine movement on campus. They were all very active [in] standing up and defending students and speaking out, and all four of them were fired.
CORINNA MULLIN: In our cases of the Fired Four, we haven’t actually been given the reason for our firing. There’s almost no due process and very little in terms of contractual protections because we’re all adjuncts, and we could be fired for any reason or no reason at all. What we share in common is that we have all been outspoken in solidarity with Palestine in contesting the genocide and in challenging also the role of our institution in its complicity, its collusion with that genocide through its investments and contracts with companies that benefit from settler colonialism, war, and genocide.
MICHAEL FOX: Now, they’ve had a big campaign to try and get them reinstated by the union, which has been really pushing this, which is exciting and important, but her situation and her case I think is so… it’s just one case of so many that we’ve seen around the country. So, both of those investigations against her were found to be unsubstantiated, but regardless, she talks about how her academic freedom was undermined.
CORINNA MULLIN: Because when I am in class and I’m teaching a course on the politics of the Middle East, for example, and I’m talking about [Palestine] because I can’t teach a course on the politics of the Middle East without talking about the history of settler colonialism in Palestine, then of course that’s in the back of my head. There’s always going to be this fear that there might be another investigation despite the fact that these two investigations have been found to be unsubstantiated. So there’s that.
The fact that the university allows for what is really a form of harassment, and many of these students might even be paid by Zionist organizations. They might have their own political agenda. So, to allow that to take place already and to pursue these investigations itself is a form of violation of academic freedom
MICHAEL FOX: Again, the teachers union has stood up. Many students have defended her, and, in fact, the union president himself has called this a McCarthyite political purge.
SPEAKER 4 [CLIP]: So we will not allow for these disingenuous McCarthy-like attacks on higher education. We will not allow it on CUNY. We will fight for the professors, for the students, for the people that make CUNY great every step of the way.
MICHAEL FOX: And I think that connection to the past, to McCarthy, to remembering what has happened in the past when people stood up or spoke out, and what’s happening now clearly on university campuses. I mean, that’s like the big image around the country where people are being purged, where people are being attacked and undermined, and people are being fired or silenced.
CORINNA MULLIN: And it’s only escalated since Trump has come to power. And now with the congressional hearings, for example, there’s the congressional hearing on higher education, so-called claims of antisemitism in higher education, which really are just conflating anti-Zionism and antisemitism.
SPEAKER 5 [CLIP]: We’ll hear today about antisemitism at three institutions: Haverford College, DePaul University, and California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
CORINNA MULLIN: That all of this has really escalated and pushed the administration or emboldened the administration to really crack down on academic freedom and the rights of students to organize and speak out against settler colonialism and genocide on campus.
MICHAEL FOX: It’s a really concerning and terrifying moment that I know I haven’t seen in my lifetime. Marc, have you ever seen something like this at this level?
MARC STEINER: At this level, I mean… I grew up in the shadow of HUAC, the House Un-American Activities Committee.
SPEAKER 6 [CLIP]: The question is, have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?
SPEAKER 7 [CLIP]: I’m framing my answer in the only way in which any American citizen can frame his —
SPEAKER 6 [CLIP]: Then you deny it —
SPEAKER 7 [CLIP]: Which invades his absolutely…
MARC STEINER: Family, friends, and some of my peers, a couple of my closest friends, their parents were dragged before HUAC for being allegedly communists or having been a member of the Communist Party, being active in trade unions, being active in progressive politics. And so that period was a very frightening moment.
That period, and as I said, that and the end of Reconstruction are emblematic of what we face today, but it’s even more serious because I think the power of the right, the authoritarian nature of the power of the right is in ascendancy in some ways because the opposition is in disarray. I don’t mean to sound as if I think it’s all over. It’s not. But I’m saying that we’re facing a threat that authoritarianism will mask itself as freedom and take hold of the country.
MICHAEL FOX: Marc, have you met or do you know many individuals who have seen, have been the victims of this backlash either at university campuses or elsewhere around the country?
MARC STEINER: There are people I know who I’ve talked to around the country who are feeling immense pressure. Where we broadcast from in Maryland, we live in a state that has a pretty powerful progressive movement inside the Democratic Party and outside. And I think that’s a little different here. But around the country, there are people that are just terrified to open their mouths, to say anything. I think we take these things for granted because we live here and we think it’s inviolable. Nothing can stop it.
MICHAEL FOX: I want to take this to Charlie Kirk because of the big issues that we’ve seen this year where there’s been silencing free speech and backlash, people losing their jobs, like the top two cases I think are around obviously Palestine and pro-Palestinian activism and around the fallout over Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
So, just for context here, for those who are listening, remember, Charlie Kirk was a right-wing political activist. He was the founder of the conservative organization Turning Point USA. He did these tours on college campuses across the United States, and he had very radical extreme views. Hateful views, many would say.
CHARLIE KIRK [CLIP]: Strong men built the West and won the wars and built the building that we’re in right now. And without strong men, then you all of a sudden see civilization unfold upon itself, and we’re seeing that happen in real time.
MICHAEL FOX: And he was killed on Sept. 10, 2025, literally while he was speaking out in public, while he was doing one of these tours on a university campus. And I feel like in so many ways that upended so many things.
A, it’s so important to say, and it’s so defining for free speech. It’s so important to say, first off, there’s no excuse for violence like this. There’s none. It has to be denounced from every place, particularly in a podcast about free speech where the whole idea is everyone has the right to speak their minds. Everyone has their right to speak.
But what we saw in the backlash against those commenting on Charlie Kirk’s murder has been really shocking. The highest profile case, Marc, was clearly the whole firing and scandal and then rehiring of the comedian Jimmy Kimmel.
JIMMY KIMMEL [CLIP]: Thank you. Anyway, as I was saying before I was interrupted [audience laughs], if you’re just joining us, we are preempting your regularly scheduled encore episode of Celebrity Family Feud [audience laughs] to bring you this special report. I’m happy to be here tonight with you all [audience cheers]…
MICHAEL FOX: Did you watch this unfold? Did you follow Jimmy Kimmel’s work?
MARC STEINER: I don’t follow religiously, but when this happened, I took a deep dive, yes.
MICHAEL FOX: What did you find? Tell me about what did you see happening there?
MARC STEINER: Given everything that’s coming out of the Trump administration, I think it was a fear among the people who own some huge broadcast stations that they were going to be attacked. They were going to be investigated. They were going to have their licenses removed. I think that Jimmy Kimmel was a test to see how far they could go in stopping freedom of speech in our country. It didn’t work, but it doesn’t mean it won’t work. It was a test run. I mean, I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but I do believe that people are organizing their resistance to how America has changed. And Jimmy Kimmel was a test run. I see him as a test run.
MICHAEL FOX: It’s interesting how other comedians have spoken out, obviously clearly in defense of Jimmy Kimmel in the days and the weeks afterwards.
NEWS REPORT 1 [CLIP]: Late night hosts are coming to Jimmy Kimmel’s defense tonight.
NEWS REPORT 2 [CLIP]: In fact, both Stephen Colbert and John Stewart unloaded tonight on ABC’s decision to suspend Kimmel’s show, and both claim it’s part of a campaign by President Trump to limit free speech and silence his critics.
JON STEWART [CLIP]: We have another fun, hilarious… administration-compliant show.
STEPHEN COLBERT [CLIP]: Well, you know what my community values are, Buster? Freedom of speech [audience cheers].
MICHAEL FOX: Obviously, it wasn’t just Jimmy Kimmel. Hundreds of people have lost their jobs: university professors, federal employees, private business, mostly for what they posted online or what they spoke out against, but clearly the backlash was shocking.
So, I wanted to understand this from behind the scenes, what was happening with Jimmy Kimmel, but was always happening in the wake of Charlie Kirk. And so, recently I went to the offices of FIRE in Washington, DC. Do you know this organization? It’s the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. It’s a free speech organization in downtown DC, big office. I was impressed by the amount of staffers and people who are there. And they’re doing incredible work all in defense of free speech today. So, I met with staff attorney David Rubin.
DAVID RUBIN: I work on the litigation team, so we’re filing lawsuits in court and challenging speech-restrictive statutes and stuff like that. And then we also have a ton of other really smart lawyers who work here and nonlawyers who are doing a lot of different kind of advocacy work.
MICHAEL FOX: And he has this really interesting background, Marc, because his background is actually in comedy.
DAVID RUBIN: And so before law school, I worked in Los Angeles in the business of standup comedy for four or five years. I worked for Budd Friedman, who founded the Hollywood Improv and discovered Rodney Dangerfield, Bette Midler. And Lenny Bruce used to go there. But anyways, I have this longstanding love of comedy.
MICHAEL FOX: So of course, the connection to Jimmy Kimmel and comedy in the United States historically today was really interesting to talk with him about that. Because he told me he only did stand-up a couple of times. It wasn’t really his thing [Steiner laughs]. But he worked in the stand-up world in Los Angeles for several years before becoming an attorney. And that’s really his passion. People like Lenny Bruce or George Carlin, which for him are like the exemplification of free speech.
DAVID RUBIN: Comedy has a big role in First Amendment protection and just in building a free speech culture, like George Carlin and the seven dirty words and all that.
GEORGE CARLIN [CLIP]: Nobody even tells you when you’re a kid what the words are that you’re supposed to avoid. You have to say them to find out which ones they are. Shit [smack]! Oh, fuck [audience laughs]! That’s two!
MICHAEL FOX: For him, these folks exemplify what free speech should be, because you’re up there on stage and you’re making your own critique of the reality in the United States, whatever that might be, and it’s your freedom to be able to speak out in public or make jokes in public about this. So, that was like one just fascinating anecdote of speaking with David.
Did you follow these people like Lenny Bruce or George Carlin or some of these other comedians?
MARC STEINER: All my life, Richard Pryor, all of them. They pushed humor to the cutting edge of America, almost at the abyss, and they were funny. But to some people, they were really dangerous and they had to be stopped. And they used sometimes not just their politics, but also the sexual content was too much for uprighteous Americans to take, at least some of them. It’s not surprising comedians, people in the creative world, are among the first to be attacked. It happened in Nazi Germany and it’s happening here.
MICHAEL FOX: Yeah. So the main reason I actually went to speak with David was about this very specific case in Tennessee. Have you heard about the case of Larry Bushart Jr.?
MARC STEINER: No. Tell us, what’s the case?
MICHAEL FOX: OK. So it’s wild and it’s shocking because it’s one of those situations that just got to this extreme that it’s hard to even believe it’s happened within the United States.
DAVID RUBIN: It was a speech chilling environment. It was a very crazy time for a week or two, but this happened in the late stage of that big wave.
MICHAEL FOX: So, Larry Bushart Jr., he’s a retired police officer and sheriff’s deputy for 24 years. And between late September until the very end of October, he spent more than a month in jail for posting a meme on Facebook in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
MARC STEINER: Oh, yes. Right.
MICHAEL FOX: So, this story first went viral over The Intercept. FIRE was following it closely as well as David Rubin. Bushart Jr. was vocal on Facebook about Donald Trump, has been for a very long time. He called Trump and his supporters a cult. He was active online after Kirk’s killing about why he shouldn’t be praised, basically saying, look, we can’t praise this guy. And he was very active particularly on Facebook, but it was one meme in particular that got him in trouble.
DAVID RUBIN: It’s just a picture of then-President Trump saying, after a shooting at an Iowa high school named Perry High School, after a shooting there, the day after he said, we’re all going to have to get over this, something to that effect, with the obvious implication that it meant perhaps we might be being a little hypocritical here where if we have to get over it the day after a bunch of kids get killed, and we’re still firing people nine days later because they say something bad about this one person.
MICHAEL FOX: Underneath this quote were the words “Donald Trump on Perry High School mass shooting one day after.” And in the image that Bushart Jr. posted on Facebook, he wrote “seems relevant today.” So that was it.
But the posts caught the attention of Perry County Sheriff. And that night at almost midnight, four officers came to his door, to the door of Bushart Jr. They had a warrant, they handcuffed him, and drove him to jail. And this video was released by The Intercept showing him as he’s arriving at the jail. An officer reads the warrant.
POLICE OFFICER [CLIP]: Threatening mass violence at a school.
LARRY BUSHART JR. [CLIP]: At a school?
POLICE OFFICER [CLIP]: It’s referring to a school. I have no idea [crosstalk].
LARRY BUSHART JR. [CLIP]: [Inaudible].
POLICE OFFICER [CLIP]: That’s what they’ve called us for. And I ain’t getting to it.
LARRY BUSHART JR. [CLIP]: I played on Facebook. I threatened no one. I know you don’t give a —
DAVID RUBIN: They arrested him and charged him with making a threat of mass violence on a school, which is like a class E felony or something like that. So they put him in jail. The judge set a $2 million bond, which is pretty insanely high for any crime.
MICHAEL FOX: So, essentially the sheriff said that people could read Bushart Jr.’s post as a possible future threat on a local school. And it’s just this shocking moment in America where someone can go to jail for more than 30 days for posting a meme on Facebook. I mean, it’s like we’ve reached another level. And it was so shocking that The Intercept, when it published this article on Oct. 23 and then there was clearly a backlash, and the charges were finally dropped in the very end of October, and he was released from jail the following week after Oct. 23.
DAVID RUBIN: So they dropped the charges, and now he’s free.
SPEAKER 8 [CLIP]: How do you feel right now?
LARRY BUSHART JR. [CLIP]: Thanks to all and any supporters out there, and very happy to be going home. I didn’t seek to be a media sensation, but here we are. But that’s about all I can say right now.
MICHAEL FOX: And the folks at FIRE believe it was in large part due to the pressure, both the media pressure from continued reporting on this case, but also the reality that there was nothing to stand on. It’s just somebody posting a meme.
Have we ever seen anything at this level before?
DAVID RUBIN: I have not seen anything like this.
MICHAEL FOX: This is the new world order almost that we’ve entered. Had you ever heard of anything like this before, Marc?
MARC STEINER: I mean, not since I was really young during the Red Scare of the ’50s. When people I know whose parents were fired from their jobs, whether they were airline mechanics or physicians or whatever, they were teachers, were being fired here in Baltimore. And the only thing that stopped it was the end of McCarthy and, oddly enough, the beginning of Eisenhower began to change what was happening.
But I think that we are facing something, that a similar moment is happening now, and I think that it’s creeping. This is not something that is overt and in your face every day, but it’s undermining our educational institutions. It’s undermining our freedoms, and it’s seeping in with the power of the right taking over the country.
So, I think it’s almost like, again, if you go back — And I don’t deal with hyperbole — But if you go back to 1931 Germany and study how slowly it moved and what it did, who they went after, the same process is happening now in this country. We’re on a cusp.
Look, our broadcast, where we are now, The Real News, places like this, this is under threat, and I think that’ll be the first line. So, I think that one of the most important parts for me in doing this work with you at this moment is beginning to really sound the alarm, but also talk about people who are standing up to it and how you organize and fight against it.
MICHAEL FOX: Well, we’ll get to organizing and fighting against it. We will get there, folks.
So, when I spoke with David, part of my question for him was what do we know about what’s behind the scenes about these situations? So we know that, for instance, hundreds of people have lost their jobs or faced backlash for their response to the Charlie Kirk assassination. We know that nearly 300 people have been investigated at the Pentagon. So, Pentagon employees who were investigated for their own response or their own views. We know that [the] State Department revoked the visas of several people who spoke out against Kirk.
And Marc, did you follow this at all? It’s really crazy because they’re totally blatant where the State Department is actually retweeting tweets by people, other things that people have posted online, and it basically says, don’t like it? Visa revoked. It’s almost like this viral amusing joke meme, but they’re actually responding to what people have posted online in response to Kirk.
And we know that at least six people have lost their visas this way. Someone from Argentina, South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, and Paraguay.
MARC STEINER: And they’ve been shipped out.
MICHAEL FOX: I don’t know the… but that’s what at least the State Department said online.
SPEAKER 9 [CLIP]: I’m sure we should not be giving visas to people who are going to come to the United States and do things like celebrate the murder, the execution, the assassination of a political figure. We should not. And if they’re already here, we should be revoking their visa.
MICHAEL FOX: So, I wanted to understand what’s behind the scenes here. How are people being targeted? And this is something we don’t hear a lot about in the news. We hear a lot about this professor was fired or [these] other people [are] trying to create a lawsuit to get their jobs back, or these other people from these different employment were fired for this, but we don’t necessarily understand what the minutia is behind this that’s driving these firings, because they’re not by accident.
And in many cases, they’re these coordinated campaigns. I’m not saying nationally coordinated, but it’s a process that is actually happening and coordinated so that people then get to a place in which they are fired or so that powerful people take these decisions.
So, this is what I sat down, part of what I sat down with David Rubin about, and I really wanted to understand what was actually happening, how were people being targeted.
And David Rubin said, no, this isn’t by accident.
DAVID RUBIN: I would say there is a campaign, or many multiple smaller campaigns, certain influencers like Libs of TikTok or like Scott Pressler or like Robby Starbuck. If you look at them, they were crowdsourcing comments from people that they disagreed with that said something about Charlie Kirk, and then all their followers were going and tweeting to that person’s boss and saying, oh, you employ this person? You should fire him. You have to fire him.
MICHAEL FOX: And he explained to me that this is very much a coordinated campaign, which he called it a heckler’s veto. Do you know this term?
MARC STEINER: Yes, go ahead.
MICHAEL FOX: So, it’s basically the idea that individuals who aren’t directly impacted by these professors, so they’re not necessarily the professor’s students. It might be a student or another student, but it’s usually individuals that have nothing to do with that local situation who then find something online, or they find a tweet online from these professors, and then they start to push it out virally and promote this to then more powerful people. Then it gets picked up by viral right-wing or conservative influencers, usually on Twitter but sometimes elsewhere like Libs of TikTok and other things.
And this is how many of these firings have actually happened, where we’ve seen this coordinated campaign against left individuals speaking out in the wake of Kirk’s assassination or standing up in defense of Palestine
DAVID RUBIN: And that’s one area in First Amendment law that needs to be addressed is this heckler’s veto that happens when politically interested but otherwise diffuse groups get really interested and keyed in on something. And if a teacher says something and their students’ parents have a problem with it, maybe that’s one thing. But if some random right-wing or whatever, left-wing podcaster and all their fans don’t like it, and then they send a bunch of emails and make a bunch of calls to the school, that is very anti-free speech culture.
MICHAEL FOX: I think it’s interesting that, for instance, Charlie Kirk’s own group that he founded, Turning Point USA, has its own professor watch lists. So, these are professors, left and progressive professors. Some of these individuals who were then pointed out, detailed online, and then the campaigns raised for their firing are individuals who are on this Turning Point USA watch list.
SPEAKER 10 [CLIP]: Turning Point USA leaders continue to publish an online database of university professors they say advance leftist propaganda in the classroom.
DAVID RUBIN: I fear that this is the start of some kind of new wave of political violence on college campuses and that folks, for instance, on the professor watch list could be targeted as well.
MICHAEL FOX: And it’s important to point out that there isn’t just one group that’s doing this. It’s being pushed by many different groups, by many different far-right social media influencers, but it is happening, and it’s in many ways coordinated.
So here’s one very, very specific example, Marc, that I’m going to take you to Clemson University for a second.
MARC STEINER: OK.
MICHAEL FOX: I spoke with Allen Chaney.
ALLEN CHANEY: I’m the legal director at the ACLU of South Carolina.
MICHAEL FOX: And they’ve been very focused on this one case around a professor named Joshua Bregy. Bregy is an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences. And then following Charlie Kirk’s murder, he reposted a friend’s post on Facebook.
ALLEN CHANEY: That was vehemently nonviolent but, at the same time, pointed out the conflict between, on the one hand, the insistent lack of empathy by Mr. Kirk, and on the other hand, the militant demand for empathy by Mr. Kirk’s supporters in the wake of his death.
MICHAEL FOX: What’s interesting about this case is that it’s so benign. The post first denounces Kirk’s assassination and clearly the violence. It expresses grief for Kirk’s friends and family, but it also points out the hypocrisy of Kirk’s own violent discourse, which is something we’ve seen a lot online by people in the response, right?
MARC STEINER: Right.
MICHAEL FOX: And so the post said, in one quote, “It sounds to me like karma is sometimes swift and ironic. As Kirk said, play certain games, win certain prizes.” And that’s probably the most demonizing phrase in the post.
ALLEN CHANEY: Now, immediately after Dr. Bregy posted that on Facebook, nothing happened. Dr. Bregy does not have a particularly large Facebook profile. He’s a climate scientist, not a huge online presence really at all. And as news was starting to break about some of the retaliation against folks for their speech, Dr. Bregy went ahead and made his post private just in an abundance of caution.
A few hours after that happened, Clemson College Republicans, which is an on-campus student group, reposted a portion of Dr. Bregy’s Facebook post, describing it as a now-deleted post, along with some old profile pictures of his, one of which had a “climate change is real” sign, and the other one which had a Black Lives Matter banner, and tagged Libs of TikTok as well as some other political profiles and demanded that Clemson fire him.
MICHAEL FOX: So, this then makes its way all the way up to the South Carolina State House Rep. Thomas Beach, who also adds fuel to the campaign. Before you know it, it’s powerful elected representatives who are lobbying leaders at Clemson University.
ALLEN CHANEY: That’s exactly right. And so, the Clemson College Republicans’ post and their tagging of Libs of TikTok is really what ignited this social media firestorm that was directed at Dr. Bregy, as well as one other Clemson professor, and then really at Clemson itself.
And so you see some posts like — Give me a second, I can pull them up. So you see folks like Rep. Thomas Beach, who’s there in the Pickens area reposting the Clemson College Republicans’ post and saying, “Another leftist indoctrinator has been identified in the Clemson faculty. This is whose salary your dollars are paying for. We can do better. Take action, fire these radicals.” And when that doesn’t work, the threats become increasingly more explicit and they become more official as well.
And so you no longer just have fringe Freedom Caucus folks like April Kromer and Thomas Beach and Jordan Pace. You see a letter from the speaker of the House, the president of the Senate on official General Assembly letterhead going to the Clemson University decision makers saying, your funding depends on you making the quote “right decision” here, and encouraging them to take decisive action.
And so, there was really no question that lawmakers were giving Clemson an ultimatum — Fire these professors, or we’re going to pull your funding.
MICHAEL FOX: So, it’s this fluid, sometimes clear, sometimes unclear campaign whereby certain local groups, in some cases it might be the local university Republicans group, and in other cases it might be other groups online, who find these or who are actively looking for these types of posts and then making it, building a whole campaign. Then it’s getting pushed by social media influencers online to powerful right-wing or conservative Republican leaders who are then lobbying those schools or offices or businesses or whatever it might be to get these people fired.
ALLEN CHANEY: But over the course of five days, you see the coercive tactics of lawmakers really start to erode Clemson’s commitment to the First Amendment. And then about five days later, before Dr. Breggie showed up to teach his first class after the Facebook post, he was fired. He was dismissed for cause and in a manner that really directly conflicts with Clemson’s own faculty manual.
MICHAEL FOX: So it’s this fascinating thing that’s actually happening against left and progressive in particular professors, but also we’ve seen this elsewhere, singled out by these smaller groups. And what’s interesting is that in a lot of cases, like for instance this one, not necessarily did Professor Bregy do anything. He didn’t post. He reposted somebody else’s post that really wasn’t that damning. But the fact that he’s a professor that is probably on their watch list already, that is left a progressive, he’s a climate scientist in the environmental department, which is clearly proenvironment and whatnot. And so this is an individual they had clearly pointed out as someone they want to get removed.
And this is like the epitome of what the heckler’s veto is. None of Professor Bregy’s… His students stood beside him. They stood up for him. The union stood up for him. His colleagues at Clemson University stood up in defense, and most of this campaign against him was from groups or individuals from outside Clemson University who have a clear political plan to try and get him fired or removed because of his views.
And what does this do? Again, it goes back to what we were talking [about] at the very beginning, Marc, where it’s not just the individual who has spoken up or spoken out or has posted something online, but it creates this chilling effect throughout the university and throughout other places where people are afraid to speak out. People are afraid to speak out against Trump, against the Trump administration, against other issues because they think, well, I might be next.
ALLEN CHANEY: The disruption is not internal to these universities or colleges, nor is it organic. It’s manufactured. So, we see a coordinated effort to identify people within academia who made posts about Charlie Kirk that could be used as ammunition to push the universities to fire these people, not really for their comments about Charlie Kirk.
I mean, you see it in my case where it’s really more about the Black Lives Matter and the climate science is real positions, and the Charlie Kirk comment is just the mechanism by which they can push their agenda into the universities and push out people who carry views that they don’t like anymore.
And so it was political opportunism of the most discouraging sort where you have a national tragedy — Regardless of how you feel about Charlie Kirk and his views, the idea that someone was gunned down at a public event because of those views should be frightening to all of us — But then to in the hours following that, see an opportunity and seize on an opportunity to, because of public employees’ views, drive them out of the public workforce.
MICHAEL FOX: And that’s the goal, really. The bottom line is to take out these professors, but also to create this chilling effect around speech so that people are not as vocal online and that people restrict their speech. We saw it from what I mentioned [at] the very beginning of that one situation of this one survey of individuals who were visa holders where 85% had changed their habits online. But I’m sure that if we were to look at some sort of other survey or other analysis that I don’t have in front of me, but if there was something like that done, we would see a huge difference in how people are interacting online over social media and what they are posting, what people are afraid to post, and how that’s impacting academic freedom at universities.
MARC STEINER: And I think that one of the things we have to take into account here are the people who are in power in Washington now. When you look at Vance, Hegseth, Rubio, as much as some people who are liberal on the left don’t want to admit it, these are really, really brilliant men who are highly organized, and that’s what’s pushing this right-wing takeover of everything going on and the killing of free speech. I think that that is something that really has to be delved into deeply to understand who these people are and the powers behind the throne, what policies they’re putting in place, how they support what’s going on in these universities. I think that people have to connect these dots to understand what we’re up against and what we’re facing.
As I said earlier, I think this is the most dangerous moment in American history in a long time. And I think what you just described is the tip of the iceberg, and it’s going to get deeper and more intense over the next several years in this administration.
And in a pure political sense, one of the things that I’ve been reading a lot about, writing about, and thinking about how to produce is how weak the opposition is, how disorganized the opposition is, how there’s no game plan among people on the left or about Democrats about how to confront this and stop it.
And I think that what you were just describing, again, if you go back to the 1930s and the early part of this in this country in the 1910s and the 1930s in Germany, this is how it began. You target what would be a weak link: universities. You target to begin the process, and that’s what we’re witnessing. That’s why what you just described is really critically important to understand in the context of how the right pushes power.
MICHAEL FOX: Two things I want to say that I think are a little hopeful within this context, particularly —
MARC STEINER: I didn’t mean to be so Mister Negative [laughs].
MICHAEL FOX: No, of course. So first off, the ACLU has this case.
ALLEN CHANEY: Yeah, we filed a complaint, and shortly thereafter we filed a motion for a preliminary injunction which asked the court to rule that we are likely to prevail on the merits of our First Amendment claim and to order Clemson to reinstate Dr. Bregy as faculty, put him back on the payroll, remove any adverse employment findings, and treat him as if he’s not done anything wrong, which we don’t think he’s done anything wrong, and we think that the First Amendment agrees with us.
MICHAEL FOX: The timeline is slow. I asked them about the timeline. They said, well, we wish it was faster. I wish I could define the timeline, but it’s happening, and that’s what’s important. And that lawsuits like this are happening and pushing back around the country.
I thought it was really interesting because I’ve been Googling this in recent days, and if you Google for “Charlie Kirk firing,” if you Google those words right now, it’s article after article of people pushing back, of lawsuits against universities, against school districts, of lawyers picking up people’s cases of trying to get people rehired. I think it’s really hopeful that if you had Googled the same thing just a couple months ago, then you would’ve seen story after story of people being fired, and now you’re seeing story after story of people of fighting back and trying to be rehired because they’re standing up for their free speech rights.
So I think that’s one thing that is really, really key. There’s a couple of the things that… Like I mentioned, Marc, I’ve been speaking to a lot of people in recent days and one of the things that was that almost everyone told me was that yes, of course, cancel culture happens on both the right and the left, and that’s what we’ve seen in recent administrations in recent years, but that this, what we’re seeing now is a whole new level and that things are bad and getting worse. Like you’ve mentioned McCarthyism, and the McCarthyist moment is the closest reference that almost all these people, all these different staff attorneys and victims and any people that I’ve been speaking with, this is like the main moment that so many of them reference of being particularly a US reference of where we are now and what this looks like.
JOSEPH MCCARTHY [CLIP]: One communist on the faculty of one university is one communist too many. One communist among the American advisors at Yalta was one communist too many. And even if there were only one communist in the State Department, even if there were only one communist in the State Department, there would still be one communist too many.
MICHAEL FOX: And Marc, I wanted to come back to Lisa Femia just for a second — Remember, she’s from EFF, this free speech rights organization out in the Bay Area — Because I asked her one specific thing about our definition of free speech because for me, I’ve for a long time felt like we’re seeing an attempt to redefine free speech in America where it’s not just your right to say anything you want, where it’s clearly not right now your right to protest because we’ve seen these attacks against pro-Palestinian protests, and obviously Trump is calling out the National Guard against protests and things.
So, clearly there’s this push to try and almost redefine what we understand as free speech. And I think Trump’s first day in office was a really clear moment in defining that. This is when he signed his executive order, which was called “Restoring freedom of speech and ending federal censorship.” He spoke about this in his inauguration.
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP [CLIP]: After years and years of illegal and unconstitutional federal efforts to restrict free expression, I will also sign an executive order to immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America.
LISA FEMIA: Yeah. I think that there was a moment where you saw Trump and allies make these free speech arguments in a way that meant free speech for them, but not necessarily for people they disagreed with. I think in that early executive order on free speech, you could tell it wasn’t, for a variety of reasons, you could probably tell this wasn’t like a fully thought out full protection of free speech because it talked only about speech from the previous administration as if this hasn’t been a push and pull in American history since the founding.
But recently, I’m not even sure, I think the administration in some ways has dropped the guise and has talked about speech in a way that is now categorizing speech they don’t like as potential domestic terrorism or threats trying to push speech into national security area, which is sort of an easier area of the law for the administration to get away with what it wants to.
And I’m not sure I’m even seeing the administration talk about speech in the way that it did even last year anymore. And you see this with even Trump discussing his executive order on flag burning.
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP [CLIP]: And we’ve made it a one-year penalty for inciting riots. We took the freedom of speech away because that’s been through the courts and the court said you have freedom of speech. But what has happened is when they burn a flag, it agitates and you end up with riots. So we’re going on that basis. We’re looking at it from not from the freedom of speech, which I always felt strongly about but never passed the courts.
LISA FEMIA: It’s like, maybe we don’t need free speech. I think the tone has shifted, and we’ve almost moved beyond some of the ideas that they were expressing before into a new area where they treat speech that is against their policies or their administration as a direct threat to the United States.
MICHAEL FOX: Lisa’s quote on this, what she said to me, I think, was just so powerful. She’s like, we’re at a whole new level. It’s not just about the discourse or justification of free speech for my people, not for your people. It’s now just an open attack on free speech itself, and Trump feels like he doesn’t even have to [pay] lip service to it.
LISA FEMIA: It’s a concerning shift. I’ve found it troubling, to say the least.
MARC STEINER: Right. No, I think that first of all, the whole burning of the American flag, A, it is against the law, and you can use that law to attack people, arrest them, and go after them. It hasn’t been done in a long time. It was done in the ’60s, and I had friends of mine who were arrested for burning a flag in protest in this country. Then when you add that to this administration’s Orwellian speak about free speech, they’re at the doorstep.
I think that as I said earlier, Trump is a figurehead. He’s not the danger. He’s an idiot, but he’s surrounded by brilliant minds who are organizing this push. I’m spelling it like the German push takeover of this country. I think that one of the things that’s really important for this particular series we’re doing, and for all of us to do, is to begin to bring it to light, to bring the stories to light so people know what’s happening around this country at this moment that no one sees.
Because the stories you just told, the examples you gave, most people aren’t thinking about them because they’re tucked away. They’re not in front of you. I think that it has to be exposed and we have to raise the alarm and talk to people who are fighting and organizing against it.
MICHAEL FOX: So, Marc, we did that recording quite a few months ago, and since then there’s been quite a few updates, and I want to run through some of these things because it’s important for several reasons. First off, according to a Reuters investigation from November 2025, roughly 600 people were fired, disciplined, investigated, or suspended due to online posts following Charlie Kirk’s murder. 600. In fact, they compared it to an ideological purge. But many of those victims have been pushing back and it has made a difference.
SPEAKER 11 [CLIP]: So didn’t you see this? A professor who was fired over a social media post about the killing of Charlie Kirk is now being reinstated…
SPEAKER 12 [CLIP]: Newark six, a FWC biologist will receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlement money after she was punished for sharing a social media post about Charlie Kirk’s death…
[Several clips overlap]
MICHAEL FOX: So, if you remember Joshua Bregy, he’s the professor from Clemson University. He was fired on Sept. 26. He sued the university through the ACLU, saying that his termination was a violation of the First Amendment. And then in early January, he settled with Clemson University. They agreed to rescind his termination, pay his salary and benefits throughout the original term of his employment. He didn’t teach this last semester, but he received payment. He agreed to drop his lawsuit and resign from his position as of May 15, just last month. And the Clemson provost also agreed to provide letters of recommendation.
Allen Chaney, who I interviewed, he’s the legal director of the ACLU in South Carolina. He said, “We’re honored to represent Dr. Bregy and to reach an agreement that restores his employment.” So good news, clearly, in the case of Joshua Bregy because he pushed back and fought for it.
Also in January in New York, the movement to reinstate the Fired Four at CUNY, the City University of New York, was partially successful. So, the university found that three of the four adjuncts were once again eligible for employment at Brooklyn College. And that includes Corinna Mullin. She was one of the professors I spoke with at the beginning of this episode. She too was reinstated. They’re still fighting, however, to get the last of the Fired Four reinstated.
And the last person that I wanted to bring in here an update was about Larry Bushart Jr. Marc, I don’t know if you remember, he was the retired policeman from Tennessee who was jailed for 37 days for posting a Trump meme on Facebook following Kirk’s killing. So, he settled, again in May, an “unlawful incarceration” lawsuit for $835,000.
So, these are all really hopeful steps. You also have the former Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil. He’s free. He’s not in jail, but of course he’s battling in the courts to remain free.
I guess the overall vision here, Marc, is just the simple fact that organizing, fighting, pushing back can make a difference. And I think that’s just such an important theme to end up on here is that despite the attacks on free speech that are clearly happening throughout the United States that are being pushed by the Trump administration, what you have and what we’ve seen over the last six, seven, eight months are people standing up, people fighting back. And of course, not in all cases, but in many cases they’re being successful, and their rights are being defended.
MARC STEINER: I’m glad you let all that out. I think that it’s really incredibly important for people to understand that it’s not just about people limiting our free speech. It’s about the struggle to fight for free speech and people standing up to it and not letting that go, and the bravery of people to lose their livelihood, to lose the life that they created because they stood up for free speech. It’s the most fundamental right in this country to stand up and be heard, to say what you believe and not be afraid that the law is going to come against you because you did.
And I think that the more examples that we can give as in these podcasts that we do to tell the stories of people fighting for their free speech, that where it’s under attack, where it’s won, it’s fight back, or important for people to learn and understand, to keep that in front, because most people don’t see it because it’s not there. But the people you describe, their voices have to be heard. Their stories have to be heard because you’re next. Your name won’t be known, but you’re next if you don’t stand up.
MICHAEL FOX: Hi, folks. Thanks for listening. We are so excited to have this series up and running. We’ve been working on it for a year.
MARC STEINER: And next week we look back into the past at how free speech battles of the past help define the abolitionist and civil rights movements and what they mean today. That’s the next time on The Battle for Free Speech.
MICHAEL FOX: If you enjoyed today’s podcast and you liked this series, please do us a favor, go to your podcasting app and give us a like, follow, a subscribe, or tell a friend about it and leave us a comment or a review. It really helps to spread the word about the show and the state of free speech in the United States today.
Also, please make sure to sign up for The Real News Network’s newsletter so you never miss an episode. You can find that at therealnews.com or you can click on the links in the show notes.
If you’d like to find out more about the stories we talked about today in this episode, we’ve added some links also in the show notes. The Battle for Free Speech is a production of The Real News. Thanks for listening. See you next time.
Mahmoud Khalil was detained and arrested at his Manhattan apartment. The video is chilling. Plainclothes agents are there. They refuse to give their names. He’s handcuffed and shoved into the back of a car. His wife — eight months pregnant — watches and tries to understand what’s happening.
This is not a scene from some dark chapter of a distant past filled with black-and-white photos of bygone dictatorships. This happened here, in the United States of America, in 2025.
In this podcast series, in the lead-up to the country’s 250th anniversary, journalists Michael Fox and Marc Steiner look at the battle for our free speech rights today, and attacks on people speaking out in the United States.
Hosted by Michael Fox and Marc Steiner. Theme music by Michael Fox, Jordan Klein, and Daniel Nuñez. Other music from Blue Dot Sessions and Epidemic Sound. Production and sound design by Michael Fox and Stephen Frank. Editorial support by Kayla Rivara and Heather Gies. Research by Ben Schweiger.
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De 5 a 21 de junho, Ribeirinha Beach regressa à zona ribeirinha de Portimão, próximo do Clube Naval, transformando um
O conteúdo Praia urbana junto ao Arade regressa para a segunda edição aparece primeiro em Algarve 7.
Evviva la tregua, la tregua che non c’è. A Washington e tra le cancellerie europee si esulta per la firma dell’intesa tra Israele e Libano su un cessate il fuoco condizionato che dovrebbe mettere fine al conflitto nel Paese dei Cedri, ai raid israeliani su Beirut e all’invasione del Sud. Il condizionale è d’obbligo perché, nonostante le reazioni positive, l’accordo presenta diverse clausole che rendono ancora complicato parlare di tregua.
Per dare un’idea del clima tra le parti conviene partire innanzitutto dalle dichiarazioni dei protagonisti. Tra i primi a prendere la parola c’è il ministro della Difesa israeliano, Israel Katz, che chiarisce subito un punto: Israele continuerà le sue operazioni nel Libano meridionale, con le truppe rimarranno nella zona di sicurezza, la cosiddetta Yellow Line collocata unilateralmente da Tel Aviv ben più a nord della zona di demarcazione individuata dalle Nazioni Unite, perché continuerà a “smantellare le infrastrutture terroristiche nell’area“. Una tregua che deve essere rispettata solo dalla controparte, quindi, ossia Hezbollah, dato che per “infrastrutture terroristiche” lo Stato ebraico intende proprio quelle del Partito di Dio. Non sarà così perché proprio i vertici della formazione armata sciita hanno chiarito di non riconoscere l’accordo sul cessate il fuoco firmato a Washington. Il gruppo ha “informato ufficialmente il presidente libanese Joseph Aoun del proprio rifiuto dell’accordo, insistendo sul fatto che qualsiasi accordo accettabile debba iniziare con il ritiro completo di Israele da tutto il territorio libanese. Il ritorno degli sfollati, gli sforzi di ricostruzione e il rilascio dei prigionieri libanesi sono condizioni essenziali per qualsiasi futuro accordo”. Il leader della formazione, Naim Qassem, ha poi definito l’intesa “una capitolazione e una sconfitta“, invitando il governo libanese a “porre fine alla farsa e all’umiliazione dei negoziati”: “La dichiarazione di Washington – conclude – definisce i principi fondamentali che gli Stati Uniti e Israele prevedono per la sottomissione del Libano al progetto del Grande Israele”.
La presa di posizione di Hezbollah, secondo quanto riportato dal quotidiano israeliano Haaretz, è frutto del coordinamento tra il partito sciita libanese e l’Iran. Per Teheran, il cessate il fuoco in Libano non può essere discusso a parte, ma deve diventare un elemento delle ben più ampie contrattazioni tra Usa e Iran.
La posizione intransigente di Hezbollah e Repubblica Islamica ha motivazioni di tipo strategico. Ma non solo. Nell’accordo di cessate il fuoco firmato a Washington senza interpellare il partito-milizia libanese, l’unica controparte veramente coinvolta nello scontro con Israele, c’è una condizione non di poco conto imposta dallo Stato ebraico: verranno istituite zone di sicurezza libanesi che escluderanno Hezbollah e lo stop alle ostilità, si precisa nella dichiarazione congiunta, sarà subordinato alla “cessazione completa del fuoco di Hezbollah e all’evacuazione di tutti i membri di Hezbollah dal settore del Litani meridionale“. Infine, “Israele ha riaffermato che la sua sicurezza e il rispetto della sua integrità territoriale possono essere raggiunti solo attraverso il disarmo di Hezbollah e lo smantellamento della sua infrastruttura in tutto il Libano”. In sostanza, Beirut e Tel Aviv hanno trovato un accordo senza coinvolgere il Partito di Dio pretendendo da esso il ritiro, il disarmo e la mancata presenza nelle zone di sicurezza. Inevitabile, quindi, il rifiuto da parte del gruppo sciita che, va ricordato, non è un attore marginale nel contesto bellico: si tratta di una milizia che vanta un numero di combattenti non troppo inferiore a quello dei soldati dell’esercito regolare ma, soprattutto, si ritiene abbia a disposizione un arsenale missilistico e di droni d’attacco più imponente di quello di Beirut.
Così, come annunciato da Katz, i raid e le operazioni israeliane non si fermano. Dopo la firma dell’accordo, Israele ha diramato un avviso urgente ai residenti del Libano meridionale per ricordare che “i combattimenti nel Libano meridionale continuano, mentre l’esercito israeliano prosegue nel colpire strutture e infrastrutture di Hezbollah presenti nei vostri villaggi e nelle loro vicinanze. L’Idf non intende arrecare danno alla popolazione civile. Per la vostra sicurezza, evitate di dirigervi a sud del fiume Zahrani fino a nuovo avviso. Chiunque si rechi verso sud mette a rischio la propria vita”. E infatti i media libanesi riferiscono di attacchi israeliani nel Sud in mattinata, poche ore dopo l’annuncio del cessate il fuoco. Le Forze di Difesa Israeliane hanno dichiarato di aver utilizzato “sei tonnellate di esplosivo per distruggere oltre 20 siti terroristici nell’area”, mentre un drone dello Stato ebraico ha colpito un’auto tra le città di Kfar Kila e Zefta.
L'articolo Libano-Israele, la tregua che non c’è. Tel Aviv continua a bombardare e Hezbollah (escluso dai colloqui) replica: “Accordo inaccettabile” proviene da Il Fatto Quotidiano.