It's the first day of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. Hockey, curling, alpine skiing, luge, and now a new sport: ski mountaineering, also known as "skimo." And another storyline to follow is the return of superstar skier Lindsey Vonn, who was on the sidelines for five years before returning for this year's Olympics. Meanwhile, a $16 billion plan called the Hudson River Tunnel Project is kaput for now after President Trump announced he's withholding its funding. It was seen as one of the biggest infrastructure projects in the country. Also, in Los Angeles, traffic jams don't just happen on the freeways, they're happening in the sky too, with the airspace over Hollywood Burbank Airport being some of the most congested in the country. In business, the graffiti towers, officially known as the Oceanwide Plaza, reached a bankruptcy agreement that may open the path to its sale and cleanup, and the Teamsters of California are calling for the state to ban Waymo cars after one struck a child in Santa Monica. Read more at LATimes.com.
Up First from NPR - Guthrie Investigation, Ghislaine Maxwell Deposition, Seahawks Win Super Bowl LX
Ghislaine Maxwell is set to be questioned by members of Congress about Jeffrey Epstein, his crimes, and the powerful figures connected to him, even as she continues to challenge her own conviction.
And the Seattle Seahawks win Super Bowl 60, beating the New England Patriots 29-13, using a dominant defense to secure the franchise’s second championship.
Want more analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.
Today’s episode of Up First was edited by James Doubek, Megan Pratz, Russell Lewis, Mohamad ElBardicy, and Adriana Gallardo.
It was produced by Ziad Buchh and Ava Pukatch.
Our director is Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from Neisha Heinis. Our technical director is Carleigh Strange.
(0:00) Introduction
(01:58) Guthrie Investigation
(05:37) Ghislaine Maxwell Deposition
(09:20) Seahawks Win Super Bowl LX
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The Daily - Why Trump Voters Are Torn Over Minneapolis
The question of what to do about undocumented immigrants has long bonded President Trump and his supporters — and an overwhelming majority of them backed his all-out crackdown over the past year.
But then came the extraordinary events of the past few weeks in Minneapolis. Since then, some of Mr. Trump’s voters have begun to have misgivings about his agenda.
“The Daily” spoke with more than a dozen people who voted for him in the last election about how they are making sense of the recent events in Minneapolis.
Background reading:
A conversation with the Minneapolis police chief on ICE and the killing of Renee Good.
Photo: David Guttenfelder / The New York Times
For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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Start Here - Pick Your Battles: Trump’s Latest Feud
The White House deletes a racist social media post from the president’s account, after vociferously defending it. The Guthrie family adjusts its language in messages to potential kidnappers. And Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show sends a stark message, both inside and outside the United States.
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Start the Week - Fun and games
Games are supposed to be fun — so what happens when the logic of games, points and competition escapes the playground and starts reshaping everyday life? The novelist and games-writer Naomi Alderman and her guests explore how the joy of play collides with the pressures of a gamified society.
Philosopher C Thi Nguyen introduces The Score, his examination of how ranking systems and numerical targets can both sharpen and warp our values, revealing how life becomes less playful when everything is reduced to points.
Journalist and critic Keza MacDonald discusses Super Nintendo, her cultural history of the iconic console, tracing how its games, aesthetics and innovations transformed the medium and helped define what play means for generations of players.
The Financial Times' commentator Stephen Bush examines the growing role of games and game like incentives in public life, exploring how the techniques of play — from reward structures to competitive framing — are reshaping political behaviour and communication.
Producer: Katy Hickman
The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 2.9.26
Alabama
- Governor Ivey sets date for 3/12 of first state execution for 2026
- SoS Wes Allen urges state senate to pass bill prohibiting foreign campaign $
- AG's Office looking into Wedowee Utilities after financial audit results
- State lawmaker says "clean" lottery bill filed last week is anything but
- Muckraker's Anthony Rubin talks mass migration as a weapon to dissolve culture
National
- 5th Circuit court rules that illegals arrested do not require bond to be set
- GA judge orders the FBI to release warrant detail on raid of election hub
- PA Senator comes out in favor of the SAVE Act still to be offered in Senate
- TANF program under scrutiny for misuse of funds by government watchdogs
- President Trump gives BAD review of Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Halftime Show
- Kid Rock gets 10M viewers in Half Time Alternative show by Turning Point USA
African Tech Roundup - Natasha Blycha of Stirling & Rose / Nooriam / LexChip: Why AI without law is just code without conscience
Episode overview:
Natasha Blycha's path into emerging technology law started in an unlikely place. As a gap-year volunteer teaching English and economics at a school outside Gweru, Zimbabwe, circa 2000, she was simultaneously working for a small rural law firm on constitutional questions — an experience she credits with shaping the questions that have driven her career since.
In conversation with Andile Masuku, Blycha — who co-authored the Oxford Smart Legal Contracts textbook and was named the Financial Times' Most Innovative Lawyer — traces a line from those early days to advising global banks on whether their crypto experiments were even legal, to building LexChip: technology that embeds enforceable contracts directly into AI-powered devices.
The conversation spans smart contracts (the technical kind and the legally binding kind — they're different), why crypto adoption in Nigeria and Ghana has less to do with speculation and more to do with broken banking infrastructure, and what Jensen Huang's "five-layer AI cake" means for nations trying to build sovereign AI stacks without the energy, chips, or legal infrastructure to hold them together.
Blycha's central argument: if we can't put code in jail, and AI systems are becoming economic stakeholders that can book a million flights or displace entire workforces, then the law as currently designed has a problem. Her proposed contribution — smart legal contracts that act as referees inside AI systems, capable of stopping a device when it breaches its own rules — sits at the intersection of contract law and responsible AI.
Key insights:
- On why this isn't Y2K: "This is so much more complicated, so much more geopolitically complicated. And if we said that Y2K didn't happen, it was one day we got to find out. What we're seeing already with AI systems is we're already getting the proof in the pudding that they are working." Blycha argues Y2K was a manageable vector of complexity compared to AI. The difference: AI systems are actively delivering on their promise, and big tech's mandate to reach AGI means we can't simply wait for one day to find out.
- On why Africa's slower adoption might be an advantage, not a liability: "If I cannot keep the power on, am I really talking about agentic AI?" But Blycha points to a counterintuitive upside: countries without legacy infrastructure can leapfrog, just as India and parts of Africa bypassed landlines for mobile. Crypto adoption in Nigeria and Ghana demonstrates this — populations using blockchain not as a speculative instrument but as functional money in economies where traditional banking fails them.
- On the difference between smart contracts and smart legal contracts: A smart contract is code that executes on a blockchain — "if this happens, do this." It's a technical term, not a legal one. A smart legal contract, by contrast, is a real, enforceable agreement where specific clauses are automated. Blycha uses the example of a lease where rent adjusts automatically based on CPI. The distinction matters because conflating the two obscures where legal accountability actually sits.
- On the fundamental legal problem AI creates: "The law needs a person to ascribe responsibility to." Bitcoin was invented by someone who may not exist. Decentralised autonomous organisations insist the code is responsible, not them. But you can't put code in jail. As AI agents proliferate — booking flights, managing finances, making hiring decisions — the gap between what the technology does and who the law can hold accountable is widening faster than regulators can respond.
- On smart legal contracts as AI's conscience: Through LexChip, Blycha's team is embedding contracts directly into AI edge devices — robotics, autonomous vehicles, hardware with embodied AI. These contracts can monitor behaviour in real time and, critically, act as a referee: stopping a device safely when it breaches its rules. "You've taken an analog thing, you've turned it into a performance-based contract and it can speak to an AI system."
- On Ubuntu as an AI governance framework — with a warning: Blycha was moved by the Ubuntu principle of interconnectedness during a family visit to South Africa. She sees it as a potentially powerful ethical framework for AI policy — but cautions against using it as "window dressing for someone to write a wishy-washy policy that then doesn't deal with the hard stuff." The hard stuff: GPU clusters, cloud compute, sovereign data infrastructure. Values without investment are just declarations.
- On who opposes all of this — and why: Peter Thiel and a portion of Silicon Valley divide the world into accelerators and decelerators. In their framing, lawyers like Blycha are slowing down progress toward a post-human, transhumanist future of brain-computer interfaces and infinite lifespan. Blycha's response: "This is not a lawyers versus the tech bros conversation because there is an extremely large majority of the tech bros who are also saying there is a big problem here."
Notable moments:
1. The first text message: At the Bata Club in Gweru, Zimbabwe, circa 2000 — a social venue attached to a Canadian shoe factory — Blycha saw her first SMS travel between England and Zimbabwe on a feature phone. "It wasn't a smartphone, it was a dead phone." She'd bought her flight to Zimbabwe on the day of the Y2K bug because tickets were cheap. That moment — witnessing a communication revolution in a country experiencing currency crisis and fuel shortages — frames the conversation's central question about technology adoption in constrained environments.
2. The Mennonite test: Visiting Amish communities in Ohio, Blycha learned their approach to technology adoption. "They don't prohibit technology at all. They ask two questions: does this technology bring me closer to my family and does this technology bring me closer to God?" Asked how everyday people should think about adopting AI tools, Blycha offered this as her "heart answer" — a striking conclusion from someone who has spent her career at technology's legal frontier.
3. The McKinsey displacement reality: Blycha points to McKinsey's replacement of significant portions of its workforce with AI agents as evidence that displacement is not theoretical. The legal question this raises: how do you write an employment contract with an AI agent? And when that agent — operating at a scale no human can oversee — breaches the law, the "human in the loop" principle that underpins every AI governance framework starts to break down.
Connect and engage:
- African Tech Roundup: LinkedIn and X
- Andile Masuku: LinkedIn, X, YouTube and Email
- Natasha Blycha: LinkedIn
Resources referenced in this episode:
- Natasha Blycha on Shirtloads of Science podcast
New Books in Indigenous Studies - Jameson R. Sweet, “Mixed-Blood Histories: Race, Law, and Dakota Indians in the Nineteenth-Century Midwest” (U Minnesota Press, 2025)
Historical accounts tend to neglect mixed-ancestry Native Americans: racially and legally differentiated from nonmixed Indigenous people by U.S. government policy, their lives have continually been treated as peripheral to Indigenous societies. Mixed-Blood Histories: Race, Law, and Dakota Indians in the Nineteenth-Century Midwest (U Minnesota Press, 2025) intervenes in this erasure. Using legal, linguistic, and family-historical methods, Dr. Jameson R. Sweet writes mixed-ancestry Dakota individuals back into tribal histories, illuminating the importance of mixed ancestry in shaping and understanding Native and non-Native America from the nineteenth century through today.
When the U.S. government designated mixed-ancestry Indians as a group separate from both Indians and white Americans—a distinction born out of the perception that they were uniquely assimilable as well as manipulable intermediate figures—they were afforded rights under U.S. law unavailable to other Indigenous people, albeit inconsistently, which included citizenship and the rights to vote, serve in public office, testify in court, and buy and sell land. Focusing on key figures and pivotal “mixed-blood histories” for the Dakota nation, Dr. Sweet argues that in most cases, they importantly remained Indians and full participants in Indigenous culture and society. In some cases, they were influential actors in establishing reservations and negotiating sovereign treaties with the U.S. government.
Culminating in a pivotal reexamination of the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862, Mixed-Blood Histories brings greater diversity and complexity to existing understandings of Dakota kinship, culture, and language while offering insights into the solidification of racial categories and hierarchies in the United States.
This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose book focuses on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. You can find Miranda’s interviews on New Books with Miranda Melcher, wherever you get your podcasts.
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Opening Arguments - In 2024, the Bronze Was Unfairly Taken from Jordan Chiles. A Recent Court Win Means She Might Get It Back
Take a break from the downfall of democracy and instead get outraged at the deep injustice of a year-long feud over a bronze medal in women’s gymnastics. This story’s got everything: bravery, racism, the best and the worst of sportsmanship, bad blood that’s been brewing since the Cold War, and, somehow, the Swedish Federal Court. Come for the weird gymnastics scoring rules, stay for the legal analysis of international arbitration rules.
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Rory Carroll (August 5, 2024). Gymnastics - Biles bows to Andrade in floor final at Paris games. Reuters.
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International Gymnastics Federation, Code of Points
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International Gymnastics Federation, Technical Regulations
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English press release from Swiss Federal Court.
Further reading:
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Richard McLaren, The CAS Ad Hoc Division at the Athens Olympic Games, 15 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 175 (2004).
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Video of the relevant floor routines, plus a time stamp for when they all attempt the infamous Gogean leap:
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Rebeca Andrade: 0:55; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXKM8ThtYOE
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Simone Biles: 0:53; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2m2UL5bljw
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Jordan Chiles: 1:29; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kU0769SvbWE
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Ana Bărbosu: 1:06; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik01tvmwV9c
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Sabrina Maneca-Voinea: 1:49; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuF-smKa4Vo
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Check out the OA Linktree for all the places to go and things to do!
What A Day - Why You Can Basically Bet On Anything These Days
Sunday was the Super Bowl, which means betting. A lot of betting. And even if you're not a gambler– and even if you don't particularly care about sports, you've probably noticed that in the last few years, sports betting has gone from obscure to nearly omnipresent. But that's not necessarily for the better. According to a 2025 Pew Research Center survey, "43% of U.S. adults say the fact that sports betting is now legal in much of the country is a bad thing for society." So, we spoke with Hannah Vanbiber, a senior editor at The Athletic, to talk about sports betting ahead of Sunday's big game.
And in headlines, survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein release a Public Service Announcement, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries says Democrats are ready to shut down the government partially, and the Japanese prime minister's governing party secures a supermajority in parliamentary elections.
Show Notes:
- Check out Hannah's reporting – www.nytimes.com/athletic/author/hannah-vanbiber/
- Call Congress – 202-224-3121
- Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8
- What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcast
- Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/
- For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
