Category: Business Insider

  • I’m a millennial who avoided cruises because I thought they were full of germs and kids. My first experience proved me wrong.

    Left: Virgin Voyages Scarlet Lady, right: Eliza Green and her husband on the Dominican Daze cruise.
    Left: Virgin Voyages Scarlet Lady, right: Eliza Green and her husband on the Dominican Daze cruise.

    • Millennial Eliza Green avoided cruises because she felt they were germ-riddled and full of kids.
    • A friend suggested a surprise cruise on Virgin's child-free ship and Green apprehensively agreed. 
    • She loved the ship experience with sizeable rooms and fun activities, but the pace of travel was too quick. 

    This is an as-told-to essay based on a transcribed conversation with millennial Eliza Green, who took her first cruise vacation on Virgin Voyages. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

    I always thought cruise ships were a place to pick up germs from people, especially children. I'd heard nightmare stories of people getting sick, overcrowding, and bad food. But when friends approached my husband and me to go for a 40th birthday, I was willing to try.

    My frequent cruise traveler friend gave us a couple of options. Virgin Voyages sounded particularly appealing. The rooms were affordable, with balconies and no children. Plus, the five-night length felt manageable as a first-time cruiser.

    In October 2023, my husband, two other couples, and I embarked on Virgin Voyage's Scarlet Lady Dominican Daze. We set off from the port in Miami for two stops in Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic and Bimini, Bahamas. For lodging and food for two, it cost $3,234.

    Still skeptical, I went in with little expectations and just the hope of having a good time with friends.

    Cruise food was better than an all-inclusive resort

    The food was a pleasant surprise, far better than the buffet options I'd imagined on other cruises. This was our first cruise, but it was our second all-inclusive-style vacation. Compared to the all-inclusive resort in Jamaica, the cruise had a wider variety of cuisines.

    For a ship that had to serve thousands, the level of food and choices exceeded my expectations. I never ate the same meal twice. The ease of dining was seamless. Food was included in our prepaid rate, so we didn't have to take out our wallets during mealtime or show our cruise wristband.

    There were sit-down restaurants, grab-and-go stations, and dining hall-style venues. We made reservations before our trip since we had a large group and the tables booked up quickly. However, you could walk into restaurants or book upon embarking on the ship through the app.

    There were premium items for an extra cost, such as lobster or wagyu, but they were unneeded because there was already so much food provided. Although alcohol was an extra cost, the prepaid option gave us extra dollars toward drinks, which was a good value.

    The cabin was a needed respite

    Before traveling on a cruise, I'd heard of windowless cabins and cramped rooms. Throughout the journey, I enjoyed spending time in my room, which I hadn't expected.

    I was also concerned about seasickness in a confined space on the water. I came prepared with motion sickness remedies, but it never hit me.

    The room was sizable and nicer than many hotel rooms I have stayed in on land. The cabin felt huge compared to the hotel I'd stayed at in Miami before embarking on the ship.

    We had a bed, seating, and ample closet space, as well as a decent bathroom. I never felt cramped or like I was stumbling around my husband.

    As somewhat of an introvert, the room was a nice respite. When I wanted time to recharge, the hammock on the balcony was a great place to read and gave me an escape, making the trip more relaxing.

    The entertainment wasn't cheesy like I expected

    I hadn't planned to partake in much of the entertainment because I assumed it would be cheesy.

    The quality of the shows and activities defied my expectations. We enjoyed a puzzle contest one night, and another night, when we stumbled upon an entertainment show; the performance was impressive and well-produced with polished performers.

    Virgin did a nice job of giving every traveler their own experience despite being on the same ship.

    The boat's layout made it so we didn't hear noise from the louder late-night parties, and they didn't detract from our vacation. I liked being able to spend time with our friends on the cruise and also seek out our own experiences.

    High-tech amenities meant the service was great

    All the offerings were shared in an app, which we could easily access onboard from our phones. The well-thought-out amenities, such as using a wristband for drinks and not having to show a room card for dinner, made it so we didn't have to think about anything. We truly felt like we were on vacation.

    The bartending staff was friendly, and the service was impressive. Plus, the layout of the boat was easy to navigate. We took advantage of the laundry service for a small fee, as it was reasonable and made our trip more convenient.

    In addition, the boat offered other amenities, such as a gym, gaming areas, spa, and shopping boutiques. They even had a tattoo parlor onboard and a medical-grade spa offering botox. Even though we didn't end up using these additional services, it was still nice to know they were available.

    We could have spent longer at the destinations

    Ironically, the destinations were the most disappointing part of our experience. The cruise made a stop in Puerto Plata and Bimini. Since they were around six hours each, including disembarking and embarking, we didn't get to experience as much of the culture as we would have liked.

    That said, we enjoyed a pre-booked waterfall excursion in the Dominican Republic, which we paid for separately. Bimini felt like an extension of the cruise because we stopped at a Virgin-owned beach club for the day. It was fun, but we wish we could have seen more of the island culture.

    Even despite that, we felt the cruise was a good value. The quality of the food and the room alone made it worth the investment. Plus, the boat was a great way to travel with friends. In the future, we would cruise again, especially if we could have more time at each stop to improve the experience.

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  • Israel’s use of AI to find targets in Gaza offers a terrifying glimpse at where warfare could be headed

    A missile explodes in Gaza City during an Israeli air strike on October 8, 2023.
    A missile explodes in Gaza City during an Israeli air strike on October 8, 2023.

    • Israel's reported use of AI in its war against Hamas is highlighting many of the problems concerning future warfare.
    • Inaccuracy and lack of meaningful human oversight could lead to errors and tragedy. 
    • There are military benefits to AI, but the tools to keep it in check aren't coming fast enough. 

    Artificial intelligence is playing a key and, by some accounts, highly disturbing role in Israel's war in Gaza.

    Recent investigative reports suggest the Israeli military let an AI program take the lead on targeting thousands of Hamas operatives in the early days of the fighting and may have played a part in rash and imprecise kills, rampant destruction, and thousands of civilian casualties. The IDF flatly rejects this assertion.

    The reporting offers a terrifying glimpse into where warfare could be headed, experts told Business Insider, and a clear example of how bad things can get if humans take a back seat to new technology like AI, especially in life-or-death matters.

    "It's been the central argument when we've been talking about autonomous systems, AI, and lethality in war," Mick Ryan, a retired Australian major general and strategist focusing on evolutions in warfare, told BI. "The decision to kill a human is a very big one."

    Israeli soldiers in an armoured personnel carrier head towards the southern border with the Gaza Strip on October 8, 2023 in Sderot, Israel.
    Israeli soldiers in an armoured personnel carrier head towards the southern border with the Gaza Strip on October 8, 2023 in Sderot, Israel.

    Earlier this month, a joint investigation by +972 Magazine and Local Call revealed Israel's Defense Force had been using an AI program named "Lavender" to generate suspected Hamas targets on the Gaza Strip, citing interviews with six anonymous Israeli intelligence officers.

    The report alleges the IDF heavily relied on Lavender and essentially treated its information on who to kill "as if it were a human decision," sources said. Once a Palestinian was linked to Hamas and their home was located, sources said, the IDF effectively rubber-stamped the machine decision, barely taking more than a few seconds to review it themselves.

    The speed of Israel's targeting put little effort into trying to reduce the harm to civilians nearby, the joint investigation found.

    Last fall, details of Israel's Gospel program came to light, revealing that the system took Israel's target generation ability from roughly 50 a year to more than 100 each day.

    When asked about the report on Lavender, the IDF referred BI to a statement posted on X by IDF spokesperson Lt. Col. (S.) Nadav Shoshani, who wrote last week that "The IDF does not use AI systems that choose targets for attack. Any other claim shows lack of sufficient knowledge of IDF processes."

    Shoshani characterized the system as a cross-checking database that "is designed to aid human analysis, not to replace it." But there are potential risks all the same.

    Israel isn't the only country exploring the potential of AI in warfare, and this research is coupled with increasing focus on the use of unmanned systems, as the world is frequently seeing in Ukraine and elsewhere. In this space, anxieties over killer robots are no longer science fiction.

    "Just as AI is becoming more commonplace in our work and personal lives, so too in our wars," Peter Singer, a future warfare expert at the New America think tank, told BI, explaining that "we are living through a new industrial revolution, and just like the last one with mechanization, our world is being transformed, both for better and for worse."

    AI is developing faster than the tools to keep it in check

    Experts said that Israel's reported use of Lavender raises a host of concerns that have long been at the heart of the debate on AI in future warfare.

    Many countries, including the US, Russia, and China, have been prioritizing the implementation of AI programs into their militaries. The US' Project Maven, which has since 2017 made major strides to assist troops on-the-ground by sifting through overwhelming amounts of incoming data, is just one example.

    The technology, however, has often developed at faster pace than governments can keep up.

    This picture taken on March 17, 2021 in the Israeli coastal city of Hadera shows several simultaneous flights of numerous unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, or drones) as part of the main demonstration performed by the companies who won the tender for the project.
    This picture taken on March 17, 2021 in the Israeli coastal city of Hadera shows several simultaneous flights of numerous unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, or drones) as part of the main demonstration performed by the companies who won the tender for the project.

    According to Ryan, the general trend "is that technology and battlefield requirements are outstripping the consideration of the legal and ethical issues around the application of AI in warfare."

    In other words, things are moving too quickly.

    "There's just no way that current government and bureaucratic systems of policymaking around these things could keep up," Ryan said, adding that they may "never catch up."

    Last November, many governments raised concerns at a United Nations conference that new laws were needed to govern the use of lethal autonomous programs, AI-driven machines involved in making decisions to kill human beings.

    But some nations, particularly ones who are currently leading the way in developing and deploying these technologies, were reluctant to impose new restrictions. Namely, the US, Russia, and Israel all appeared particularly hesitant to support new international laws on the matter.

    "Many militaries have said, 'Trust us, we'll be responsible with this technology,'" Paul Scharre, an autonomous weapons expert at the Center for New American Security, told BI. But many people are not likely to trust a lack of oversight, and the use of AI by some countries, such as Israel, doesn't give much confidence that militaries are always going to use the new technology responsibly.

    Smoke plumes billow during Israeli air strikes in Gaza City on October 12, 2023.
    Smoke plumes billow during Israeli air strikes in Gaza City on October 12, 2023.

    A program such as Lavender, as it has been reported, doesn't sound like science fiction, Scharre said, and is very in line with how global militaries are aiming to use AI.

    A military would be "going through this process of collecting information, analyzing it, making sense of it, and making the decisions about which targets to attack, whether they're people as part of some insurgent network or organization, or they could be military objectives like tanks or artillery pieces," he told BI.

    The next step is moving all of that information into a targeting plan, linking it to specific weapons or platforms, and then actually acting on the plan.

    It's time-consuming, and in Israel's case, there's likely been a desire to develop a lot of targets very quickly, Scharre said.

    Experts have expressed concerns over the accuracy of such AI targeting programs. Israel's Lavender program reportedly pulls data from a variety of information channels, such as social media and phone usage, to determine targets.

    In the +972 Magazine and Local Call report, sources say the program's 90% accuracy rate was deemed acceptable. The glaring issue there is the remaining 10%. That's a substantial number of errors given the scale of Israel's air war and the significant increase in available targets provided by AI.

    And the AI is always learning, for better or for worse. With every use, these programs gain knowledge and experience that they then employ in future decision-making. With an accuracy rate of 90%, as the reporting indicates, Lavender's machine learning could be reinforcing both its correct and incorrect kills, Ryan told BI. "We just don't know," he said.

    Letting AI do the decision-making in war

    Future warfare could see AI working in tandem with humans to process vast amounts of data and suggest potential courses of action in the heat of battle. But there are several possibilities that could taint such a partnership.

    The gathered data could be too much for humans to process or understand. If an AI program is processing massive amounts of information to make a list of possible targets, it could reach a point where humans are quickly overwhelmed and unable to meaningfully contribute to decision-making.

    There's also the possibility of moving too quickly and making assumptions based on the data, which increases the likelihood that mistakes are made.

    People inspect damage and remove items from their homes following Israeli airstrikes on April 07, 2024 in Khan Yunis, Gaza.
    People inspect damage and remove items from their homes following Israeli airstrikes on April 07, 2024 in Khan Yunis, Gaza.

    International Committee Red Cross Military and Armed Group Adviser Ruben Stewart and Legal Adviser Georgia Hinds wrote about such a problem back in October 2023.

    "One touted military advantage of AI is the increase in tempo of decision-making it would give a user over their adversary. Increased tempo often creates additional risks to civilians, which is why techniques that reduce the tempo, such as 'tactical patience,' are employed to reduce civilian casualties," they said.

    In the quest to move quickly, humans could take their hands off the wheel, trusting the AI with little oversight.

    According to the +972 Magazine and Local Call report, AI-picked targets were only reviewed for about 20 seconds, typically just to ensure the potential kill was male, before a strike was authorized.

    The recent reporting raises serious questions about to what extent a human being was "in the loop" during the decision-making process. According to Singer, it's also a potential "illustration of what is sometimes known as 'automation bias,'" which is a situation "where the human deludes themselves into thinking that because the machine provided the answer, it must be true."

    "So while a human is 'in the loop,' they aren't doing the job that is assumed of them," Singer added.

    Last October, UN Secretary-General António Guterres and the President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Mirjana Spoljaric, made a joint call that militaries "must act now to preserve human control over the use of force" in combat.

    "Human control must be retained in life and death decisions. The autonomous targeting of humans by machines is a moral line that we must not cross," they said. "Machines with the power and discretion to take lives without human involvement should be prohibited by international law."

    Israeli soldiers stand near tanks and armored personnel carrier near the border with the Gaza Strip on April 10, 2024, in Southern Israel.
    Israeli soldiers stand near tanks and armored personnel carrier near the border with the Gaza Strip on April 10, 2024, in Southern Israel.

    But while there are risks, AI could have many military benefits, such as helping humans process a wide range of data and sources in order to allow them to make informed decisions, as well as survey a variety of options for how to handle situations.

    A meaningful "human in the loop" cooperation could be useful, but at the end of the day, it comes down to the human holding up their end of such a relationship — in other words, retaining authority and control of the AI.

    "For the entirety of human existence, we've been tool and machine users," Ryan, the retired major general, said. "We are the masters of machines, whether you're piloting aircraft, driving a ship or tank."

    But with many of these new autonomous systems and algorithms, he said, militaries won't be using machines, but rather "partnering with them."

    Many militaries aren't prepared for such a shift. As Ryan and Clint Hinote wrote in a War on the Rocks commentary earlier this year, "in the coming decade, military institutions may realize a situation where uncrewed systems outnumber humans."

    At present, the tactics, training, and leadership models of military institutions are designed for military organizations that are primarily human, and those humans exercise close control of the machines," they wrote.

    "Changing education and training to prepare humans for partnering with machines — not just using them — is a necessary but difficult cultural evolution," they said. But that remains a work in progress for many militaries.

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  • US says Iran readying as many as 100 cruise missiles for possible strike on Israel, reports say

    The flags of Iran, left, and Israel, right.
    The flags of Iran, left, and Israel, right.

    • The US expects Iran will carry out a number of strikes on Israel.
    • President Joe Biden issued a warning to Iran, advising them against attacking.
    • It comes after Israel killed Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp  officials in an airstrike in Syria.

    The US expects Iran will carry out a number of strikes on Israel as tensions rise in the Middle East, a senior administration official and a source familiar with the intelligence said, per CNN.

    One of the people said that US officials believe Iran could be readying as many as 100 cruise missiles for an attack, the report said. ABC News carried a similar report.

    Both sources said Iran had been moving military assets, including drones and missiles, in preparation for a possible attack on the Jewish state.

    It comes after Israel killed seven Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC) officials in an airstrike earlier this month.

    "There is a real risk that Iranian-backed groups will intensify their targeting of US forces and Israel in response to this latest attack, leading to heightened escalations in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and possibly Jordan," Haid Haid, a consulting fellow in the think tank Chatham House's Middle East and North Africa Programme said in a report.

    On Friday, the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel from its Lebanon base, some of which were shot down by Israel's Iron Dome defenses, reports said.

    President Joe Biden issued a simple but stark warning to Iran following the reports, saying: "Don't," while also warning that he expected an attack "sooner than later."

    "We are devoted to the defense of Israel. We will support Israel," he added. "We will help defend Israel and Iran will not succeed."

    The US has responded to the latest threat with plans to dispatch its warships, including the aircraft carrier the USS Dwight D Eisenhower, a cruiser, and two destroyers, closer to Israel, reports said.

    Tensions between Israel and Iran have ramped up since Israel's military campaign in the Gaza Strip, following the October 7 terrorist attacks, when Hamas militants killed an estimated 1,200 people in Israel.

    The Israeli counteroffensive has killed more than 32,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.

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  • Kamala Harris leads Biden’s charge on abortion rights

    Kamala Harris speaks at a rally to restore Roe v. Wade and nationwide abortion rights
    Vice President Kamala Harris has taken the lead in the Biden campaign's push to highlight abortion rights on the campaign trail.

    • Kamala Harris has become the face of the Biden's campaign attacks on Trump's abortion rights record.
    • Harris tore into Trump during a Friday rally in the battleground state of Arizona.
    • The former president has tried to pivot away from the topic.

    Vice President Kamala Harris is making sure abortion rights stay at the forefront of the 2024 campaign.

    Harris repeatedly tore into former President Donald Trump during a Friday evening campaign appearance in Arizona, arguing that he is solely responsible for the state Supreme Court upholding an 1864 law that would outlaw virtually all abortions.

    "Donald Trump is the architect of this healthcare crisis, that is not a fact that he hides," Harris said at a rally in Tucson. "In fact, he brags about it."

    The vice president has long been outspoken in her advocacy for reproductive rights. She is the first president or vice president to visit an abortion clinic, an appearance that would have been unthinkable even a few years ago. Harris has also been holding a series of events since January focused on reproductive rights, though, unlike those past rallies, the Biden-Harris reelection campaign hosted Friday's event.

    Unlike President Joe Biden, Harris doesn't seem to have the same compunction he does in talking about the issue. According to The New York Times, Harris even advocated for her appearance in Tucson, home to the University of Arizona, to focus on abortion rights instead of student debt before the state Supreme Court released its controversial 4-2 ruling.

    Harris has consistently pushed her party on the issue. During the 2020 Democratic presidential run, then-Sen. Harris said states with a history of restricting abortion rights should be forced to get federal approval before enacting new laws. This system would have mirrored the preclearance requirements for voting laws under the Voting Rights Act of 1965. At the same time, Biden struggled before following the progressive push to end his decadeslong support for the Hyde Amendment, which restricts federal funding for abortion.

    Separately from Harris, the Biden campaign has released multiple ads focused explicitly on abortion. The campaign also announced that it will spend seven figures in an ad blitz focused on abortion rights in Arizona. In a new ad, Biden looks directly at the camera, vowing to "fight like hell" for millions of Arizona women who lost their reproductive freedom after the Dobbs decision.

    Republicans, including Trump, were quick to condemn the state court's decision but are still grappling with the political reality of the US Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade. The former president has repeatedly bragged about his role in appointing the three justices that provided the necessary margin for the high court to issue its landmark ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson.

    Trump has unsuccessfully tried to pivot away from abortion.

    Trump, of course, had no say in appointing any of the seven Arizona Supreme Court justices. All seven, including the one justice who recused himself from the case after his Facebook Post calling abortion "the greatest genocide known to man" resurfaced, were appointed by GOP governors. On Friday, before Harris' rally, Trump publicly pleaded for the Arizona legislature to repeal the 1864 law.

    "The Supreme Court in Arizona went too far on their Abortion Ruling, enacting and approving an inappropriate Law from 1864," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "So now the Governor and the Arizona Legislature must use HEART, COMMON SENSE, and ACT IMMEDIATELY, to remedy what has happened."

    Even before the Arizona ruling, the former president tried to wash his hands of the topic.

    Trump said that the future of abortion rights should be determined at the state level either by legislation, at the ballot box, or a combination of both. His declaration left many questions unanswered, particularly given his shifting views.

    Some political allies were also disappointed Trump no longer favored a nationwide abortion ban. Trump's White House supported legislation that would have banned abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, with exceptions in the case of rape, incest, or the life of the mother. On Friday, speaking alongside Speaker Mike Johnson, Trump said that he no longer needed to support a nationwide abortion ban since Roe was reversed.

    "We broke Roe v. Wade, and we did something that nobody thought was possible — we gave it back to the states and the states are working very brilliantly, in some cases conservative and in some cases not conservative, but they are working and it's working the way it's supposed to," Trump said.

    Harris referenced Trump's comments during her speech and said Americans shouldn't be gaslit into thinking that the former president wouldn't support a ban.

    "Here is what a second Trump term looks like — more bans, more suffering, and less freedom," she said. "Just like he did in Arizona, he basically wants to take America back to the 1800s. But we are not going to let that happen."

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  • Israel is struggling to find and kill the top Hamas commanders it wants most

    Israeli soldiers drive an tanks on the border with the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel on Feb. 13, 2024.
    Israeli soldiers drive an tanks on the border with the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel on Feb. 13, 2024.

    • More than six months after Hamas' Oct. 7 massacre, Israel is still fighting the militants in Gaza.
    • The IDF has managed to kill some of Hamas' top commanders, but it continues to hunt down others.
    • These individuals are likely hiding underground, a top White House official said last month.

    More than six months into its war in Gaza, Israel has little to show for its efforts. It has been unable to kill or capture the most senior members of Hamas' leadership, and its scorched-earth offensive has left a trail of death and destruction in its wake.

    Israel's inability thus far to eliminate the top Hamas commanders it wants most is complicating ones of its stated war aims: crushing the militant group. Officials have said that the devastating war — triggered by Hamas' Oct. 7 massacre that killed some 1,200 people — will continue until the country achieves its goals, which include returning all the hostages, destroying Hamas, and demilitarizing the entirety of Gaza.

    But securing these objectives in full is proving to be elusive for the Israel Defense Forces, or IDF. Fears are growing that many of the remaining hostages may already be dead, Israeli clearing operations throughout Gaza have not prevented Hamas from returning to areas that were once the sites of hard-fought and bloody battles, and there doesn't seem to be a clear consensus on a workable post-war governance plan.

    Israel has claimed that it has eliminated a significant number of mid- to senior-level commanders of Hamas' military wing, known as the al-Qassam Brigades. In December, for instance, the IDF released a photo purporting to show multiple commanders it had killed.

    Israeli soldiers are seen near the Gaza Strip border in southern Israel on March 4, 2024.
    Israeli soldiers are seen near the Gaza Strip border in southern Israel on March 4, 2024.

    A mid-March Israeli airstrike killed Marwan Issa, the deputy head of Hamas' military wing who had been hiding in an underground compound in central Gaza, according to the IDF.

    Jake Sullivan, who serves as the White House national security advisor, identified Issa as Hamas' "number three" in Gaza and said that after his death last month that Israel had "killed thousands of Hamas fighters, including senior commanders."

    The exact number of militants killed is unclear. Israel said in late-February that it had killed 12,000 members of Hamas' 30,000-strong pre-war force. Hamas, by contrast, claimed at the time that its death toll was only half of that figure.

    As of this week, more than 33,000 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7, including 25,000 women and children, according to figures released by Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry. The death toll, which is cited by the United Nations, does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

    Palestinians walk through the destruction in the wake of an Israeli air and ground offensive in Khan Younis on April 8, 2024.
    Palestinians walk through the destruction in the wake of an Israeli air and ground offensive in Khan Younis on April 8, 2024.

    Israel has also managed to strike at Hamas' political wing, which operates in exile in Qatar.

    An early January explosion in a Beirut suburb eliminated Saleh al-Arouri, the deputy head of Hamas' political bureau, which is often referred to as its politburo. He was the militant group's senior official in Lebanon, responsible for maintaining ties with Hezbollah, another Iran-backed proxy force like Hamas.

    And more recently, on Wednesday, the IDF and Israel's Shin Bet security agency confirmed in a joint announcement that an airstrike in central Gaza had killed three sons of Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas' political wing.

    All three men were known to be Hamas military operatives, Israel said. Haniyeh responded to their deaths by stating that this incident would not change his demands to stop the fighting.

    Smoke rises to the sky after an explosion in Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel on April 4, 2024.
    Smoke rises to the sky after an explosion in Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel on April 4, 2024.

    But several top Hamas military leaders, including those most wanted by Israel, remain at-large.

    This includes figures such as Yahya Sinwar, the overall head of the organization in Gaza, his brother Mohammed, a leader in the al-Qassam Brigades, and Mohammed Deif, who is the commander of the military wing.

    "The rest of the top leaders are in hiding, likely deep in the Hamas tunnel network," Sullivan said during a March White House briefing. "And justice will come for them too, and we are helping to ensure that."

    Hamas' vast and sophisticated tunnel network underneath Gaza — where the militants have been able to hide and facilitate the movement of weapons, and from which they can launch surprise assaults — has proven to be a headache for Israeli forces.

    Retired Maj. Gen. Charlie Herbert, a former officer in the British army, told Business Insider that Hamas leaders who are hiding below ground are able to maintain operational, personal, and communications security there.

    A supporter of the Iran-backed Houthi militia holds a poster of Yahya Sinwar during a protest marking Jerusalem Day in support of Palestinians in Yemen on April 5, 2024.
    A supporter of the Iran-backed Houthi militia holds a poster of Yahya Sinwar during a protest marking Jerusalem Day in support of Palestinians in Yemen on April 5, 2024.

    Israel's inability to kill them is less of an intelligence failure, said Herbert, who has also served as the senior NATO advisor to Afghanistan's interior ministry, and more that the country has yet to link any intelligence success it does have with an effective kinetic strike targeting the senior leaders.

    Israel has found "no real success" at getting Sinwar over the last six months, Herbert said.

    What it needs to do instead, he argued, is pivot away from major combat operations toward a more targeted and methodical campaign that also reduces civilian casualties, allows displaced Palestinians to return to their homes, and boosts the flow of humanitarian aid into the besieged enclave.

    Herbert said the Israeli military should "retain freedom of maneuver into Gaza for their military forces as and when they require and conduct an intelligence-driven counter-terrorist strategy, whacking Hamas as and when you can do."

    Indeed, on Thursday, the IDF announced it was beginning a "precise operation" in central Gaza, seemingly marking a new phase in its efforts to hunt down Hamas leaders. It was unclear if the move came in direct response to the killings of Haniyeh's sons the day prior.

    Israeli soldiers work on tanks at a staging ground near the border with the Gaza Strip in southern Israel on April 11, 2024.
    Israeli soldiers work on tanks at a staging ground near the border with the Gaza Strip in southern Israel on April 11, 2024.

    "Overnight, the 162nd Division began a precise, intelligence-based operation to eliminate terrorist operatives and strike terrorist infrastructure in central Gaza," the IDF said in a statement shared to the Telegram messaging platform. What that may look like is a mystery though.

    The IDF announcement came just days after the IDF withdrew its forces from the southern city of Khan Younis. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said the move was to prepare for "future missions," including a planned offensive in Rafah, where scores of civilians are sheltering.

    The potential Rafah assault has drawn concern and pushback from Western governments, including the Biden administration, amid rising international criticism of Israel's aggressive military campaign as the death toll continues to mount and the humanitarian situation in Gaza continues to worsen.

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  • Some Cybertruck owners report getting red warning screen alerts within days of taking delivery

    Cybertruck
    The Cybertruck launched last year.

    • Some Cybertruck owners are reporting issues they say occurred shortly after delivery.
    • BI counted six owners online saying they've faced a "critical steering error" warning message.
    • The issue appears to cause the EV to slow to a few miles per hour and flash a red warning screen.

    Some Cybertruck owners are taking to the internet to report issues with their new Tesla pickup truck. Several say the issues started within days of receiving the vehicle.

    Last week, Thomas Remo, known for his YouTube channel "Gear Down," shared a video of his Cybertruck appearing to break down just moments after it was delivered.

    In the video, Remo has just started to drive the vehicle onto the road when the truck begins to beep and its infotainment system flashes red with the alert: "PULL OVER SAFELY Critical steering issue detected."

    The warning message says the truck's system has detected a "high voltage system error" and service is required as the electric vehicle may not be able to restart, according to multiple pictures of the error screen posted online.

    As the warning message flashes, Remo's truck appears to gradually slow to a few miles per hour.

    "My foot is on the floor and it's not moving," Remo said in the video.

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZZP0eVQcAA?feature=oembed&w=560&h=315]

    The YouTuber was able to reset the vehicle by turning it off and back on again, but said he experienced the issue four more times within 44 miles of driving it when he attempted to accelerate with the truck in "Beast Mode," a driving mode similar to the Ludicrous mode which allows a Tesla to accelerate faster.

    The vehicle was eventually towed to a Tesla service center, Remo said in the video.

    "This car — it just doesn't work," he said. "This car is a lemon."

    According to a screenshot Remo shared online that he said showed the invoice from Tesla's service center, the company said the issue was the result of a low voltage harness that connects to the ancillary bay. The technicians replaced the ancillary bay and ancillary cover at no cost to the owner, according to the invoice.

    Multiple owners have reported the same issue

    At least five others who identified themselves as Cybertruck owners online have posted that they had seen the same warning screen. One Cybertruck owner on a Cybertruck owners forum said they'd seen the warning message, but had less success resetting the vehicle.

    "It was great for 5 minutes.. tried everything, restarting, screen is stuck black and keeps beeping," they wrote on the forum. "Tesla really rushed these trucks out, what a nightmare."

    Another owner said they'd kept driving the vehicle over time for about 2,000 miles and seen it happen "randomly."

    "I just get out, lock the car, wait a few seconds, get back in and it usually works again," the owner said on the Cybertruck forum, adding that they sometimes have to repeat the process two to three times and are waiting for the parts to come in to fix it at a service center.

    Tesla and Remo did not respond to a request for comment.

    According to the Cybertruck owner's manual, the issue is not indicative of a steering problem.

    "This alert indicates a possible issue with one of the multiple redundant sensors and actuators designed to make sure the steer-by-wire system always remains available while driving," the manual says.

    The alert can be cleared by exiting and re-entering the truck, according to the manual.

    "If you attempt this successfully, and no further alert messages display in the touchscreen indicating potential steering issues or inability to drive, continue to your destination," the manual reads. "If this alert occurs again during your next drive, or occurs multiple times over subsequent drives, it is recommended that you schedule service."

    It's not the only issue Cybertruck owners are flagging online — owners have also pointed out issues with the ADAS system and charging. Since the truck's release last November, a Reddit forum dedicated to examples of the truck running into issues, r/Cyberstuck, has taken off, garnering 10,000 members.

    It's unclear how many Cybertruck owners have experienced issues with the truck or what percentage the alleged issues represent overall. Many have shared positive experiences with the vehicle. In his first test of living with the truck, tech YouTuber Marques Brownlee said he was impressed by the vehicle.

    "I think they really got themselves something solid here," Brownlee said at the time.

    Cybertruck owners have also proven to be a resilient bunch. After some owners began spotting rust specks on the truck earlier this year, the owners told Business Insider they were unfazed by the issue. They were quick to find ways to tackle it — sharing hacks for cleaning the truck and purchasing wraps to protect the stainless steel exterior.

    Do you work for Tesla, own one, or have a tip? Reach out to the reporter via a non-work email and device at gkay@businessinsider.com

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  • The possibility of Ukraine’s army collapsing cannot be ruled out a US official has warned, report says

    Ukraine servicemen
    Ukrainian servicemen fighting off Russian troops in Donetsk Oblast, April 7, 2024

    • The collapse of Ukraine's army cannot be ruled out, a US official told Bloomberg.
    • Russia has been advancing on the battlefield in recent weeks.
    • Ukraine's ammunition supplies and air defense capabilities are dwindling, say reports.

    The possibility of Ukraine's army collapsing cannot be ruled out, an unnamed US official told Bloomberg.

    The report said, citing talks with multiple officials, that Ukraine's position on the battlefield is at its most fragile moment since Russia's full-scale invasion began in February 2022

    Ukraine's war effort has been weakened in recent months by a severe shortage of ammunition, dipping morale among Ukrainian soldiers, and the impasse in Congress over US aid to Ukraine, Bloomberg reported.

    One major risk is a collapse of Ukraine's line of defense, which would allow Russia to make a major advance, Bloomberg said, citing an official speaking anonymously.

    In recent weeks, building on its capture of Avdiivka, Russia has advanced incrementally in eastern Ukraine, claiming new territory and threatening the town of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region.

    Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said Friday that the government would allocate a further Hr 3.88 billion (almost $100 million) to help reinforce fortifications, primarily in the Kharkiv and Sumy regions, which sit near Russia's border.

    However, The Wall Street Journal reported in March that although Ukrainian troops were building fortifications in preparation for an oncoming Russian offensive, there are fears that not enough progress is being made.

    "What's happening right now is what Russia has spent a long time preparing for. It has gathered enough forces and resources to pressure various axes all at once," Maksym Zhorin, the deputy commander of the Third Assault Brigade, told the WSJ.

    Meanwhile, Russia appears to have largely replaced its heavy battlefield losses, and at a much faster pace than anticipated, top US General Christopher Cavoli warned lawmakers on April 11.

    "Russia is reconstituting that force far faster than our initial estimates suggested," Cavoli said in a statement to Congress. "The army is actually now larger — by 15 percent — than it was when it invaded Ukraine."

    Ukraine's air defense capabilities are also showing vulnerabilities, as more Russian missiles and drones are hitting targets such as critical infrastructure facilities. The largest power plant delivering energy to Kyiv was destroyed Thursday raising concerns that Ukraine might be running out of surface-to-air missiles to counter Russian airstrikes, The Washington Post reported Friday.

    "We need air defense systems and other defense assistance, not just turning a blind eye and having lengthy discussions," President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a post on X.

    US aid to Ukraine

    A new $60 billion US military aid has been held up in Congress since December due to opposition from some Republicans.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Joe Biden shake hands during a meeting inside the East Room at the White House on Thursday, September 21, 2023. Biden announced that Ukraine would be receiving American M1 Abrams tanks before 2024.
    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and President Joe Biden meet at the White House in September 2023.

    The White House has tried to keep at least some aid passing through, sending $300 million in additional weapons last month and an emergency $138 million for upgrades to a key missile defense system, HAWK, earlier this week.

    "If Congress does not help Ukraine, then Ukraine will lose the war," Zelenskyy warned Sunday to a group of celebrity ambassadors.

    Zelenskyy said last week he remained hopeful of a "positive vote" in Congress, and suggested that Kyiv would be willing to receive the aid as a loan rather than a handout, an idea originally put forward by Donald Trump.

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  • It’s been a year since I graduated from college, and I still live at home. My therapist says I have post-graduation depression.

    the back of a woman walking away with a backpack
    The author, not pictured, is a recent college grad.

    • I graduated from college a year ago and couldn't get a job, so I now live with my mom.
    • My therapist told me I have post-graduation anxiety and depression.
    • Im trying to see the bright side of this time in my life. 

    I remember the day I graduated from college like it was yesterday. After five years of intense studying, I was thrilled to be done with the college phase of my life.

    The graduation party with all my college friends was truly memorable. We were all so excited about the end of late-night reading. The atmosphere was electric, and everyone was having so much fun.

    I was most excited about the prospect of independence. I was on the precipice of being able to live my life on my own terms — and I was truly optimistic about the future.

    But a year has passed since graduation, and I'm now jobless, depressed, and confused about my future.

    Post-grad life is nothing like I expected

    I had always thought that my best life would begin after college, and I had no idea how unprepared I was for the reality of living in today's world.

    I currently live at home with my mom; I had to move back in when I couldn't keep up with the bills since I was unemployed. In the last year, I seem to have lost touch with most of my college friends, and the few I've kept in touch with all seem to have their lives pretty figured out; they all seem to be starting new careers, traveling, or getting married.

    I feel like some sheer cosmic force has left me behind. 

    I was never known to get beat up about life; I was the positive, upbeat friend who always encouraged others to have a positive outlook. So, my new take on life has been particularly surprising to my family and friends, but it has been surprising to me most of all.

    Most days, I ask: What went wrong? What did I not do right? Is it possible I missed a step, and maybe that is why I got left in the funk? But my questions are just that, and no one seems to have an answer.

    Instead, I am stuck going through the motions of living without really living. In the time I have been back home, I haven't missed a family gathering nor stopped hanging out with my childhood friends, and to most of them, I seem to have it all figured out. I don't bother correcting this impression, but looks can be deceiving. I know I am going through life numb, yet I have no idea how to stop it.

    My therapist gave me an interesting diagnosis

    After discussing these issues with my therapist, she told me I have post-graduation anxiety and depression. She told me she sees this issue among many college graduates she works with, especially recently.

    My therapist insists I find pleasure in doing the little things, but that is easier said than done. One day, I feel just fine and start thinking maybe this depression is finally over, and the next, I am back to where I began. My biggest fear has been: Will this feeling ever truly go away, or is this my new normal? I don't want it to be. 

    But here is an unexpected twist: In the last year I've been home, I have learned so much about myself amid all my struggles. I have been able to answer questions like who I am and what I really want when I take away the expectations of others. I'm gradually realizing I have never had a time off where I had no achievement to attain.

    For the first time, I am truly just living, which is not bad. Maybe my body has not been living but rather just moving to an auto-response, and maybe that's why I am releasing all the stored-up energy.

    I may never truly know the answers to all these questions, but I know I have decided to live my life without an outline, taking it one day at a time and doing my best with what I have been given.

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  • Millennials aren’t giving up on having a home they love

    buying a home

    Welcome back to our Saturday edition! With the weather heating up, it's time to hose down your weathered furniture and spruce up your outdoor space. We asked gardeners and exterior designers how to make your outside feel as cozy as your inside.

    Now let's get into a roundup of some of our top stories.

    On the agenda:

    But first: Who needs homeownership?


    If this was forwarded to you, sign up here. Download Insider's app here.


    Young millennial woman holding a paint roller, seen from behind, in the process of painting over an upward trending line

    This week's dispatch

    The HGTV-ification of millennials

    Millennials know just how hard it is to buy a home. From the home shortage to having higher debt compared to their parents during the same stage of life, it hasn't been easy.

    But millennials, the eldest of the group being in their early 40s, aren't giving up. In fact, in 2022, homeownership for the cohort was above 50% for the first time, reports BI.

    Still, while some millennials are spending seven figures buying and renovating their homes, others are giving up on homeownership completely. Instead, they're reprioritizing how they're spending their money and what they're choosing to invest in.

    Brigette Muller told Business Insider she'd rather invest in her Brooklyn apartment. The 36-year-old spent $20,000 renovating her rental — and said she has no regrets.

    "I just want to have a space that I feel good in," she said.


    Camogli, Liguria, Italy

    WFI (Work From Italy)

    If you've ever considered fleeing the country to work as a digital nomad, now might be your chance.

    Italy launched its digital nomad visa, a long-anticipated pass to live and work in the country. Non-EU or Swiss citizens can now apply for the visa, which lasts for one year.

    See if you fit the requirements.


    An illustration of two office chairs leaning together, apparently in love.

    Your secret work crush

    It's not just you — half of workers have an office crush. After all, we spend much of our waking lives at work, making it natural to develop feelings for the people around us.

    And while they have the power to bring out some of our best work, they can also turn an enjoyable office experience into a soul-crushing one.

    How the office spurs workplace attraction.


    masters merch store gnome
    Patrons at the Masters tournament lug around multiple bags, including the hottest item of all: the garden gnome.

    Masters merch feeding frenzy

    The Masters Tournament, which started on Thursday, is the most exclusive event in golf. For those lucky enough to snag a ticket, merch is the way to show off that good fortune.

    Items boasting the Masters logo — think hats, shirts, and even a garden gnome — have become elite status symbols.

    Why Masters merch is so coveted.

    Also read:


    stock image of chickpea salad (left) Rob Hobson sitting at a table (right).
    Rob Hobson started to cut down on UPFs last year

    Skip the ultra-processed foods

    After learning about the potential health risks of ultra-processed foods, nutritionist Rob Hobson decided to eat as few of them as possible.

    Before reducing his UPF consumption, Hobson would eat a whole wheat bagel with ham and avocado for lunch. He's since turned away from processed meats and stopped including bagels in his lunchtime routine.

    Here's what his lunch looks like now.


    A television with an interference screen

    What we're watching this weekend

    • "Patti Stanger: The Matchmaker": The millionaire matchmaker is back and as unfiltered as ever.

    • "Fallout": Check out Amazon's masterful adaptation of the beloved video game series.

    • "The Sympathizer": Robert Downey Jr. plays multiple characters in HBO's show based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.

    • "Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion": HBO's newest documentary features reporting on the teen cult brand from BI reporter Kate Taylor.

    See the full list.


    More of this week's top reads:


    The Insider Today team: Joi-Marie McKenzie, editor-in-chief, in New York. Jordan Parker Erb, editor, in New York. Dan DeFrancesco, deputy editor and anchor, in New York. Lisa Ryan, executive editor, in New York.

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  • The US is betting big on AI chips, but there’s a giant flaw in the plan

    Purdue University
    Purdue University is newly flush with about $4 billion in investment to build a semiconductor manufacturing complex.

    • The Biden administration is subsidizing the semiconductor industry to boost US chip production.
    • But the US doesn't have enough workers in the AI chip manufacturing sector.
    • Universities can be a key place for recruiting new talent.

    The US desperately needs more workers to build AI chips.

    The semiconductor industry is responsible for building AI chips, but over the past two decades, the number of workers in American semiconductor manufacturing has dropped sharply, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    That decline in workers corresponded with a decline in the US share of the global chip-making market. Between 1990 and 2020, the number of chips made in the United States fell by a third. In that same period, Taiwan, China, and South Korea's combined share grew by almost 60%, the Journal reported.

    The United States is eager to control chip manufacturing as artificial intelligence becomes critical in national and international security. Since "general-purpose AI software, datasets, and algorithms are not effective targets for controls, the attention naturally falls on the computer hardware necessary to implement modern AI systems," Saif M. Khan and Alexander Mann wrote in a Center for Security and Emerging Technology report.

    An edge in chip manufacturing would help the United States maintain global dominance. "Given the foundational nature of certain technologies, such as advanced logic and memory chips, we must maintain as large of a lead as possible," national security advisor Jake Sullivan said in a speech in 2022.

    Chip manufacturing, however, is the industry's largest cost driver, according to a report from McKinsey & Company. And manufacturing in the United States has only become more expensive.

    So the Biden administration is providing billions of dollars for semiconductor research, development, manufacturing, and workforce development through the CHIPS and Science Act.

    Leading chip manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is one company using those subsidies to expand production in Arizona.

    But subsidies only help if there are workers to do the jobs. If the United States really wants to catch up in the race to make more chips, it will have to convince more workers to join the semiconductor industry.

    Universities can be a fertile ground for recruiting that talent.

    At Purdue University in Indiana, students are already excited about the buzz around AI and the skyrocketing valuations of US chipmakers like Nvidia.

    About 100 Purdue students majoring in materials, mechanical, or electrical engineering have graduated with a concentration in semiconductors, while another 135 students are enrolled in certificate programs, the Journal reported. There's even an on-campus semiconductor club that drew 170 new members in two months.

    Purdue is now partnering with South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix to build a $3.9 billion semiconductor complex in West Lafayette that will make AI memory chips, the Journal reported. Still, "one of the biggest challenges is getting students to fall in love with semiconductors," Nikhilesh Chawla, a professor of materials engineering who co-directs Purdue's semiconductor programs, told the Journal.

    The good news is that experts also say that the industry's labor costs are likely to diminish in the coming years. Purdue's president, Mung Chiang, told the Journal that one area that may see a decrease in costs is packaging, which helps chips connect to other devices. Packaging has long been labor-intensive, but SK Hynix's plans for advanced packaging will help "rewrite the cost equation," Chiang told the Journal.

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