...i thought taliban was backed by cia&co...
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Taliban holding on to $7 billion of U.S. military equipment left behind after withdrawal
The USA will definitely believe that the Iranian government is backing the Talibans because the Talibans are terrorist. Now USA believe that Iran is a terrorist country by nature and the Iranian government is sponsoring them. As the world awaits the USA to attack Iran, let it be known that Trump is more dangerous than the Iranian people. Probably it might be a setup for Iran by the Trump administration to carry out the planned attack on the Iranian people
...very likely, one more point to support the invasion,...
but at the same time, high ranks of the Armed Forces/Navy, are discouraging him,
...
..an order for anti-ship missiles that they bought from China has arrived...
I believe that they will continue in negotiations, as long as internal differences
in the United States are resolved.
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-This week the price of BTC USD, defended the 65k, went and scraped the feet of the 70k,
leaving a slight shadow and smell of seventy,...
falling and curling at the 68k,
and now, defending the 65k again,
week of consolidation and accumulation.
-Gold at 5250, BCO at $72/73 per barrel, Silver $93, BTC/EUR 55200, DXY 97,500...

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While the 50-day average is at 78k, and BTCUSD shorts on Kraken had a drop
from 340 to 280 last three days, was at 800 on February 26, and now, 266.5
a good sign that they are selling less,
and the sentiment of the bottom is close,
...
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Amazon put an AI to evaluate their engineers' code,
and it deleted everything and left it down for 13 hours(december 2025)
Amazon: Recent Service Disruptions 'Not Linked' to AI Agents
Amazon traced a December disruption to engineers using its Kiro AI coding tool, but says the problem 'stemmed from a misconfigured role,' and was not a case of AI going rogue.
Amazon provided an internal post-mortem on one of the disruptions, which happened in December, lasted approximately 13 hours, and impacted a single service in China. However, employees told the FT that it was the second time in as many months that Amazon's AI tools were involved in a service incident. (Both were unrelated to the massive October AWS incident that seemed to take down half the internet.)
In a statement, Amazon told PCMag that the December outage was an "extremely limited event." It impacted AWS Cost Explorer—which helps customers visualize, understand, and manage AWS costs and usage over time—in one of two regions in Mainland China, but did not affect compute, storage, database, AI technologies, or other services run by Amazon.
The Kiro tool reportedly took it upon itself to "delete and recreate the environment," the FT says. However, Amazon disputes the characterization; it says the events were "not linked to agents" and instead "stemmed from a misconfigured role—the same issue that could occur with any developer tool (AI powered or not) or manual action."
Kiro will ask engineers before taking any major actions, but apparently, the person involved in the December incident had permission to deploy changes to production without a second approval, suggesting it could be a management problem.