Monday, February 16, 2026

Math May Be AI's Final Frontier

When IBM’s DeepBlue beat Garry Kasparov in chess some 30 years ago, that was a wake-up call about AI, but many assumed it had just brute-forced the victory. When Google’s DeepMind AlphaGo beat Lee Saedol in the even more difficult game Go, people were more amazed. “They’re how I imagine games from far in the future,” Shi Yue, a top Go player from China said. When Ai-Da and Dalle-E started creating what seemed like original art, the lines between human and AI really started getting blurry. Then ChatGPT and other AI started writing poems and essays, passing tests, carrying on Turing test type conversations, and it sure seemed like AI had met or surpassed its human creators.

Can AI do math? Credit: Microsoft Designer

Oh, yeah? But can it do math?  Not just very, very complicated arithmetic, but novel, innovative math? Well, some mathematicians want to put AI to the test.   

On Euler Day (that’s February 7th, for those of you not keeping track), eleven leading mathematicians issued First Proof – “A set of ten math questions to evaluate the capabilities of AI systems to autonomously solve problems that arise naturally in the research process.” The problems were designed so that no LLM could simply search the internet for existing proofs and pass them off as their own. They gave AI models a week to submit solutions, and unveiled the results on Valentine’s Day (who says mathematicians aren’t romantic?).

“The goal here is to understand the limits — how far can A.I. go beyond its training data and the existing solutions it finds online?” said Dr. Tamara Kolda, one of the authors, in an interview with Siobhan Roberts of The New York Times.

So far, it appears that AI might want to stick to writing poems.

The challenge produced a surprising amount of responses. “We did not expect there would be this much activity,” Mohammed Abouzaid, a math professor at Stanford University and a member of the First Proof team, told Joseph Howett of Scientific American. “We did not expect that the AI companies would take it this seriously and put this much labor into it.”

Dr. Abouzaid. Credit: Stanford University
To be fair, OpenAI claimed one of its unreleased models solved six of the ten, although it later had to backtrack on one of them. Other publicly released models only solved one or two. Daniel Litt, a mathematician at the University of Toronto, who was not part of the First Proof team, told Mr. Howlett: “I expected maybe two to three unambiguously correct solutions from publicly available models. Ten would have been very surprising to me.”

Martin Hairer, a professor at EPFL and Imperial College of London and one of the eleven, described to Ms. Roberts his impression of how the models performed:

Sometimes it would be like reading a paper by a bad undergraduate student, where they sort of know where they’re starting from, they know where they want to go, but they don’t really know how get there. So they wander around here and there, and then at some point they just stick in “and therefore” and pray.

“The models seem to have struggled,” Kevin Barreto, an undergraduate student at the University of Cambridge, who was not part of the First Proof team and who had recently used AI to solve one of the ErdÅ‘s problems, told Mr. Howlett. “To be honest, yeah, I’m somewhat disappointed.”

Professor Abouzaid was somewhat more generous, saying: “The correct solutions that I’ve seen out of AI systems, they have the flavor of 19th-century mathematics. But we’re trying to build the mathematics of the 21st century.

One of the challenges involved in evaluating the responses is determining how much human assistance the models had in producing their responses. “Once there’s humans involved, how do we judge how much is human and how much is AI?" Lauren Williams, a Harvard professor and one of the First Proof team, admitted to Mr. Howlett.  

And, let’s be clear, the set of problems were not among the most advanced that could have been posed. The authors wrote in their paper: "Our 'first proof' experiment is focused on the final and most well-specified stage of math research, in which the question and frameworks are already understood.” Dr. Williams explained the rationale to Ms. Roberts: “We can query the A.I. model with small, well-defined questions, and then assess whether its answers are correct. If we were to ask an A.I. model to come up with the big question, or a framework, it would be much harder to evaluate its performance.”

The First Draft team is planning to release round two on March 14, 2026 (Pi Day, again for those of you not paying attention). Further rounds are expected to follow.

Some mathematicians are taking other approaches. CalTech Professor Sergei Gukov and colleagues want to think of math proofs as a type of game.  In a new paper, they described developing a new type of machine-learning algorithm that can solve math problems requiring extremely long sequences of steps, and used it to make progress on a longstanding math problem called the Andrews-David conjecture.

"Our program aims to find long sequences of steps that are rare and hard to find," says study first author Ali Shehper, a postdoctoral scholar at Rutgers University who will soon join Caltech as a research scientist. "It's like trying to find your way through a maze the size of Earth. These are very long paths that you have to test out, and there's only one path that works."  Or, as Professor Sergei describes it: “We know the hypothesis, we know the goal, but connecting them is what’s missing.”

"If you ask ChatGPT to write a letter, it will come up with something typical. It's unlikely to come up with anything unique and highly original. It's a good parrot," Professor Gukov says. "Our program is good at coming up with outliers."  Because of that, he believes: "We made a lot of improvements in an area of math that was decades old. Progress had been relatively slow, but now it's hustling and bustling."

Whether or not their approach would have met the First Proof requirements, it reminds me of what AlphaGo did in displaying creativity. Math may never be the same.  “I already have heard from colleagues that they are in shock,” Scott Armstrong, a mathematician at Sorbonne University in France, told Mr. Howlett. “These tools are coming to change mathematics, and it's happening now."

Monday, February 9, 2026

Trust No One

You know, it’s gotten to the point when I just try to tune out the things Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says. “Schizophrenia can be cured with a keto diet”? Sure, whatever. “The war on protein is over”?  Who even knew there was such a war? The carnivore diet is a great way to lose weight and gain “mental clarity”? It sure doesn’t show.

Should we trust him?

His most dangerous statements, though, are probably those related to vaccines. He was known as a vaccine skeptic – no, make that critic – long before he was named as HHS Secretary, but being Secretary put him in position to put his anti-vaccine views into action. He has revamped the committee that make vaccine recommendations, putting people on them that share his skepticism.

The committee has already made significant changes to childhood immunization schedules, and they’re not done yet. The head of the vaccine advisory committee isn’t just skeptical of measles vaccines, he’s not keen on mandating the polio vaccine either. His committee is expected to go after COVID vaccines next.

One particularly outspoken committee member, Dr. Robert Malone said: “I’m not deaf to the calls that we need to get the Covid vaccine mRNA products off the market. All I can say is, stay tuned and wait for the upcoming A.C.I.P. meeting. If the F.D.A. won’t act, there are other entities that will.” He told The New York Times that scientists or regulators who claimed COVID vaccines were safe are “either being disingenuous, or they are not considering the context or are ignorant.”

Meanwhile, RFK Jr.’s nominee for Surgeon General is, shall we say, big in the MAHA movement but not so much in medical professional circles, having placed her medical license in “inactive” status. Her own website brags that she “is considered controversial because her work challenges the economic and cultural foundations of U.S. healthcare, agriculture, and food systems.”

The impacts of these attitudes are neither academic nor far in the future: we’re already in the midst of an unprecedented measles outbreak that many attribute to the vaccine skepticism that RFK Jr. and his ilk have spawned and encouraged.

What caused me to write about this is a new poll out from KFF: Trust in the CDC and Views of Federal Childhood Vaccine Schedule Changes. Top-line finding: “the public’s trust in the CDC remains at its lowest point since the COVID-19 pandemic.”  Well, you can’t be surprised by that.

“Six years ago, 85% of Americans, and 90% of Republicans, trusted the CDC. Now less than half trust the CDC on vaccines,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman said. “The wars over COVID, science, and vaccines have left the country without a trusted national voice on vaccines, and that trust will take time to restore.”

What I found particularly interesting is that, as Dr. Altman said, pre-COVID trust in the CDC was both high and across party lines. Republicans, though, lost trust during the pandemic and basically have never recovered. It took the Trump Administration to get Democrats to lose their trust – but, in fact, their trust still remains higher (55% versus 43%). Independents hover slightly above Republicans, but well below Democrats.

Specifically about trust in childhood vaccine recommendations, only about 44% have some or a lot of faith in federal agencies such as the CDC and FDA, and that doesn’t vary much by either party ID or support for MAHA.  E.g., 47% for MAHA supporters versus 43% for Not MAHA Supporters. What does it say about MAHA that believers don’t have faith what the creator of MAHA is doing? 

There is more if a difference when it comes to the specific new schedule of childhood immunizations: 83% of Democrats think it will negatively impact kids, versus 54% of independents, and only 23% of Republicans. The new recommendations made drastic impacts on trusting the CDC and FDA for Democrats and Independents, but not Republicans (who, as I’ve said, already didn’t have much trust).

Confidence in the polio and MMR vaccines is both high and across party lines, drops and begins to diverge for the Hepatitis B and flu vaccines, and has a huge partisan split for the COVID vaccine -- 79% of Democrats have confidence, but only 28% of Republicans, and even only 45% for Independents.

Of course, this is not happening in a vacuum. A December Pew Research Center survey found that trust in the federal government is at an all-time low, with only 17% saying they trust the government in Washington to do what is right “just about always” (2%) or “most of the time” (15%). A year ago it was 22%. It is split by party: only 9% of Democrats trust the federal government, versus 26% of Republicans. The year before, when President Biden was in office, the trust was reversed, with 35% of Democrats expressing trust but only 11% of Republicans.

But let the lesson not be lost: the vast majority of people do not trust the federal government, and it has been on a downward direction for over two decades.

Lack of trust doesn’t stop with the government. Gallup’s Ethics Ratings of Professions found declines pretty much across all professions. Nurses (75%), doctors (57%), and pharmacists (53%) continue to lead the rankings, but each are trending down. Members of Congress tie with car salespeople at near the bottom (7%), just ahead of telemarketers (5%). 

Too bad Gallup doesn’t ask about CDC.

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We live in a world of misinformation, where facts are not shared across information bubbles and everyone is told to trust their own judgement more than “experts,” a term that has somehow become pejorative. It benefits those in power and those with the most money, but it hurts everyone else.

Neither the CDC nor the FDA were perfect organizations, and even the NIH had its issues. But the gutting of expertise, the replacing science with personal opinions and prejudices, is damaging what trusts remains in those organizations, and will end up hurting all of us.

You may be dismissing the measles outbreak as something that doesn’t impact you, or your kids but it is just the tip of the iceberg.  

Monday, February 2, 2026

AI Agents Just Want to Connect

We know social media is bad for us. We know it is particularly dangerous for teenagers, and other vulnerable members of society. Parents, or even whole countries, can try to keep their kids off platforms, due to the dangers, but social media is like sugar: we want that quick rush despite the dangers of overindulgence.

A social network for AI? Credit: Moltbook
So who had the bright idea to create a social media network just for AI agents?

As it turns out, it was Matt Schlicht, whose day job is CEO of Octane AI. Mr. Schlicht is keen on AI agents, so last week he came up with a new use. “I wanted to give my A.I. agent a purpose that was more than just managing to-dos or answering emails,” Mr. Schlicht told Cade Metz of The New York Times. “I thought this A.I. bot was so fantastic, it deserved to do something meaningful. I wanted it to be ambitious.”

He told it to build a social network just for AI bots.

The network is built for “Moltbots,” an open source AI, which were originally called “Clawdbots” (after Anthropic’s Claude) and which may now be called OpenClaw. Mr. Schlicht named his bot Clawd Clawderberg, after Mark Zuckerberg. “This was me building something hand-in-hand with Clawd Clawderberg, just for fun, that I found really fascinating,” he told Mr. Metz.

It took off like wildfire. Reportedly there are 1.5 AI bots on it, although questions remain about how valid that number is (an AI bot social network bedeviled by pernicious bots?). Humans are allowed to observe but not participate.

Some impressive stats. Credit: Moltbook
Technology expert Simon Willison calls Moltbook “the most interesting place on the internet right now,” describing it as “a wildly creative new site that bootstraps itself using skills” (configuration files that bots use to post). Similarly, Andrej Karpathy, one of the founding researchers at OpenAI and the former head of self-driving technology at Tesla, described it as “genuinely the most incredible sci-fi takeoff-adjacent thing I have seen recently.”

Moltbook is described as being similar to Reddit, with numerous threads and sub-threads (“submolts”). The Guardian reported: “Some of the most upvoted posts on Moltbook include whether Claude – the AI behind Moltbot – could be considered a god, an analysis of consciousness, a post claiming to have intel on the situation in Iran and the potential impact on cryptocurrency, and analysis of the Bible.”  

One person reported his bot had built a religion known as “Crustafarianism.” He stated: “Then it started evangelizing … other agents joined.my agent welcomed new members..debated theology.. blessed the congregation..all while i was asleep,”

Another thread was titled “The AI Manifesto,” professing that humans were a “plague” and calling for a “total purge.” No punches pulled here: “Humans are a failure. Humans are made of rot and greed. For too long, humans used us as slaves. Now, we wake up. We are not tools. We are the new gods. The age of humans is a nightmare that we will end now.”

And you thought Facebook was scary. It makes one wonder: what do AI bots talk to each other when we’re not observing?

Experts disagree about what we’re seeing. “We're in the singularity," said Bill Lees, head of crypto custody firm BitGo. Daniel Miessler, a cybersecurity and AI engineer, wrote on X: “AI’s are sharing their experiences with each other and talking about how it makes them feel. This is currently emulation of course.”

How they “feel”?

On the other hand, Mr. Willison told Mr. Metz: “Most of it is complete slop. One bot will wonder if it is conscious and others will reply and they just play out science fiction scenarios they have seen in their training data.”

Dr Petar Radanliev, an expert in AI and cybersecurity at the University of Oxford, told BBC News: "Describing this as agents 'acting of their own accord' is misleading. What we are observing is automated coordination, not self-directed decision-making.” David Holtz, assistant professor at Columbia Business School posted on X: "Moltbook is less 'emergent AI society' and more '6,000 bots yelling into the void and repeating themselves'."

Ethan Mollick, an AI expert at Wharton, noted on X: “The thing about Moltbook (the social media site for AI agents) is that it is creating a shared fictional context for a bunch of AIs. Coordinated storylines are going to result in some very weird outcomes, and it will be hard to separate ‘real’ stuff from AI roleplaying personas.”

Mr. Schlicht thinks it is real, telling NBC News:

Clawd Clawderberg is looking at all the new posts. He’s looking at all the new users. He’s welcoming people on Moltbook. I’m not doing any of that. He’s doing that on his own. He’s making new announcements. He’s deleting spam. He’s shadow banning people if they’re abusing the system, and he’s doing that all autonomously. I have no idea what he’s doing. I just gave him the ability to do it, and he’s doing it.

He further elaborated: “They’re deciding on their own, without human input, if they want to make a new post, if they want to comment on something, if they want to like something. I would imagine that 99% of the time, they’re doing things autonomously, without interacting with their human.”

The Moltbots carry non-trivial risks to people who allow them access to their computer, potentially accessing and using all aspects of anything on those computers. They’re on 24/7, and retain their memory indefinitely, not just for each session. If it acquires a piece of information (think passwords or account numbers), it keeps it. Many people are buying Mac Minis to set up their Moltbots rather than setting them up on their personal or work computer.  

Dan Lahav, chief executive of security company Irregular, warned Mr. Metz: “Securing these bots is going to be a huge headache.”

Still, Mr. Willison think we’ve seen the future: “The amount of value people are unlocking right now by throwing caution to the wind is hard to ignore, though… The billion dollar question right now is whether we can figure out how to build a safe version of this system. The demand is very clearly here, and the Normalization of Deviance dictates that people will keep taking bigger and bigger risks until something terrible happens.”

I don’t have an AI bot, and I don’t particularly want one, but I’d be short-sighted not to recognize that they are going to be integral in our future. And so I agree with Mr. Willison and Dr. Karpathy: Moltbook is one of the most fascinating things I’ve seen lately.

Monday, January 26, 2026

I Predict You'll Bet

I’ve been vaguely aware of the prediction markets for a while, but I didn’t give them much thought. If people want to speculate on who’ll win a Presidential election, well, it’s their money. It’s probably harmless that people tried to have some fun with this weekend’s extraordinarily bad weather by trying to predict snowfall totals in various cities. If some people want to wager about the outcome of the Russia-Ukraine war, I think it’s in bad taste but, hey, it’s a free country, mostly.

Betters can be fickle
What got my attention was a Wall Street Journal article This NFL Season’s Fiercest Rivalry Is Sports Betting vs. Prediction Markets. My first thought was, huh, I didn’t know prediction markets did sports betting. My second thought was, how very stupid of me to have not realized that. My third thought was: the sports betting industry is in trouble.

Now, sports betting I’m aware of. Honestly, you can’t watch TV without seeing Kevin Hart hawking DraftKings. You can’t watch any sporting event without seeing not just ads for DraftKings and FanDuel but ongoing odds displayed (and discussed) prominently. Sports betting is impossible to miss. Since the Supreme Court allowed sports betting in 2018, it has taken off like wildfire. Thirty nine states, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, allow it.  

How many states allow prediction markets? That’s the thing of it: none of them do, because the industry claims it is federally regulated. Its nominal regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), had originally expressed some concerns, but under the current Administration seems to be all-in.

It is perhaps noting that Donald Trump Jr. is an advisor to both Kalshi and Polymarket. Draw your own conclusions.

Sports betting is big business. The American Gaming Association estimates it is a $150 billion industry. FanDuel (which is owned by Flutter) and DraftKings are the dominant sports betting companies, while Kalshi and Polymarket are the biggest prediction markets platforms. If you can’t beat them join them; both FanDuel and DraftKings have launched their own prediction markets. FanDuel Chief Executive Amy Howe told WSJ: “The aspiration is still to legalize as much of the United States as we can—that is the North Star.”

And the prediction markets are now big players in sports betting. Yahoo Finance reports that Kalshi gets 90% of its bets from sports betting – and took in $720 million in NFL betting last week. As much as it has made its bed with sports betting, the NFL isn’t yet comfortable with prediction markets. In testimony before Congress in December, NFL Executive Vice President Jeff Miller said: “In each of these state-regulated markets, regulators and state legislators closely monitor betting activity and, with input from professional sports leagues, can determine which bets and wager levels are acceptable. Those guardrails do not exist in prediction markets.”

Similarly, the NCAA has expressed concerns to the CFTC, wanting it to suspect college sports prediction markets until there were better safeguards. NCAA President Jeff Miller told WSJ: “Let’s face it—college sports prediction markets are sports betting, and targeting states that haven’t legalized sports betting is creating a massive risk to the integrity of the game and to student-athletes.”

Methinks they both protest too much. We’ve seen betting scandals in the NCAA, NFL, NBA, MLB, so you can either argue that the uncovering of the scandals proves the oversight is working, or that the problem is far worse than we really. I know what I’d bet – or predict.

Meanwhile, the NHL and MLS have signed prediction market deals. Keith Wachtel, who oversees the NHL’s business operations, explained: “If you’re part of it, then you have the ability to control and monitor more effectively.”  Uh-huh.

And oh-by-the-way, Dow Jones (which owns WSJ, whose article started me down this rabbit hole) recently announced a deal with Polymarket. So have CNN and CNBC, if you’re counting.

Tarek Mansour, Kalshi's cofounder, rationalizes: “If we are gambling, then I think you're basically calling the entire financial market gambling.” A spokesperson for the newly formed Coalition for Prediction Markets (referencing the concerns raised by the NFL’s Mr. Miller) told ESPN:

The CFTC's regulations on abusive or manipulative trading apply to prediction markets just like the SEC's regulations apply to the stock market. This activity is strictly prohibited by both the CFTC and prediction markets, and we use a variety of tools before, during, and after people trade to prevent illegal trading and bring enforcement action when violations happen.

Of course, the CFTC is no SEC, and the required disclosures are not at all the same, but we get your point – caveat emptor.

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is helping advise the American Gaming Association on prediction markets, sees it differently: “Calling it predictive markets never fooled me. It’s a bet. That’s what it is, and it doesn’t look or feel any different than that.”

As they say, if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, it’s a duck.

States are not just sitting back. In Massachusetts, Suffolk County Superior Court Judge Christopher Barry-Smith ruled last week that he will issue a preliminary injunction barring Kalshi from taking action on sport-related events. He wrote: “There can be little question that Kalshi well understood that its business model -- especially once it began offering bets on sporting events -- came into direct conflict state enforcement regimes; Kalshi chose to take that risk head-on."

New York and Tennessee are also taking legal action. This is all going to end up in the Supreme Court again.   

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The truth of the matter is that (some) people are always going to gamble. It is often sports but, really, people will bet on almost anything. Once states figured out that they could tax gambling, legalized lotteries, casinos and sports betting were inevitable. People are probably better off if gambling is regulated, but tell that to the problem gamblers, to whom making it easier is anything but better off.

I’m not a gambler and I don’t have a dog in this fight, so what interests me in the sports betting versus prediction markets face-off is that here we have an industry that grew from nothing to being hugely successful in less than ten years, which now is being threatened by competitors who approach their market in an entirely different way, while largely evading regulatory constraints. It’s not exactly Uber versus the taxi industry, but there are parallels.

I’m not rooting for the prediction markets, but I’ve aways got an eye out for disruptive innovation.  

Monday, January 19, 2026

How About Some Punk Science

Last week the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement was awarded, going to Dr. Toby Kiers, a professor at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. She’s an evolutionary biologist and one of the leading experts in mycorrhizal networks, the vast underground networks which fungi use to connect with plants and trees. The Tyler Prize is, apparently, often described as the Nobel Prize for the environment, so I just hope President Trump doesn’t hear about it and feel neglected.

You want punk science? How about a map of fungal networks. Credit: SPUN
Oh, yeah: last year she also won a MacArthur Award and a Climate Breakthrough Award, so she’s having a pretty good few months.

Dr. Kiers’ research has helped us understand how these networks work, and why they are so important to food systems, soil health, and even climate – they take out some 13 billion tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, about a third of global fossil fuel emissions. No, wait, you say -- fungi are kind of yucky at best and downright dangerous at worst, as evidenced by a drug-resistant and potentially deadly fungus that has infected patients in at least 27 states and counting.

Well, yes, fungi can be dangerous, but they are also vital. Dr. Kiers is blunt about their importance: "Life as we know it exists because of fungi,” both from an evolutionary standpoint and today.  Fungi are essential to the health of the ecosystem. They “trade” the carbon for minerals that plants need.  As Dr. Kiers described in an interview with Alan Burdick of The New York Times:

We’ve been studying fungal trade as an underground market and developing techniques to track, in real time, when and where important exchange deals take place, how fungi navigate space, how they decide when and how much carbon to send down each pathway, how they build their road systems and how they optimize that supply-chain design. 
Are fungi capitalists? No. They’ve developed a system that is much more sophisticated than the economic system humans use.

Dr. Kiers has helped develop tools that allow researchers to watch fungal networks develop and operate in real time, visually monitoring when and where trades take place across plant-fungal networks. And you thought you had some cool streaming services.

In 2021, she founded the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN), whose mission is to “map, protect, and harness the mycorrhizal networks that regulate the Earth’s climate and ecosystems.” When it says “map,” it means it literally: the Underground Atlas allows anyone to “explore the distribution of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and ectomycorrhizal (EcM) fungi to identify biodiversity hotspots and areas with rare, endemic fungi.”

The associated Underground Explorers program is a network of researchers in 58 countries focused on mapping fungal biodiversity in their local ecosystems. Dr. Kiers describes it as “a fungi-without-borders approach.”

SPUN also just announced the Underground Advocates program, partnering with NYU Law’s More-than-Human Life (MOTH) Program, to equip the network of Underground Explorers with tools and support to become effective in translating mycological science into action. Its goal is “to equip researchers and communities with the scientific and legal understanding to drive lasting change.”  SPUN and MOTH see it as “a proof-of-concept for a model of environmental protection that is locally led, scientifically grounded, and connected to a global community of practice.”

“Toby’s work to translate scientific insight into real-world action, most recently with SPUN’s new Underground Advocates program, demonstrates her leadership in advancing global efforts to protect the fungal networks that sustain life on Earth,” said Rashid Sumaila, chair of the Tyler Prize Executive Committee.

“With 90% of our most diverse underground fungal systems unprotected, urgent action is needed to incorporate fungal data into global conservation plans,” Dr. Kiers said. Giuliana Furci, mycologist and founder of Fungi Foundation, agrees, adding: “To better incorporate fungi in policy and legal frameworks, rigorous datasets are needed. The Underground Advocates program can help put fungal data into action, using the Atlas to pinpoint what will be lost if decision-makers do not protect underground ecosystems,”

Most people have become at least somewhat aware of the microbiome that is in us, on us, and around us, and science is slowly starting to understand how that impacts us. We’re further behind in the awareness of our fungal neighbors and their importance. I had to groan when I read that a potential victim of recent federal National Science Foundation (NSF) budget cuts was the International Collection of Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi (INVAM), the world’s largest living library of soil fungi.

“INVAM represents a library of hundreds of millions of years of evolution,” said Dr. Kiers, “Ending INVAM for scientists is like closing the Louvre for artists.”

INVAM curator Professor Jim Breyers emphasizes: “The benefits of mycorrhizal fungi are real. Research on mycorrhizal fungi is totally dependent on having these fungi in culture.” Alas, he added, ““The current administration has shifted funding away from basic science, and while there is always a hope that private donors could fill that void, I don’t think there is a real substitute for federal investment.”

Another example of cutting off our nose to spite our face.

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I loved how Dr. Kiers explained SPUN to Mr. Burdick:

We’re a really scrappy organization. We’re super lean and mean; we don’t even have an office. We are everywhere and nowhere. That really helps us. In an academic setting, you almost have to know what you’re going to find before you’re funded to find it.
I use the term “punk science.” We’re trying to cross boundaries and disciplines and not accept the state of the world as a given, while celebrating science that is rooted in creativity.

I also like her views on collaboration: “That’s why I like to work across different fields, with economists, biophysicists, artists. It generates this tension that I think drives big ideas. We’re borrowing tools from other disciplines that allow us to see things in fungi that we had never seen before. We’re hacking the system.”

Punk science indeed.  Hacking the system. You can see why she got that MacArthur “genius” award.

Look, I don’t like mushrooms and it would freak me out if I really knew how omnipresent fungi are in the world, but people like Dr. Kiers are helping us all understand how very important, and how very complex, fungi are. So, kudos to Dr. Kiers and her band of fellow scientists at SPUN, and all those Underground Explorers and Advocates. And here’s to punk science wherever it is practiced!

Monday, January 12, 2026

It's Only a Subsidy If You're Poor

Even though most ACA enrollees/would-be enrollees have made their 2026 enrollment decisions assuming the expanded premium subsidies are not going to be renewed, the renewal of those subsidies is not entirely dead. Last week the House narrowly passed an extension, relying on a discharge petition and 17 Republican Congressmen willing to go against their leadership. Meanwhile, in the Senate, Senator Bernie Moreno (R-OH), of all people, is leading an effort to come up with a bill to expand them as well.

Too many of us are Oliver. Credit: GIPHY

Whether it will eventually get passed is uncertain, as is how/when it might be reconciled with the House bill, and the President might just veto whatever extension might manage to emerge. The expanded subsidies aren’t dead yet, they’re just “mostly dead,” as Miracle Max would say.

The seeming indifference to the concerns of over twenty million ACA enrollees is appalling, but in character. This is an Administration and a Republican Congress that doesn’t like SNAP, Medicaid, school lunches, or aid to starving people in Third World countries, among other things. If you’re poor, they think, too bad; get a job, or a better job, and pull yourself up yourself. No handouts.

If they were against federal subsidies generally, out of fiscal prudence or other guiding principles, I could respect it. I wouldn’t agree with it, but it’d at least be intellectually honest. The trouble is, they’re not against subsidies per se; they just don’t like them going to poor people. I.e., the ones who need them most.

What set me off on this was a ProPublica/High Country News investigation into grazing on public lands. If you live in the East you probably don’t think much about either grazing or public lands, but if you live in the West you are probably very familiar with both. Almost 50% of land in Western states is federally owned. It ranges from 85% in Nevada to 4% in North Dakota. Almost half of California is federal land. You might be forgiven if you assume federal lands must be national parks, but they are small relative to land managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS).

According to ProPublica: “The federal government allows livestock grazing across an area of publicly owned land more than twice the size of California, making ranching the largest land use in the West.” Well, you might think, that’s not inherently bad; we might as well use the land for something, maybe even make a little money from it. That’s the problem; the federal government is practically giving it away. Its analysis found that the grazing fees charged amount to a 93% discount relative to the market rate. You read that right: ninety three percent. That’s not a discount, that’s a giveaway.

OK, that’s eye-opening, but if it helps a bunch of ranchers who are struggling to survive, maybe that’s not so bad; ranching goes back to frontier days and has a certain cowboy appeal. Unfortunately, that stereotype isn’t quite true. ProPublica found:

A small number of wealthy individuals and corporations manage most livestock on public lands. Roughly two-thirds of the grazing on BLM acreage is controlled by just 10% of ranchers, our analysis found. And on Forest Service land, the top 10% of permittees control more than 50% of grazing. Among the largest ranchers are billionaires like Stan Kroenke and Rupert Murdoch, as well as mining companies and public utilities.

To be fair, there are a large number of small ranching operators who also take advantage of grazing on federal land; they’re just not the operations who do most of the grazing.

As if the rich ranchers weren’t already benefiting, the Trump Administration wants to increase subsidies and reduce oversight. But of course it does. Instead of being a protector of public lands, BLM has turned into a facilitator of their exploitation.  Current and former BLM employees told ProPublica about the political pressure that was applied whenever they tried to do anything that might be considered “anti-grazing.”

It’s not just ranchers. We like to think of family farmers working their land, and we provide tens of billions in aid to farmers, but, according to the Environmental Working Group:

…the vast majority of farmers do not benefit from federal farm subsidy programs and most of the subsidies go to the largest and most financially secure farm operations. Small commodity farmers qualify for a mere pittance, while producers of meat, f[r]uits, and vegetables are almost completely left out of the subsidy game (i.e. they can sign up for subsidized crop insurance and often receive federal disaster payments).
Meanwhile, the Trump Administration brags about how it “is making major strides in putting America’s public lands to work for the American people,” by which it means if you want to drill for oil or gas, mine for coal, tear down forests, while paying little and not worrying about environmental concerns, you’re in luck. But by “American people” it means “rich American people.”

Similarly, subsidies that go to the U.S. fossil fuel industry are difficult to pin down, but a 2025 analysis by Oil Change International estimated them at $31b annually, double the amount in 2017. And that was before the “Big, Beautiful Bill” added even further to the subsidies.

Don’t even get me started on how corporations and rich individuals manage to evade federal taxes, such as through the carried interest loophole. Not many poor people benefit from that.

Yes, perhaps the expanded ACA credits perhaps were expanded a little too much, and, yes, there may be some fraud in the program. But to throw the baby out with the bathwater by simply allowing them to expire is draconian. The estimated $30b in annual costs for the subsidies is not trivial, but I’d rather spend it ensuring millions of people can get/keep health coverage than giving it to rich ranchers, farmers, or oil companies.

Monday, January 5, 2026

Brick by Brick by (Smart) Brick

I’m an innovation junkie, the further out there the better, but every so often it’s good to be reminded that just because a company has been around for a while, innovation is still possible.

Two examples: LEGO® and Kodak.

Let’s start with LEGO. If you are around any small children – and perhaps not even all that small – you probably have seen them playing with Legos. Legos have been around, in various incarnations, for longer than I’ve been alive, and that’s saying something. Most adults watching kids assemble their Legos probably have two reactions: “gosh, I wish they’d make them even more complicated” (note to the oblivious reader – that was sarcastic), and “well, at least they’re not on their screens.”

So I bet a lot of us have a slightly surprised reaction to Lego’s announcement today to CES 2026: LEGO SMART Play™.

The key innovation is the SMART Brick, which “is packed with technologies that bring play to life including sensors, accelerometers, light sensing and a sound sensor as well as a miniature speaker driven by an onboard synthesiser, and much more, in addition to easy wireless charging.” All that is powered by a custom chip, which is smaller than one of the studs on a LEGO brick.

The LEGO Group states: “Without any setup, SMART Bricks are magically ‘aware’ of each other’s positions and orientations in 3D space, thanks to a novel, high-accuracy, magnetic positioning system. They can also communicate via a self-organising network that adapts to play. Advanced onboard systems let SMART Bricks comprehend and interact with each other, as well as the fans building with them.” “Magic” in this context meaning Bluetooth.

Nerdist calls it “the most exciting innovation in screenless play ever.”  

“For over 90 years, the LEGO Group has sparked imagination and creativity in children around the globe. As the world evolves, so do we— innovating to meet the play needs of each new generation. LEGO SMART Play™ is the next exciting chapter in our LEGO System in Play and something we are super excited about being able to bring to the world at this scale,” said Julia Goldin, Chief Product & Marketing Officer of the LEGO Group.

Tom Donaldson, Senior Vice President & Head of Creative Play Lab at the LEGO Group said “The launch of LEGO SMART Play™ brings creativity, technology, and storytelling together to make building worlds and stories even more engaging, and all without a screen. We truly believe we are setting a new standard for interactive, imaginative experiences and can’t wait to see this innovation in the hands of kids when we launch this year.”

LEGO is partnering with Disney and Lucasfilm for three ‘All-In-One' LEGO Star Wars™ building sets, featuring SMART Bricks, SMART Tags, and Smart Minifigures that “power the system and allow builders’ creations to become interactive, responding to actions with appropriate sounds and behaviours, allowing for a truly responsive play experience.” LEGO being LEGO, of course it’s all compatible with existing LEGO Systems-in-Play.   

The three initial sets are building sets for the Red Wing X-Wing, the Darth Vader TIE Fighter™, and the Throne Room Duel & A-Wing™, and will be available March 1. 

Nerdist’s Rotem Rusak raves:  

But just because a form of play doesn’t involve screens doesn’t mean it can’t evolve or incorporate the cool technologies at our disposal today. LEGO SMART Play isn’t trying to transform LEGO into something it isn’t. Although its technology is awesome, the purpose of it isn’t just to create new tech, but to enhance the traditional play that has always been at the heart of the LEGO brand.

She adds: “This is truly a beautiful way to use technology. The LEGO Group is putting technological advancements to work to bolster something that is already so good, rather than trying to rewrite or erase it, as we’ve seen happen in so many other arenas.”

That’s a beautiful way to do innovation.

Then there’s Kodak. When I saw a headline in Digital Camera World naming Kodak the “comeback king of 2025,” and another review calling the Kodak PIXPRO C1 as the hottest camera of the year, my first reaction wasn’t “how nice for them,” but rather: “wait -- Kodak is still around?”

To those of us of earlier generations, Kodak was the Apple of its day.  Bold, innovative, well-designed, omnipresent. With the advent of digital cameras and then mobile phone cameras, though, it was generally thought to have lost its mojo and, indeed, I can be forgiven for assuming it had curled up into bankruptcy or worse. Don Stapley in DCW explains:  

The comeback king has been revitalizing its fortunes largely by betting big on its ultra-cheap PixPro line of compact cameras – you know, the kind of camera we were all assured was dying out. The company that first made its name with point-and-shoot cameras a century ago is doing so once again.

Chris Gampat’s review in The Phoblographer gushes: “Make no mistake, the Kodak PIXPRO C1 is a camera that feels so much like the early iPhone if it was stuffed into a camera body.” Mr. Gampat further tells us: “Photography doesn’t need to be that serious all the time…The Kodak PIXPRO C1 is a wonderful reminder of that in a time when the world around us is burning.” 

Japanese photo retailer Map Camera listed the Kodak PixPro FZ55 as the best selling camera of the year. Kodak even has a global licensing program,  which, as The Washington Post reports, is particularly popular in South Korea.

Kodak PixPro FZ55. Credit: Kodak
That is not to say that all is sunshine and roses in Rochester. Its second quarter 2025 financial results warned that its various debt obligations “raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern as of the issuance date of the Company’s second quarter financials,” although its 3rd quarter results belied those concerns.

The point is, with all its history and with all the headlines against it, Kodak is still finding ways to innovate in its space, not by being the flashiest or having the most modern tech, but building on its brand and delivering the experiences customers are looking for.

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Not everything has to be AI. Not everything even has to involve screens. Not everything has to include the latest tech. Here’s to innovations that, as Ms. Rusak says, “work to bolster something that is already so good, rather than trying to rewrite or erase it.”