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Trump orders blockade on oil tankers entering and exiting Venezuela

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US President Donald Trump has said he is ordering a “a total and complete” blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers going into and out of Venezuela.

In a post on Truth Social, he said Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro’s government had been designated a foreign terrorist organisation and accused it of stealing US assets, as well as “Terrorism, Drug Smuggling, and Human Trafficking”.

“Therefore, today, I am ordering A TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE OF ALL SANCTIONED OIL TANKERS going into, and out of, Venezuela,” he added.

His remarks came a week after the US seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela. Venezuela has not yet responded to Trump’s latest remarks.

In his post, Trump said Venezuela was “completely surrounded by the largest Armada ever assembled in the History of South America”.

He added that it will “only get bigger” and “be like nothing they have ever seen before”.

Trump also accused Maduro’s government of using stolen oil to “finance themselves, Drug Terrorism, Human Trafficking, Murder, and Kidnapping”.

The Trump administration has repeatedly accused Venezuela of drug smuggling, and since September the US military has killed at least 90 people in strikes on boats it alleged were carrying fentanyl and other illegal drugs to the US.

In recent months, the US has also moved warships into the region.

Venezuela – home to some of the world’s largest proven oil reserves – has, in turn, accused Washington of seeking to steal its resources.

The US, under both Trump and former President Joe Biden, has opposed the Maduro government for years and pressed for him to be removed by instituting stringent sanctions.

Last week, the US imposed fresh sanctions on six more ships it said were carrying Venezuelan oil.

Sanctions were also placed on some of President Maduro’s relatives and on businesses associated with what the US called his illegitimate regime.

A day earlier the US said it had seized a tanker off Venezuela’s coast.

The White House said the seized vessel, called the Skipper, had been involved in “illicit oil shipping” and would be taken to an American port.

Venezuela’s government denounced the seizure, with Maduro saying the US “kidnapped the crew” and “stole” the ship.

The US had built up its military presence in the Caribbean Sea, which borders Venezuela to the north, in the days before the raid.

It involved thousands of troops and USS Gerald Ford – the world’s largest aircraft carrier– being positioned within striking distance of Venezuela.

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Trump directs complete blockade of sanctioned Venezuela oil tankers | Latest news on Donald Trump

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The order comes a week after the US military seized an oil tanker off Venezuela’s coast.

United States President Donald Trump has ordered “a total and complete” blockade of all US-sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela.

“Venezuela is completely surrounded by the largest Armada ever assembled in the History of South America,” Trump said in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.

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“For the theft of our Assets, and many other reasons, including Terrorism, Drug Smuggling, and Human Trafficking, the Venezuelan Regime has been designated a FOREIGN TERRORIST ORGANIZATION,” Trump said.

“Therefore, today, I am ordering A TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE OF ALL SANCTIONED OIL TANKERS going into, and out of, Venezuela,” he said.

Trump’s comments come a week after US forces seized a sanctioned oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela and as Washington has ordered a huge build-up of US military forces off the Venezuelan coast in an operation said to target drug smuggling.

The US military has killed at least 90 people since September in attacks on dozens of vessels in the eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea near Venezuela, in what international law experts have criticised as extrajudicial killings.

Washington claimed the vessels were involved in drug trafficking but has provided no evidence to support its allegations.

Caracas has long said the deployment of US forces to the region was aimed at allowing “external powers to rob Venezuela’s immeasurable oil and gas wealth“.

Despite holding the world’s largest proven oil reserves, Venezuela has faced severe restrictions on its exports in recent years under US sanctions first imposed during the first Trump presidency.

This is a breaking news story. More to follow shortly.

Terence Crawford Retires Undefeated as Five-Division World Champion

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Terence Crawford has made the decision to hang up his boxing gloves.

Crawford’s next move had been heavily debated ever since he became undisputed super-middleweight champion with a victory over Canelo Alvarez in September.

It was the latest major victory in his career, having already achieved huge success in the sport, with undisputed wins at welterweight and super-lightweight and further world title triumphs at lightweight and super-welterweight.

Many fans expected that ‘Bud’ could drop down to middleweight in search of becoming a six-division world champion, but that is no longer the case after the American made his shock announcement on Tuesday.

Posting on his YouTube channel, Crawford revealed why he has made the decision to retire, bringing to an end his remarkable career.

“Every fighter knows this moment will come. We just never know when. I spent my whole life chasing something. Not belts, not money, not headlines, but that feeling, the one you get when the world doubts you but you keep showing up and you keep proving everyone wrong.

“This sport gave me everything, I fought for my family, I fought for my city, I fought for the kid I used to be, the one that had nothing but a dream and a pair of gloves, and I did it all my way. I gave this sport every breath I have, every spar, every triumph, every ounce of my heart. I’ve made peace with what’s next. Now, it’s time. Thank you.

I’m stepping away from competition. Not because I’m done fighting, but because I’ve won a different kind of battle. The one where you walk away on your own terms. This isn’t goodbye, it’s just the end of one fight, and the beginning of another.”

The switch-hitter from Omaha, Nebraska also posted a message explaining further on the announcement.

“I’ve been blessed to live out a dream that started long before the lights, the fans, or the world titles. From Omaha to the biggest stages in boxing, every step of this journey was earned through sacrifice, discipline, and faith.

“I gave this sport everything I had. I faced the best, moved through weight classes, and made history on my own terms. 42-0. 3x Undisputed. 5 Division World Champion. No shortcuts. No excuses.

“This isn’t goodbye to boxing…it’s a thank you. Thank you to my family, my team, my city, and the fans who rode with me through every chapter. Thank you to the sport for shaping the man I am today.”

Crawford ends his career with a record of 42-0, and will go down as one of the greatest boxers in recent memory. For many, he will be considered one of the best of all time.

Research Unveils the Dangers in a New Study

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When nights stay warm, the body struggles to cool down, a key signal for drifting into deep sleep. Heat doesn’t just shorten sleep; it disrupts its rhythm, sparks dehydration, and keeps the nervous system on alert.

Studies show that hotter days and nights cut sleep hours for both adults and children. And it’s not just about duration; quality matters too. Broken sleep stages and poor continuity can ripple into heart problems, mental health struggles, and reduced cognitive performance.

While we know hot nights can cut sleep short, the science on how heat affects sleep quality is still thin, especially in the United States. No large-scale studies have yet tracked how outdoor heat exposure shapes sleep patterns across diverse populations.

Even more gaps remain: researchers haven’t fully explored who is most vulnerable, nor how seasonality and regional climate differences might shape future risks.

Rising outdoor temperatures not only make nights uncomfortable but also deteriorate the quality of our sleep, according to a recent University of Southern California (USC) study. Researchers looked at the effects of heat on several aspects of sleep, such as duration, stages, continuity, and structure.

The findings are sobering: higher nighttime temperatures are tied to shorter sleep and poorer sleep quality, with the most significant impact on people with chronic health conditions, lower incomes, or those living on the West Coast.

The new study, conducted with Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, took a big-data approach to bedtime. Researchers linked long-term sleep records from 14,232 US adults, collected through digital wearables over a decade, with detailed meteorological grids.

“This work is an important step toward understanding how sleep is affected by environmental stressors like heat, which can increase the risk of disease and even death,” Jiawen Liao, the study’s first author explained. “If we can help people sleep better, we may be able to reduce illness and save lives.”

To understand how heat reshapes our rest, researchers didn’t just rely on surveys. Alongside demographic, socioeconomic, and health information, participants shared their FitBit data, offering a vivid snapshot of sleep over time. The scale was enormous: 12 million nights of sleep duration and ease of falling asleep, 8 million nights charting sleep stages and interruptions, all matched with location and meteorological records to see how rising temperatures influence our sleep.

Researchers found that every 10 °C (18 °F) rise in daytime or nighttime temperature trims sleep time by between two and three minutes. And the ripple effects go deeper: higher nighttime temperatures were linked to lower sleep efficiency, longer periods of wakefulness after drifting off, and delays in falling asleep.

Adults between 40 and 50 years old lost more sleep than younger participants, with their total sleep duration dropping by 2.76 minutes per 10 °C increase in nighttime temperature. Women, too, were more vulnerable, losing 2.65 minutes compared to men, a difference of almost 23%.

“This may seem like a small amount, but when it adds up across millions of people, the total impact is enormous,” Liao added.

The study revealed that the toll of heat on sleep is not evenly spread across the calendar or the map. The warmest months, from June through September, were the most punishing, with people losing more sleep during this stretch than at any other time of year. Those living on the West Coast were hit hardest, losing nearly three times as much sleep as people in different regions.

Looking ahead, the projections are sobering. By the end of the century, US adults could lose between 8.5 and 24 hours of sleep each year due to rising nighttime temperatures, depending on where they live. The losses are not uniform; marine climate zones, for example, showed effects nearly twice as significant as other regions. Compared to the period from 1995 to 2014, researchers estimate that by 2099, people in these zones could face up to a full day’s worth of additional sleep reduction annually.

“A key takeaway from the study is that some populations face higher risks than others,” Liao said. “Targeting interventions and policy changes to those groups may be particularly impactful.”

Liao and his colleagues are not stopping at documenting the problem; they are already looking toward solutions. Their next step is to investigate whether practical interventions can soften the blow of hot nights on sleep. There are concepts like organized sleep hygiene programs, green roofs that reduce ambient temperatures, and indoor cooling systems. The team wants to see if these tactics can do more than just improve the comfort of the night.

The study is published in the journal Environment International.

Source: Keck School of Medicine

Authorities continue to search for identity of Brown University gunman after three days

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Authorities still trying to identify Brown University gunman three days into manhunt

Rob and Michele Reiner’s son, Nick, to be charged with murder in connection to parents’ deaths

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Prosecutors in Los Angeles will file murder charges against a son of Rob and Michele Reiner, the Hollywood couple who were found dead in their home with multiple stab wounds on Sunday.

Nick Reiner, 32, is facing two counts of first-degree murder and could be sentenced to life in prison if found guilty. He will be brought to court to formally face charges after he is “medically-cleared” by prison officials, District Attorney Nathan Hochman said.

During a news conference on Tuesday, Mr Hochman also said no decision had yet been made about whether to seek the death penalty.

Rob Reiner directed several iconic films in a variety of genres, including This is Spinal Tap, Misery and A Few Good Men.

Michele Singer Reiner was an actress, photographer and producer, and the founder of Reiner Light, a photography agency and production company.

Their son Nick Reiner is facing two counts of first degree murder, “with a special circumstance of multiple murders,” according to Hochman. That enhancement could lead to a stiffer sentence if he is later found guilty.

District Attorney Hochman said he also is accused of using a “dangerous and deadly weapon, that being a knife”.

The suspect is currently undergoing medical testing to ensure that he can attend court. He is expected to appear before a judge later on Tuesday for an arraignment hearing, where he will be formally charged, and also able to enter a plea of guilty or not guilty.

LA Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell also spoke during the news conference, describing how the case has reverberated throughout the city.

“This case is heartbreaking and deeply personal, not only for the Reiner family and their loved ones, but for the entire city,” he said.

“We extend our deepest condolences to everyone affected by this tragedy.”

During the news conference, officials declined to say how the suspect was located, attributing his arrest to “good, solid police work”.

District Attorney Hochman added that it is too early to say whether any “mental illness” played a role in the crime, and speculated that it could come up at trial.

“If there is evidence of mental illness, it will appear in court, in whatever details the defence seeks to present,” he said.

Google researchers discover key insights on optimizing AI agent performance

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Welcome to Eye on AI. In this edition…President Trump takes aim at state AI regulations with a new executive order…OpenAI unveils a new image generator to catch up with Google’s Nano Banana….Google DeepMind trains a more capable agent for virtual worlds…and an AI safety report card doesn’t provide much reassurance.

Hello. 2025 was supposed to be the year of AI agents. But as the year draws to a close, it is clear such prognostications from tech vendors were overly optimistic. Yes, some companies have started to use AI agents. But most are not yet doing so, especially not in company-wide deployments.

A McKinsey “State of AI” survey from last month found that a majority of businesses had yet to begin using AI agents, while 40% said they were experimenting. Less than a quarter said they had deployed AI agents at scale in at least one use case; and when the consulting firm asked people about whether they were using AI in specific functions, such as marketing and sales or human resources, the results were even worse. No more than 10% of survey respondents said they had AI agents “fully scaled” or were “in the process of scaling” in any of these areas. The one function with the most usage of scaled agents was IT (where agents are often used to automatically resolve service tickets or install software for employees), and even here only 2% reported having agents “fully scaled,” with an additional 8% saying they were “scaling.”

A big part of the problem is that designing workflows for AI agents that will enable them to produce reliable results turns out to be difficult. Even the most capable of today’s AI models sit on a strange boundary—capable of doing certain tasks in a workflow as well as humans, but unable to do others. Complex tasks that involve gathering data from multiple sources and using software tools over many steps represent a particular challenge. The longer the workflow, the more risk that an error in one of the early steps in a process will compound, resulting in a failed outcome. Plus, the most capable AI models can be expensive to use at scale, especially if the workflow involves the agent having to do a lot of planning and reasoning.

Many firms have sought to solve these problems by designing “multi-agent workflows,” where different agents are spun up, with each assigned just one discrete step in the workflow, including sometimes using one agent to check the work of another agent. This can improve performance, but it too can wind up being expensive—sometimes too expensive to make the workflow worth automating.

Are two AI agents always better than one?

Now a team at Google has conducted research that aims to give businesses a good rubric for deciding when it is better to use a single agent, as opposed to building a multi-agent workflow, and what type of multi-agent workflows might be best for a particular task.

The researchers conducted 180 controlled experiments using AI models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. It tried them against four different agentic AI benchmarks that covered a diverse set of goals: retrieving information from multiple websites; planning in a Minecraft game environment; planning and tool use to accomplish common business tasks such as answering emails, scheduling meetings, and using project management software; and a finance agent benchmark. That finance test requires agents to retrieve information from SEC filings and perform basic analytics, such as comparing actual results to management’s forecasts from the prior quarter, figuring out how revenue derived from a specific product segment has changed over time, or figuring out how much cash a company might have free for M&A activity.

In the past year, the conventional wisdom has been that multi-agent workflows produce more reliable results. (I’ve previously written about this view, which has been backed up by the experience of some companies, such as Prosus, here in Eye on AI.) But the Google researchers found instead that whether the conventional wisdom held was highly contingent on exactly what the task was.

Single agents do better at sequential steps, worse at parallel ones

If the task was sequential, which was the case for many of the Minecraft benchmark tasks, then it turned out that so long as a single AI agent could perform the task accurately at least 45% of the time (which is a pretty low bar, in my opinion), then it was better to deploy just one agent. Using multiple agents, in any configuration, reduced overall performance by huge amounts, ranging between 39% and 70%. The reason, according to the researchers, is that if a company had a limited token budget for completing the entire task, then the demands of multiple agents trying to figure out how to use different tools would quickly overwhelm the budget.

But if a task involved steps that could be performed in parallel, as was true for many of the financial analysis tasks, then multi-agent systems conveyed big advantages. What’s more, the researchers found that exactly how the agents are configured to work with one another makes a big difference, too. For the financial-analysis tasks, a centralized multi-agent syste—where a single coordinator agent directs and oversees the activity of multiple sub-agents and all communication flows to and from the coordinator—produced the best result. This system performed 80% better than a single agent. Meanwhile, an independent multi-agent system, in which there is no coordinator and each agent is simply assigned a narrow role that they complete in parallel, was only 57% better than a single agent.

Research like this should help companies figure out the best ways to configure AI agents and enable the technology to finally begin to deliver on last year’s promises. For those selling AI agent technology, late is better than never. For the people working in the businesses using AI agents, we’ll have to see what impact these agents have on the labor market. That’s a story we’ll be watching closely as we head into 2026.

With that, here’s more AI news.

Jeremy Kahn
jeremy.kahn@fortune.com
@jeremyakahn

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

US poll shows Trump’s approval rating falls to 39% due to economic worries

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Reuters/Ipsos survey suggests Americans are increasingly unhappy with Trump’s handling of the economy.

A new poll suggests that the number of people in the United States who approve of the job Donald Trump is doing as president has dropped to 39 percent as concerns grow over the state of the economy.

The poll released by Reuters/Ipsos on Tuesday indicated Trump’s approval rating is down about 2 points from 41 percent earlier this month, a decline driven partly by growing economic dissatisfaction among members of Trump’s own Republican Party.

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Just 33 percent of respondents expressed approval of Trump’s handling of economic issues, the lowest level since he took office for a second time in January.

Growing affordability woes could be a serious political liability for Trump and his allies, who campaigned in 2024 on a promise to address inflation and concerns around the cost of living.

A recent Politico poll found high levels of anxiety in the US over expenses such as healthcare, groceries and housing with 55 percent of respondents assigning Trump’s policies some responsibility for increasing food prices.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll also suggested Trump’s approval rating on cost-of-living issues dropped to 27 percent from 31 percent earlier in December. Among Republicans, approval of his handling of the economy dropped to 72 percent from 78 percent.

‘Golden age’

Trump has denied rising prices are squeezing Americans, calling concerns over affordability a “hoax” being perpetrated by hostile media coverage and Democratic rivals and insisting that the US economy is in a “golden age”. In remarks last week, Trump said he was “crushing” inflation and “prices are coming down tremendously.”

Some Democrats have relished watching Trump reprise the arguments of his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, who was criticised for insisting during his 2021-2025 presidency that Americans’ frustrations over inflation and the cost of living were being exaggerated.

While Trump’s approval rating has declined from a high of 47 percent when he first returned to the White House, his rating has remained relatively stable over the past several months with slight increases and decreases between the high 30s and low 40s.

James Barton steps down from Superstruct following KKR’s acquisition, in under 18 months

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James Barton, co-founder of Europe’s largest independent festivals group Superstruct Entertainment, has resigned less than 18 months after its $1.4B acquisition by investment fund KKR.

In an emotional note to staff sent today (December 16) and obtained by MBW, Barton confirmed that he would be resigning from the Superstruct board at the end of 2025.

The British exec told his colleagues: “The past nine years — building this company and watching it grow, with all its highs… and occasional lows — have been nothing short of remarkable. Sharing that journey with you has been one of the most meaningful experiences of my career and my life.”

Serial entrepreneur Barton started in the music business by co-founding legendary Liverpool dance club Cream. That spawned the highly successful Creamfields festival, which he later sold to Live Nation.

Barton then spent five years at Live Nation in LA as President of Electronic Music before striking out on his own with Superstruct Entertainment alongside co-founder Roderick Schlosser.

Barton and Schlosser launched London-headquartered Superstruct in 2017 with backing from Providence Equity Partners.

Since then, Superstruct has acquired 80 independent festivals, including such fixtures of the European festival scene as Sonar (Spain), Sziget (Hungary), Zwarte Cross (Netherlands), Wacken and Parookaville (Germany), and Field Day and Lost Village (UK).

Providence announced that it had sold Superstruct to US investment group KKR in June 2024.

At the time, Providence’s Andrew Tisdale and Daniel Zwicky said:  “We believe [Superstruct’s] resilience and emergence from the global pandemic as a stronger business is testament to the entrepreneurial spirit of Roderik Schlösser, James Barton and the impressive management team.

“We are confident that with KKR’s support, Superstruct will continue to thrive.”

Yet earlier this year, Superstruct found itself at the centre of global controversy when over 100 artists publicly boycotted the firm’s festivals in protest against KKR’s purported economic interests in Israel.

In April, a different collection of over 50 artists, including Brian Eno and Robert Del Naja of Massive Attack, signed a letter calling on the UK’s Field Day to publicly distance itself from KKR’s investments.

Barton’s co-founder in Superstruct, Roderick Schlosser, left the company earlier this year.

Barton was widely expected to follow him in the coming months, but it is understood to have accelerated his departure following the arrival of KKR-appointed CEO Alex Mahon, formerly CEO of UK public broadcaster Channel 4.

You can read Barton’s note to staff sent today (December 16), and obtained by MBW, below:

Dear friends, colleagues, and fellow founders,

I’m writing to share the news that I will be leaving the company and resigning from the Superstruct board at the end of the year.

Stepping away from something you’ve poured so much of yourself into is never easy. It has been a tough decision to make, but I know it’s the right moment for me to move on.

The past nine years — building this company and watching it grow, with all its highs… and occasional lows — have been nothing short of remarkable. Sharing that journey with you has been one of the most meaningful experiences of my career and my life.

Live entertainment is a tough business, but festivals are a world of their own — creative, magical, demanding, and deeply human. Creating them, nurturing their communities, and protecting what makes them special takes more than hard work. It takes heart. As I’ve often said, you can own a business, but you can’t own a culture. You have to inspire it, live it, and earn it every day. And that’s exactly what you’ve done.

Thank you for believing in the simple but powerful idea of building a home for independent festival and event creators. None of us could have imagined just how far it would take us, or how much it would shape us. You should be incredibly proud of what you’ve built together and be excited for what you will continue to build in the future.

It has been an honour — truly — to stand alongside you and I wish you all the very best for the future.

JamesMusic Business Worldwide