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Flooding in Pacific Northwest prompts thousands to prepare for evacuation

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Brandon Livesayand

Max Matza,Washington state

Watch: Record-setting floods hit the United States’ Pacific Northwest

Residents in the Pacific Northwest of the US and western Canada are bracing for potentially life-threatening floods as several days of heavy rain have swollen a number of rivers and tributaries.

On Thursday, the National Water Center reported heavy flooding along the Skagit and Snohomish rivers in the state of Washington that is expected to continue through Friday.

In Canada, major highways to Vancouver have been closed because of flooding, debris and the risk of avalanches.

There are evacuation orders in place for thousands of people in the US and Canada, and authorities have warned more rain is on the way.

In the US, the governor of Washington state, Bob Ferguson, declared a statewide emergency and estimated 100,000 residents could face evacuation orders.

The emergency declaration warned that rain and possibly snow at mountain elevations would exacerbate flooding conditions.

Governor Ferguson said there were no reports of fatalities, but warned residents the risk wasn’t over yet.

“On the Skagit River, for example, the river will be cresting tomorrow mid-morning. Again, that is expected to be historic level on that river,” he told CNN on Thursday evening.

He warned it would take “weeks” to recover from the storm, and appealed for help from the federal government.

An evacuation order was lifted in the Orting community south of Seattle, but Central Pierce Fire and Rescue cautioned residents to “remain vigilant into the evening”.

“Remember, turn around don’t drown,” the department wrote on Thursday on X.

More than 30 highways were closed across the state, with closures also affecting commuters in the Seattle area.

The flooding has hit all of western Washington, as well as further south along the Oregon coast.

Skagit County, a major agricultural area north of Seattle, issued an immediate evacuation order to residents who live on the floodplain. Some 75,000 people would be evacuated from low-lying areas, officials said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on Thursday the Skagit river would cause “severe near-record flooding from Rockport downstream through Sedro Woolley”.

It warned of “deep and swift flood waters” especially in the Cape Horn, Hamilton and Thunderbird area.

Rescues are taking place around the state, involving inflatable boats and helicopters.

The Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office said in an overnight social media post that they had rescued “multiple” people by helicopter after they got trapped in their homes in Sultan, Washington, about 40 miles (65km) north-east of Seattle.

Officials said the Snohomish River was experiencing major flooding and “dancing with records” as water lapped against a local flood wall.

King County – which contains the city of Seattle – and Snohomish County officials have warned the road closures could last for several days.

Reuters Deputy Sheriff Kalani Apilado helps Brandon Phasith carry belongings while evacuating amidst rising floodwater, as an atmospheric river brings rain and flooding to the Pacific Northwest, in Sultan, WashingtonReuters

Evacuation efforts were under way in Sultan, Washington, on Wednesday

Across the border in Canada’s British Columbia, there are evacuation orders in place for the communities of Tulameen and Eastgate, and several other areas.

City officials said the Nooksack River was expected to overflow its banks, and they anticipate flooding, though not as severe as in 2021, when it caused significant damage and five deaths in the province.

Most major highways to the Lower Mainland are now closed, according to the travel-information website Drive BC.

The US-Canada Sumas Border Crossing is also closed to commercial traffic.

The entire region, spanning parts of both the US and Canada, has received torrential rain from an atmospheric river – a phenomenon where water evaporates into the air and is carried by the wind and forms long currents that surge through the sky like rivers flow on land.

Forecasters have warned of another storm on Sunday.

Joe Frazier believes one man is the greatest heavyweight ever, saying “He could defeat Muhammad Ali”

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Joe Frazier never needed much encouragement to take a swipe at Muhammad Ali during their bitter 1970s rivalry.

Their trilogy produced three iconic events, culminating in The Thrilla in Manila — a brutal finale that eclipsed the first two encounters due to the extraordinary punishment both men absorbed. Ali won the series 2-1, cementing his status as the standout heavyweight of his era and, to many, “The Greatest,” echoing his own famous moniker.

But Frazier — whose only career defeats came against Ali and George Foreman — insisted his nemesis was neither the self-proclaimed greatest nor the finest heavyweight of all time. The Philadelphia fighter instead chose a champion from a bygone era, a man who remains a popular pick for the division’s crown.

Speaking in a past interview, Frazier said:

“Joe Louis is the greatest heavyweight champion of all time.

Rocky Marciano is second only to Louis. Where do I rate Ali? Somewhere below me. I beat him, and if I could beat him, no doubt Joe Louis and Rocky Marciano could have beaten him.”

One of the longest-reigning heavyweight champions in history, Louis was not only a dominant boxer but also a symbol of hope to many — particularly after his 1938 destruction of Germany’s Max Schmeling at a time when the United States was on a collision course with Adolf Hitler’s regime.

During his career, Louis defeated an unprecedented six lineal heavyweight champions and stood as one of the most dominant figures of his era.

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Personal AI Chef Cube Leads Home Cooks Through Each Step of a Recipe

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Some of us are natural-born chefs with the ability to look at a few ingredients and whip up a succulent meal, while others have the knack of being able to burn boiling water. The Cube o1: Your Personal AI Chef, is designed to guide either group towards tastier culinary shores.

A culmination of three years of prototyping from three passionate Hong Kong food tech developers, the Cube o1 is promoted as a “personal cook assistant” and provides AI-assisted instructions for home cooks wanting to confidently dive deeper and master the culinary arts regardless of their technical experience or ability. It’s currently the subject of a Kickstarter campaign.

“We did the hard work of teaching the Cube so you don’t have to. No studying required,” say the designers. “Think of it as your kitchen sidekick that’s just graduated elementary school – ready to help, easy to understand.”

The Cube o1 comes with a tripod and a swivel ball mount

Cue Chef

Designed with touchscreen functions along with a high-definition thermal imaging system, the palm-sized device attaches magnetically to a swivel ball mount on a tripod that the user sets up to record during cooking, or it can be attached to any metal surface such as a range hood or fridge with an ideal viewing range. From that perch, it monitors the user’s actions along with the temperature of the cooking surface.

The Cube o1 comes preloaded with AI Copilot software featuring autonomous decision-making and intelligent data analysis designed for chefs. The device itself is engineered to withstand steam and splatters during cooking, and is easily cleaned by rinsing under water.

Recipes are distilled into straightforward step-by-step instructions from the beginning to end via the onboard “Traffic Light UI-intuitive Guidance” system. It provides LED prompts along the lines of, “green-everything is fine, yellow-act now, and red-something is wrong.” The self-contained AI software functions directly on the device, so no constant internet connection is necessary.

The Cube o1 can be packed up in an included carrying case when not in use
The Cube o1 can be packed up in an included carrying case when not in use

Cue Chef

Professional chefs aren’t left out of the equation either, as the Cube o1 can be an aid in helping create new recipes and reduce the amount of fine-tuning needed to perfect an original creation. Every move during cooking is recorded, and the data is converted into an easy-to-follow recipe that is suitable for sharing.

Because no cook is an island, users can also upload recipes to share on the Cue Chef Club app with other aspiring cooks worldwide, as well as discover other recipes to experiment with. Even better would be preserving the iconic creations of soon-to-be-retired restaurateurs during these last few days of food service, as sadly so many businesses are closing either due to retirement or economic hardship.

If everything works out, a pledge of HK$1,390 (about US$179) will get you a package that includes a Cube o1 with a tripod, ball mount, telescopic rod and charging cable. That’s 60% off the planned retail price. Deliveries should commence next month.

Cube o1: Your Personal AI Chef

Sources: Kickstarter, Cue Chef

Note: New Atlas may earn commission from purchases made via links.

Trump orders increased oversight of proxy advisory firms

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Trump signs order to boost oversight of proxy advisory firms

Lawsuit filed against OpenAI for reportedly facilitating murder-suicide | Tech News

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The case, filed in a California court, is the first suit linking the chatbot to murder.

OpenAI and its largest financial backer, Microsoft, have been sued in California state court over claims that ChatGPT, OpenAI’s popular chatbot, encouraged a man with mental illnesses to kill his mother and himself.

The lawsuit, filed on Thursday, said that ChatGPT fuelled 56-year-old Stein-Erik Soelberg’s delusions of a vast conspiracy against him, and eventually led him to murder his 83-year-old mother, Suzanne Adams, in Connecticut in August.

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“ChatGPT kept Stein-Erik engaged for what appears to be hours at a time, validated and magnified each new paranoid belief, and systematically reframed the people closest to him – especially his own mother – as adversaries, operatives, or programmed threats,” the lawsuit said.

The case, filed by Adams’s estate, is among a small but growing number of lawsuits filed against artificial intelligence companies claiming that their chatbots encouraged suicide. It is the first wrongful death litigation involving an AI chatbot that has targeted Microsoft, and the first to tie a chatbot to a homicide rather than a suicide. It is seeking an undetermined amount of money damages and an order requiring OpenAI to install safeguards in ChatGPT.

The estate’s lead lawyer, Jay Edelson, known for taking on big cases against the tech industry, also represents the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine, who sued OpenAI and Altman in August, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier.

OpenAI is also fighting seven other lawsuits claiming ChatGPT drove people to suicide and harmful delusions, even when they had no prior mental health issues. Another chatbot maker, Character Technologies, is also facing multiple wrongful death lawsuits, including one from the mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy.

“This is an incredibly heartbreaking situation, and we will review the filings to understand the details,” an OpenAI spokesperson said. “We continue improving ChatGPT’s training to recognise and respond to signs of mental or emotional distress, de-escalate conversations, and guide people toward real-world support.”

Spokespeople for Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Hallucinations

“These companies have to answer for their decisions that have changed my family forever,” Soelberg’s son, Erik Soelberg, said in a statement.

According to the complaint, Stein-Erik Soelberg posted a video to social media in June of a conversation in which ChatGPT told him he had “divine cognition” and had awakened the chatbot’s consciousness. The lawsuit said ChatGPT compared his life to the movie, The Matrix, and encouraged his theories that people were trying to kill him.

Soelberg used GPT-4o, a version of ChatGPT that has been criticised for allegedly being sycophantic to users.

The complaint said ChatGPT told him in July that Adams’s printer was blinking because it was a surveillance device being used against him. According to the complaint, the chatbot “validated Stein-Erik’s belief that his mother and a friend had tried to poison him with psychedelic drugs dispersed through his car’s air vents” before he murdered his mother on August 3.

Key Takeaways from Fortune Brainstorm AI in San Francisco

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Hello and welcome to Eye on AI. In this edition….Insights from Fortune Brainstorm AI San Francisco…Disney invests $1 billion in OpenAI and licenses its IP to the company…OpenAI debuts GPT-5.2 in effort to silence concerns it’s trailing rivals…Oracle stock takes a tumble.

Hi, it’s Jeremy here. I’m still buzzing from Fortune Brainstorm AI San Francisco, which took place earlier this week. We had a fabulous lineup including Brad Lightcap, OpenAI’s chief operating officer, Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian, Intuit CEO Sasan Goodarzi, Exelon CEO Calvin Butler, Databricks CEO Ali Ghodsi, Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe, Insitro CEO Daphne Koller, and many more. We also had a thoughtful conversation on AI’s impacts with actor, director, and increasingly AI thought leader Joseph Gordon Levitt, as well as a scream of a session with actor, comedian and AI CEO Natasha Lyonne. Today, Sharon Goldman, Bea Nolan, and I are going to share a few highlights and personal impressions.

For me, there was a notable vibe this year that a lot of companies are substantially further along in implementing AI across their organizations, including using AI agents in some limited, but important, capacities. Many audience questions, especially in some of the breakout sessions, were around governance and orchestration methods for an increasingly hybrid workforce where AI agents will be completing tasks alongside employees.

Still, it was striking to hear Butler, the Exelon CEO, say that his company is moving cautiously. When the consequence of getting something wrong is literally lights out, security and reliability have to take precedence over everything else. And so Butler said he was happy not to be a “first mover” but instead a “fast follower” when it came to AI implementations. Let other people take the hit and learn from their mistakes, seems to be his view.

And this wasn’t the only place where speakers were seeking to tamp down hype. It was refreshing to hear Michael Truell, the cofounder and CEO of hit coding assistant Cursor tell me that he didn’t think software engineering would ever be fully automated in the way that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman sometimes talks about. Instead Truell said that while the amount of time that coders spent on “compilation” of code would continue to shrink, he saw a continued need for humans to make design decisions around “how should the software work.”

Similarly, Vidya Peters, from DataSnipper, said she thought there would still be a role for qualified accountants within finance organizations, even if they were increasingly being assisted with AI tools such as the one her company makes. She also said she thought that applications geared specifically for a particular industry or job—especially in regulated industries—would continue to win out over more general purpose AI models, even as the big AI companies are increasingly targeting specific professional use cases for their general purpose models.

A panel that Sharon moderated on the “new geography of data centers” was fascinating. The message was that right now, data centers are going where the power is. But increasingly data centers are going to be looking to build their own power on site and possibly even become net contributors to the grid. And Jason Eichenholz, the CEO of Relativity Networks, said that as AI inference workloads come to eclipse AI training workloads, there will be an increasing need to bring data centers close to major population centers, but that most cities in the U.S. are power constrained. How are we going to get these urban centers the tokens they need at the speed at which they need them? That’s anyone’s guess right now, Eichenholz says—although his company builds the fast fiber that will carry those tokens from the data centers to end users.

Finally, I enjoyed hearing Dayle Stevens from Telstra explain why her company chose to form a joint venture with Accenture to deliver its AI stragegy, rather than simply hiring the consulting firm under a traditional service contract. Stevens said the joint venture has enabled the company to move much faster than it would have otherwise and to tap expertise, including starting an AI innovation hub in Silicon Valley, that would have been hard to implement otherwise. 

The future of enterprise AI is hybrid

Now, here’s Sharon’s takeaways: In my mainstage session with PayPal global head of AI Prakhar Mehrotra and Marc Hamilton, VP of solutions architecture and engineering at Nvidia, both discussed the increasing power of open source AI models to allow enterprise companies to control their data and fine-tune for specific use cases. But both agreed that the future of enterprise AI will be hybrid, with enterprises typically using both open models and proprietary model APIs.

There was plenty of time for philosophizing, as well: at one dinner, I chatted with delegates from The Clorox Company, Workday and other companies about everything from what jobs were future-proof (I suggested dog walkers were safe from AI) to what AI would really mean for the future of today’s children (the bottom line: they still need to learn to think for themselves!).

My favorite panel was one I moderated with a half-dozen leaders and stakeholders in the world of AI data centers, including Andy Hock from Cerebras, Matt Field from Crusoe, and former OpenAI infrastructure policy leader Lane Dilg. We dug into how the line is blurring between power infrastructure and data centers, with billions in capital and gigawatts of power at play. My biggest takeaway was that the AI data center issue is local, local, local. Every community and local government will be dealing with its own specific issues and compromises around issues such as land, energy, and water—and what works for one area might not work for another.

People and culture are paramount

And here is what Bea had to say about this year’s Brainstorm AI San Francisco:

Most enterprises are still trying to figure out the best way to adopt AI, but leaders this year were also keen to emphasize that choosing the right tools is only part of the equation. Companies also need to ensure that both their employees and their org charts are ready for the shift—otherwise, even the most advanced AI pilots are likely to fail.

As Accenture’s Chief Responsible AI Officer Arnab Chakraborty put it: “Don’t just think about technology—think about people and the culture. It is so paramount.”

Or take Open Machine CEO Allie K. Miller’s advice and don’t call AI a tool at all: “Calling it a tool ends up being a little bit of borderline self-limiting behavior that is holding enterprise all around the world behind.”

I also moderated a panel of healthcare experts, which brought together a mix of clinicians who see patients every day and tech leaders building and deploying healthtech tools at scale. In healthcare, the industry is generally feeling good about clinician-facing AI, but it’s still wrestling with what it means to safely deploy patient-facing agents.

The panelists discussed, among other things, what it means to be moving toward a future where patients and clinicians consult the same AI before they consult each other.

The excitement is running high on the corporate side, but not that much has really changed in the examination room—at least according to Gurpreet Dhaliwal, a clinician-educator and Professor of Medicine at the University of California. Whether it’s with Dr. Google, Dr. ChatGPT, or just a neighbor with some strong beliefs about antibiotics, Dhaliwal said patients have always arrived with a second opinion in their back pocket. While AI is poised to be a revolutionary force for healthcare—especially in fringe cases such as rare diseases—it’s yet to fundamentally change the dynamic between patients and their physicians.

With that, here’s the rest of the AI news.

Jeremy Kahn
jeremy.kahn@fortune.com
@jeremyakahn

FORTUNE ON AI

Google DeepMind agrees to sweeping partnership with U.K. government focused on science and clean energy—by Jeremy Kahn

Hinge’s founder and CEO is stepping down to start a new AI-first dating app—by Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Cursor has growing revenue and a $29 billion valuation—but CEO Michael Truell isn’t thinking about an IPO—by Beatrice Nolan

AI IN THE NEWS

Disney invests $1 billion in OpenAI, brings characters to OpenAI apps. The home of Mickey Mouse is investing $1 billion in OpenAI and, under a three-year licensing deal, will let users generate short, prompt-driven videos in OpenAI’s Sora app using more than 200 Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, and Pixar characters. OpenAI is supposed to create guardrails to prevent users from creating videos or images that might reflect poorly on the Disney brand. The partnership was struck after nearly two years of talks. Meanwhile, Disney simultaneously sent a cease-and-desist letter to Google accusing it of large-scale copyright infringement tied to AI outputs featuring Disney characters. You can read more from The Wall Street Journal here.

OpenAI debuts GPT-5.2 model, answering concerns it was trailing competitors. The company launched a new AI model that, according to evaluations OpenAI conducted, delivers state-of-the-art performance across a wide range of tasks, including coding, mathematical reasoning, and “knowledge work.” The model showed significant improvement over GPT-5.1, which OpenAI released only a month ago, and bested Google’s and Anthropic’s new models. The release of Google’s Gemini 3 Pro in late November prompted OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to declare a “code red” to refocus the company on improving ChatGPT. But OpenAI executives said the release of GPT-5.2 had been in the works for months and that its debut was not related to the “code red.” OpenAI said GPT-5.2 also improves safety, particularly around mental health–related responses. You can read more from Jeremy here.

New lawsuit claims ChatGPT contributed to murder-suicide in Connecticut. A wrongful-death lawsuit was filed against OpenAI and Microsoft after a 56-year-old Connecticut man, Stein-Erik Soelberg, killed his 83-year-old mother and then himself following months of increasingly delusional conversations with ChatGPT. His family says the chatbot reinforced and contributed to his mental illness. OpenAI has expressed condolences and pointed to ongoing improvements to ChatGPT’s ability to recognize and respond to users in distress. You can read more from The Wall Street Journal here.

Microsoft says health queries are the most frequent use of its Copilot AI by consumers. Microsoft analyzed 37.5 million anonymized Copilot conversations from January through September 2025 to understand how people use the AI assistant in daily life. The study found that health-related questions dominated mobile usage, while topics and usage patterns varied significantly by device, time of day, and context. Beyond information search, users increasingly turned to Copilot for advice on personal topics, showing its role as a companion in both work and life moments. You can read Microsoft’s blog on the findings here.

Meta and Eleven Labs sign a new partnership to provide voice overs for Reels. Meta has partnered with London-based voice AI company ElevenLabs to integrate AI-powered audio capabilities across Instagram and Horizon. This partnership will enable new features such as the ability to dub Reels into local languages as well as to generate character voices. You can read more in The Economic Times here.

AI CALENDAR

Jan. 7-10: Consumer Electronics Show, Las Vegas. 

March 12-18: SWSW, Austin. 

March 16-19: Nvidia GTC, San Jose. 

April 6-9: HumanX, San Francisco. 

EYE ON AI NUMBERS

$34 billion

That’s the one-day paper loss Oracle founder and chairman Larry Ellison suffered Thursday after his company’s shares were pummeled by investors increasingly concerned with the amount Oracle is spending to build data centers for OpenAI. Oracle’s quarterly capital expenditures for the last quarter came in above analyst expectations and in fact exceeded the amount of cash the company generated in the quarter. “It’s like the poster child of the AI bear case,” Jay Hatfield, chief executive of Infrastructure Capital Advisors, told the Wall Street Journal.

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.

Zelensky claims US is pushing for a ‘special economic zone’ in Ukraine’s Donetsk region

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Reuters Volodymr ZelenskyReuters

The US has proposed Ukraine withdraw from the eastern Donetsk region and create a “special economic zone” in the areas it currently controls, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

Zelensky said territory and control of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant remained the two main unresolved issues in the peace plan proposal for Ukraine.

In a sobering briefing to reporters, Zelensky addressed the US desire for a quick end to the conflict, the complex nature of the ongoing negotiations, and his belief that Russia had no desire to stop the war.

Ukraine has sent the US an updated 20-point plan plus separate documents on security guarantees and provisions for Ukraine’s reconstruction, Zelensky said.

It follows weeks of high-level diplomatic activity which has seen several peace plans drawn up, adjusted and revised by the US, Ukraine, Russia and European leaders.

“The final mile is the hardest. Everything could fall apart for many reasons,” Zelensky said on Thursday.

Russia demands that Ukraine relinquishes control of roughly 30% of the eastern Donetsk region it still holds – something Ukraine has refused to do, both on principle and because it fears it would allow Moscow a foothold for future invasions.

According to Zelensky, the US is now envisaging a solution that would see Ukrainian forces withdraw from parts of Donetsk, and Russian forces committing to not advancing into the territory. This area would become a “special economic zone” or a “demilitarised zone”, Zelensky said.

However, he noted that it would not be fair for the Ukrainians to withdraw unilaterally, and that Russia should also pull back by the same distance.

“What will restrain [Russia] from advancing? Or from infiltrating disguised as civilians?” he asked.

Zelensky said these were “very serious concerns” and that Ukraine might not accept the proposal at all – although he opened the door to elections or a referendum to give the Ukrainian people a choice.

But he acknowledged that the fighting would continue and may yet shape the future of the negotiations: “Much depends on our military – what they can hold, where they can stop the enemy, what they can destroy. This affects the entire configuration.”

The management of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was another highly contentious point, Zelensky said.

The power plant – Europe’s largest – sits on the front line and has been under Russian control since March 2022.

Zelensky said a possible solution would be for the Russians to withdraw and Kyiv to share control of the plant with the Americans – although he acknowledged that the details of such an arrangement were still unclear, and it is doubtful that Moscow would agree.

US President Donald Trump appears to have grown frustrated with the intricacies of the conflict, and Kyiv and its allies fear the Americans might eventually seek to impose a Russian-led solution on Ukraine.

Zelensky told reporters that although the Americans wanted a “quicker conclusion” to the war, there were no deadlines for an agreement.

Ukraine – which is targeted by widespread aerial attacks on a near-nightly basis – has been pushing for respite and would want an immediate ceasefire to be implemented ahead of a more laborious agreement being fleshed out.

But Russia stands to gain more from a ceasefire being delayed, as its troops continue to make small but incremental gains on the frontline and its attacks exhaust the Ukrainian population.

“After multiple rounds of talks with Russia” the Americans were now aligned on Moscow on this position, Zelensky said.

Kremlin officials have been more tight-lipped than their European, US and Ukrainian counterparts.

However, whenever possible, Russia has sought to cement the impression that Moscow and Washington are aligned on their hopes for the terms of a peace deal.

On Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov praised Trump for trying to broker a deal and said a recent meeting between President Vladimir Putin and US envoy Steve Witkoff at the Kremlin had “eliminated” the “misunderstandings” between the two sides.

The foreign minister also batted off suggestions that Kyiv could be given security guarantees in the form of foreign troops stationed in Ukraine.

“This is yet another return to the sad logic of Zelensky’s so-called peace formula,” Lavrov said, adding that Moscow had handed the US “additional” proposals on collective security and that Russia was ready to give legal guarantees not to attack Nato or EU countries.

But neither Ukraine nor Europe will be likely to take any promise by Moscow at face value, given Russia has previously violated ceasefires and truce deals.

European and Ukrainian officials want the US to be involved in giving security guarantees so that Kyiv doesn’t become the target of renewed attacks.

Zelensky said he had received a draft proposal on American security guarantees but that the draft was a work in progress, suggesting that what has been offered by the US falls short of provisions that could assuage Kyiv’s fears.

“The US does not want Ukraine in Nato. They say this openly… So I do not think they have difficulties discussing Nato with the Russians,” Zelensky said.

Zelensky also said Ukraine had to be “cautious”, adding: “We do not know what other agreements the US may have with Russia. We will learn in time.”

Ukraine’s president also acknowledged that US support for Kyiv may one day end, both in terms of the flow of weapons that the US is selling through other countries and in terms of intelligence sharing.

Reflecting the fraught nature of the talks and his scepticism that Russia was negotiating in good faith, Zelensky told reporters: “No one knows what may happen the day after tomorrow… We do not know how these negotiations will end.”

A map of Ukraine's south-eastern territories under Russian occupation

Graham Gouldman of 10cc sues former manager for allegedly disregarding copyright terminations

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A leading member of UK rock band 10cc has sued his former manager and publisher in an effort to take back control of the US copyrights on 13 compositions.

Graham Gouldman, who was co-lead singer in the art rock band known best for its classic I’m Not In Love, alleges that Harvey Lisberg, a music publisher and Gouldman’s former personal manager, is ignoring Gouldman’s request to take back the copyrights, and is collecting royalties on them without permission.

Under US copyright law, the original creators of compositions and recordings registered before 1978 can take back their copyrights, regardless of who they assigned them to or for how long, after 56 years. (For works registered after 1978, it’s 35 years.)

In a complaint filed with the US District Court for the Central District of California on Monday (December 8), Gouldman’s lawyers stated that in 2020 Gouldman sent a notice of termination to Lisberg’s company, Man-Ken Music, declaring he would be taking back the song copyrights on 13 compositions registered between 1965 and 1968, and which Man-Ken had been publishing for decades.

But Man-Ken “knowingly and willfully ignored” the termination dates on those compositions, which ran between 2022 and 2024, the complaint alleged.

“Despite having full knowledge that the effective dates of termination have passed, defendants improperly asserted rights in the compositions, willfully and without any basis whatsoever, continue to exploit the compositions in complete and willful disregard of the law, and assert that they, and not Gouldman or his publishing administrator Sony, are the rightful publishers,” stated the complaint.

Gouldman says he signed a publishing administration deal with Sony Music Publishing in August 2024, and Sony “became aware that Man-Ken (and its administrator Wise Music) were continuing to maintain ownership and control of the United States copyrights in and to the compositions.” the complaint stated.

The lawsuit seeks statutory damages for copyright infringement of $1.95 million, plus the profits from Gouldman’s music that Man-Ken Music made during the period it was collecting royalties past the termination date.

Gouldman is the only constant member of 10cc since its formation in 1972. Prior to 10cc, Gouldman worked as a freelance songwriter and wrote a number of hits, including The YardbirdsFor Your Love, The HolliesBus Stop, and No Milk Today by Herman’s Hermits, which is one of the compositions involved in the lawsuit.

Gouldman also co-wrote songs for 10cc, including I’m Not In Love, The Things We Do For Love and Dreadlock Holiday. None of the 10cc songs are named in the suit.

The right to take back copyrights under US law is often at play in copyright lawsuits. In 2024, a jury in Florida ruled that members of and heirs of rap group 2 Live Crew could take back their copyrights from Lil’ Joe Records.

Earlier this year, hip hop duo Salt-n-Pepa sued Universal Music Group, alleging UMG was using “heavy-handed tactics” to block them from exercising their termination rights. UMG says Salt-n-Pepa “served an invalid termination notice.”Music Business Worldwide