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Sorsby placed at least 40 bets on Indiana football as Hoosiers QB – ESPN

Football Sorsby placed at least 40 bets on Indiana football as Hoosiers QB  ESPNTexas Tech coach Joey McGuire pushes for Brendan Sorsby’s reinstatement  The New York TimesBrendan Sorsby, Myles Garrett trade are Browns “easy” options to find QB of Future  Dawgs By NatureNCAA Will Not Negotiate Settlement To Reinstate Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby  NFL Rumors – ProFootballRumors.comTexas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby made dozens of wagers on Indiana football in 2022 while with the Hoosiers  Yahoo Sports…
Read More Alejandro Pekar

Big 12’s CFP expansion vote is first step in calling SEC’s separation bluff

Football

Bullet point summary by AI

  • The Big 12 coaches have unanimously voiced support for expanding the College Football Playoff to 24 teams.
  • Their move follows provocative statements from several SEC coaches about their conference’s dominance and independence.
  • The response from within the SEC reveals a lack of unity behind those bold claims, raising questions about the conference’s true stance.

Conferences not named the SEC are feeling more inclined to push for expansion of the College Football Playoff from 12 teams to 24 teams. On Thursday, Big 12 coaches unanimously voted to express their support for the larger field which would’ve seen five programs qualify for the postseason tournament instead of just the one — champion Texas Tech.

The informal vote comes on the heels of incendiary comments made by members of the SEC about their conference’s superiority and the insane proposition it could survive on its own outside the NCAA. Georgia head coach Kirby Smart explicitly suggested the latter at a press conference on Tuesday.

Smart’s totally un-smart secession idea was (presumably) a veiled threat in the face of the ever-growing likelihood the CFP will grow to include double the amount of teams that participated in the last two editions. It’s clear he and other coaches like Texas’ Steve Sarkisian and LSU’s Lane Kiffin, who suggested SEC backups would go undefeated in other conferences, feel threatened by an increased chance of being upset in an early playoff round.

SEC not unified in crazy CFB secession suggestion

LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin | Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

The Big 12 publishing its coaches’ preference for an expanded postseason field can be viewed as the conference daring the SEC to back up its talk. Though, for now, those few with puffed up chests don’t appear to have a consensus among their colleagues.

“In the SEC we have to be one,” LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry told ESPN Thursday during the conference’s spring meetings in Florida. “We fight each other on the fields: Saturday nights, basketball games, baseball weekends, track and field, that’s when we compete. After that, this is one. When you start breaking up and doing our own things, that hurts our conference.”

Ausberry didn’t name names, especially not his own head football coach, but he was clearly referencing Kiffin, Sarkisian and Smart’s recent comments. What was clear is the disunity within the conference and that’s only been highlighted by SEC commissioner Greg Sankey’s equally inflamatory approach.

“If you look at the entirety of our league, we are by far the most competitive, the strongest football league by far,” he told reporters Wednesday in Florida. Ironically, Sankey was silent on how he handled Kiffin, Sarkisian and Smart’s controversial claims.

Understandably, Sankey is going to back his conference which has historically been dominant in football. It’s just cringe when its rival, the Big Ten, has won four of the last five national championships since the advent of NIL, the transfer portal and the expanded CFP.

We’ll only know whether the SEC is serious about making a huge stink if and only if the CFP is actually expanded as large as 24-teams. The NCAA is already on shaky ground to begin with as the business of college sports evolves ever-rapidly but an SEC secession would probably shatter the sport altogether.

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Read More Maribel Schewe

Eagles Deadzone Debate: Will the team be better off without A.J. Brown?

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OK, we’re getting close now.

After months of speculation and endless rumors in the football media world, an expected trade of A.J. Brown by the Eagles will likely come to fruition sometime after Monday. That’s because, after June 1, the Eagles can trade away their star receiver without absorbing as dramatic a salary cap hit.

You know all this. And now that Monday is creeping ever closer, the rumor mill is beginning to churn again after a few weeks of blissful respite.

Even if Rapoport is correct, it seems a forgone conclusion that A.J. Brown will be playing for another organization this season.

This week’s topic for the Eagles Deadzone Debates is a simple one — Will the Eagles be better off with A.J. Brown, or without him? Here are the arguments:

Football Better Off Keeping Brown

The arguments for keeping him are simple.

He’s probably the greatest receiver in Philadelphia Eagles history and is still a talented wideout that creates match-up problems for most defenses.

And, the Eagles will absorb a significant salary cap penalty if they deal him, even after June 1.

In four years in Philly, Brown has piled up 339 catches and 5,034 yards. He’s scored 32 touchdowns. He averages 81.2 yards per game, made two Pro Bowls and named 2nd-team AP All Pro three times.

When healthy and motivated, there are few receivers in the league better than Brown, and his presence on the team has always been a difference maker for Jalen Hurts and the offense. Even as Brown has complained about usage, he’s put up Hall of Fame numbers, been to two Super Bowls and had an impact in each, winning one of them.

And of course, the money. By waiting until after June 1, the Eagles can spread out the remainder of Brown’s signing bonus, his dead money, over multiple season, making it easier on their ‘26 cap situation. Still, Brown has $43.5 million in dead money left. Even with the post-June 1 designation, they still owe him that cash, only spread out — a little over $16 million this year and around $27 million in 2027.

So yes, waiting until after June 1 is better, but it’s still not ideal to be paying out $43.5 million for someone to play in another uniform.

Of course, the Eagles have done this before, and they’ve made it work. But if you’re looking for an argument to keep Brown, the wasted cap space is one of them.

Football Better Off Trading Brown

Brown is aging. He’ll be entering his age-29 season, and historically, production begins to drop off significantly for receivers approaching 30. It appears we began to see a bit of that a year ago, when Brown put up his lowest yardage total since coming to Philadelphia (1,003 yards in 15 games, 66.9 average per game).

His yards per target were down (8.3), and his 12.9 yards per reception were a career low, and his 50.4% success rate was also the lowest of his career. Brown supporters would argue much of this can and should be attributed to Kevin Patullo’s putrid playcalling, but to me, Brown appeared a step slower last season and was unable to win the one-on-one battles that have been the hallmark of his Eagles career. It’s fair to wonder if Howie Roseman would be trading Brown before his trade value decreases.

The Eagles have also added a ton of new receivers to the roster through free agency and the draft, acknowledging that, yes, Brown is almost certainly to be moved elsewhere. They drafted Makai Lemon in the first round this year and signed Dontayvion Wicks, Hollywood Brown, Elijah Moore and John Metchie III. Not all of those receivers will join DeVonta Smith during the regular season this year, but there are enough viable bodies in the mix to allow the Eagles to begin anew with new offensive coordinator Sean Mannion.

Much of Brown’s lack of production can likely also be traced to effort. It seemed clear by the end of the season Brown was simply playing out the string. In terms of the locker room, while Brown is still beloved by his teammates, the constant distraction was just too much drama for them to overcome. Removing him from the equation can help the Eagles re-focus on the true goal of winning a Super Bowl.

At the end of the day, if the player doesn’t want to be here, he’s not going to be good. And so, in my mind, there’s little choice. The Eagles are more likely to return to Super Bowl contention without A.J. Brown than with him, given his current physical abilities, reluctance to play here, and off-season roster construction.

Yes, the Eagles are less talented on paper without him, but will be more productive as they replace him in the aggregate.

What do you think? Sound off in the comments below!

Football Brandon Lee Gowton

Read More John Stolnis

Depot After Dark: Former S Picks Reed Over Polamalu, Ex-Steelers Coach With Ravens, Ireland Flag Football

Football

A Steelers Depot daily segment. A quick hit of some Pittsburgh Steelers-related stories that may not require a complete article, but nuggets worth mentioning and passing on to you guys.

Your Depot After Dark for May 28.

FORMER S PICKS REED OVER POLAMALU

The Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens have one of the best rivalries of the last few decades. It’s still going strong today, but it was at a different level in the 2000s. Both teams boasted some of the NFL’s best defenses and were loaded with talent. They employed two of the greatest safeties ever, Troy Polamalu and Ed Reed. As a result of the rivalry, the two are often compared.

Recently retired NFL safety Justin Simmons made his stance on that argument clear. He recently appeared on Jordan Schultz’s podcast and played a game where he kept four safeties and cut four others. While Simmons originally kept Polamalu, he had to cut the Steelers great after Reed’s name was brought up. Both players are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, but Simmons clearly prefers Reed.

EX-STEELERS COACH WITH RAVENS

The Steelers aren’t the only AFC North team to make significant changes this offseason. The Ravens also parted ways with their head coach and overhauled their staff as a result. They added former Steelers running backs coach Eddie Faulkner to fill the same role.

The Baltimore Banner’s Giana Han recently posted a video of Faulkner in action, coaching with the Ravens. He had been with the Steelers since 2019, so it’s odd to see him with a division rival. However, Faulkner has plenty of talent to work with in Baltimore. Specifically, he could help Derrick Henry further establish himself as one of this generation’s best running backs.

IRELAND FLAG FOOTBALL

The Steelers will make history this season by playing in the NFL’s first regular-season game in Paris, France. This is their second year in a row playing in an international game. They also played in the league’s first regular-season game in Ireland last year.

The Steelers understandably have a deep connection with Ireland. U.S. Ambassador to Ireland Edward Walsh recently shared on Twitter that the Steelers hosted their first-ever Flag Football Final in Dublin. Dan Rooney, son of Steelers owner Art Rooney II, was also in attendance. The Steelers are still increasing their presence in the country.

Thrilled to join the @steelers for their first ever Flag Football Final in Dublin. Watching Irish players compete and celebrating the legacy of Ambassador Dan Rooney reminds us how sports bring 🇺🇸 and 🇮🇪 closer together. Congrats to the champions from St. Marnock’s National… pic.twitter.com/Yt6GnVEGyW

— Ambassador Edward Walsh (@USAmbIreland) May 27, 2026

Read More Troy Montgomery

Why the Cowboys have solid wide receiver depth

Football

The Dallas Cowboys placed wide receiver Parris Campbell on the reserve/retired list, signaling the end of his professional football journey. He leaves the game after seven seasons, most of which occurred with the Indianapolis Colts, highlighted by a career 2022 season where he finished with 63 catches for 623 yards and three touchdowns. After four years in Indy, he had a one-year stint with three of the four NFC East teams – first New York, then Philly, and then finally last year with Dallas, with each stay becoming increasingly shorter.

During his good years, Campbell was an absolute blazer with 4.31 speed who was known for making big plays after the catch. Health issues plagued his time in the NFL, with just about every lower extremity injury you could think of impacting his playing career. His time in Dallas was next to nil after suffering a knee injury in training camp last season and only seeing the field for one game, where he did not register a single offensive stat.

His sudden retirement doesn’t come as a huge surprise. The tiring injury battles, combined with a crowded house of bottom-roster depth candidates, created an uphill battle for him to make the team. You could even make a case that the Cowboys anticipated his possible departure because immediately after the draft, they signed a couple of free agent wide receivers. Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Tyler Johnson both joined the squad on cost-effective, one-year contracts, shoring up the receiving depth. While fans will now forget Parris, this serves as a good time to remind everyone of what the Cowboys have in their more recent receiving acquisitions as we approach OTAs.

The addition of Valdes-Scantling gives the team an eight-year veteran with over 100 games of experience. He spent his first four years with the Green Bay Packers catching passes from Aaron Rodgers, where he averaged over 500 yards receiving. He then joined the Kansas City Chiefs as a target for Patrick Mahomes, where he again averaged over 500 yards receiving across two seasons and earned two Super Bowl rings. Things have since tapered off for him as he’s played for four different teams over two seasons.

While last season was a disappointment for him, the prior seasons have shown that he’s a legit weapon in the vertical game. Valdes-Scantling has great speed, and whether or not he’s hauling in passes, his average depth of target is typically one of the highest in the league, and it forces defenses to respect the deep ball. Recapturing some vintage Valdes-Scantling and meshing it into this offense could create an interesting habitat for the rest of the Cowboys’ passing game that will feature CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens running around creating havoc.

The team also signed Tyler Johnson, a former fifth-round pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who has spent the better part of his six-year career just trying to find a home. He started his career in Florida catching passes from Tom Brady, but was buried on the depth chart as the Bucs were loaded at wide receiver with Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, and even a veteran Antonio Brown. He spent the next two seasons bouncing around on practice squads before getting a chance with the Los Angeles Rams. But again, he was stuck behind some good receivers, this time Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp. Injuries to both guys opened up some opportunities, and he put together a solid year in 2024. Last year, he started on the New York Jets practice squad before playing his way onto the active roster for 12 games.

If Johnson makes the team, it won’t be as a downfield burner. His role would more likely turn into a physical route runner who will work the short and intermediate parts of the field. He’s a smart player (a former quarterback) who is sharp at finding soft spots in coverage, and is a physical blocker who would be a nice asset in the running game. If he were to find any time of meaningful role in this offense, it would be as a nice safety valve, leaving the explosive plays to Lamb and Pickens.

The loss of Campbell doesn’t do much to change the Cowboys’ receiving depth situation. They are still looking for that lucky number WR5 to join Lamb, Pickens, KaVontae Turpin, and Ryan Flournoy. It’s a wide-open battle with some youngsters fighting for a spot, and a couple of former Super Bowl Champions added to the mix. It should make for an interesting training camp.

Read More Dan Rogers

Dallas Cowboys preseason schedule dates and times

Football

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The Cowboys’ preseason schedule is set.

The games for the Dallas Cowboys 2026 football season have now been set, at least all of them that come before the post-season. It wasn’t that long ago we learned the dates and times of the Cowboys 17-game regular-season schedule.

Now we have the dates and times for the preseason slate. Once upon a time, teams played up to six preseason games before a season. Thankfully that has become fewer preseason games and more regular-season games.

This year the Cowboys will play the Seattle Seahawks, the Arizona Cardinals and the New Orleans Saints.

  • @ Seattle Seahawks: Saturday August 15th, 8:00 PM ET
  • @ Arizona Cardinals: Saturday August 22nd, 10:00 PM ET
  • vs New Orleans Saints: Friday August 28th, 8:00 PM ET

The Cowboys will face both the Seahawks and the Cardinals in the regular-season. We’ll visit Super Bowl champion DeMarcus Lawrence on the road in Seattle during the preseason, while welcoming Kellen Moore into AT&T Stadium for the preseason finale.

Below are some regular-season schedule wallpapers for mobile and desktop created by our very own RJ Ochoa. File through to find the timezone and player you want.

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Read More David Halprin

Samsung and LG Uplus want to turn cell towers into radar for 6G

Samsung Electronics and LG Uplus signed a memorandum of understanding on 27 May to jointly develop Integrated Sensing and Communication, or ISAC, a technology that would allow mobile network base stations to double as environmental sensors. The agreement was signed at LG Science Park in Magok, Seoul, with Samsung Research, the advanced R&D division within Samsung’s Device eXperience unit, leading the development effort.

ISAC works by analysing wireless signals as they reflect off nearby objects, extracting information about an object’s speed, distance, and direction of movement. In practical terms, it means a cell tower could detect a drone, track a vehicle, or monitor foot traffic without any dedicated sensing hardware. The technology uses the same signals that already carry voice and data, turning existing communications infrastructure into a sensing platform.

Why it matters

Environmental sensing today relies on dedicated equipment. LiDAR systems use laser light to measure distance, while radar uses radio waves. Both require separate hardware that must be installed, powered, and maintained independently of the communications network. ISAC eliminates that requirement by piggybacking sensing on the wireless infrastructure that mobile operators have already built.

The International Telecommunication Union’s Radiocommunication Sector, which sets the global framework for mobile standards, has designated ISAC as one of six usage scenarios for IMT-2030, the formal name for 6G. It sits alongside immersive communication, hyper-reliable low-latency communication, massive communication, ubiquitous connectivity, and AI-integrated communication. The inclusion signals that 6G networks are being designed from the outset to sense the physical world, not just move data through it.

What they will test

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The collaboration will initially focus on human detection for safety applications and on improving network operational efficiency. The two companies plan to validate ISAC performance on LG Uplus’s existing 5G networks first, then move to the 7 GHz band, a candidate frequency for 6G that offers a balance between the wide coverage of lower bands and the high bandwidth of millimetre-wave spectrum.

Over time the partnership will combine ISAC-generated wireless data, including location, speed, and density information, with camera imagery to improve detection accuracy. That work will involve developing multimodal AI models that integrate and analyse diverse forms of sensing data. Samsung Research will handle core ISAC and AI technology development, while LG Uplus will provide data and field-testing infrastructure from its commercial network.

The spectrum race behind 6G

The 7 GHz band is increasingly described as the “golden band” for 6G because it offers enough bandwidth for high-speed data while still propagating far enough for practical coverage. South Korea is actively exploring the 7.125 to 8.4 GHz range as a primary 6G candidate. The World Radiocommunication Conference in 2023 identified portions of the 6.425 to 7.125 GHz band for mobile use in several regions, and the 7.125 to 8.4 GHz range is on the agenda for WRC-27.

In the United States, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration must complete its study of the 7.125 to 7.4 GHz band by the end of 2026 before it can be opened to commercial wireless. Europe is pursuing the upper 6 GHz range. The allocation decisions at WRC-27 will largely determine which countries have the spectrum to deploy 6G at scale and which do not. For South Korea, whose economy is deeply exposed to shifts in global tech supply chains, securing early 6G spectrum and standards influence is a strategic priority.

Samsung’s 6G positioning

Samsung has been building its 6G credentials methodically. The company published a 6G white paper outlining its vision for AI-native and sustainable communications, demonstrated 6G technologies alongside global partners at the Silicon Valley Future Wireless Summit in November 2025, and showcased AI-RAN capabilities at Mobile World Congress in March 2026. The ISAC collaboration with LG Uplus extends that work from lab demonstrations to field validation on a live commercial network.

The partnership pairs Samsung’s research capabilities with LG Uplus’s operational infrastructure, a combination that matters because ISAC performance in controlled environments may differ significantly from real-world networks with interference, building reflections, and variable traffic loads. Samsung’s broader ambitions in AI and semiconductor manufacturing give it a vertically integrated stake in 6G infrastructure that few competitors can match.

Commercial 6G deployment is not expected until the early 2030s, and ISAC will need to clear both technical and regulatory hurdles before it replaces dedicated sensing equipment at scale. But the technology represents a genuine shift in what a wireless network can do, and Samsung and LG Uplus are now testing whether the physics holds up outside the lab.

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Alina Maria Stan

UK and France begin AI collaboration for medical research

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The two governments unveil ‘groundbreaking’ science and technology deal

Cliff Saran

By

Published: 29 May 2026 15:15

During the G7 Digital and Technology Ministerial Summit in Paris, the UK government announced a partnership with France to use advanced imaging and artificial intelligence (AI) to improve research in women’s health.

The summit is focused on AI adoption, security and resilience to protect citizens, driving economic growth, and unlocking jobs and opportunities, as well as the energy and water efficiency of the digital sector and how to create a safer online world for children and young people.

The partnership, called the UK-France Strategic Biomedical Alliance in Health and AI, is a collaboration between the University of Oxford, Université Paris Cité, Institut Pasteur, and the UK and French national advanced imaging facilities, the Diamond Light Source and Synchrotron Soleil.

The overall objective is to make it simpler and faster for British and French institutions to cooperate on biomedical research. The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) said that harnessing emerging technology like AI involves joint projects, sharing research expertise in both countries, and working together on joint funding bids to deliver the technologies and products that will benefit people all over the world.

The team of researchers will use AI and data to tackle under-researched, under-diagnosed conditions effecting millions of women. These include complications arising from childbirth and living with endometriosis. 

Speaking about the partnership, technology secretary Liz Kendall said: “This groundbreaking partnership between the UK and France will tackle some of the biggest challenges in women’s health, deliver safer and healthier pregnancies, and accelerate the fight against infectious diseases worldwide. That means new treatments, earlier diagnoses and more personalised care.

“We are determined to build on that spirit of co-operation with our G7 partners this week, to drive forward work on some of the most important issues that affect us all, from AI adoption to keeping kids safe online.”

The government committed £900m of funding to boost the partnership between the Bristol Centre for Supercomputing, which hosts Isambard‑AI, and France’s computing centre, Genci. DSIT said this will allow researchers to access world-class compute and deliver scientific breakthroughs. 

Through the UKRI’s International Science Partnerships Fund, the UK is also contributing £300,000, matched by €330,000 from the French government to support new researchers living and working both in the UK and France, advance their careers.

Imperial College has also signed an agreement with the French National Center for Scientific Research to collaborate on metabolism research – tackling major health challenges including heart disease, cancer and neurodegenerative disorders.

French minister for higher education, research and space Philippe Baptiste said: “The renewed dialogue between France and the United Kingdom marks a decisive step in our scientific partnership. Together, we are building a dynamic and ambitious roadmap, transforming our shared vision into concrete actions, notably through enhanced collaboration in Horizon Europe projects. This cooperation, anchored in trust and excellence, will deliver tangible results in artificial intelligence, health and beyond, for the benefit of both nations.”

Hugh Brady, president of Imperial College London, said: “Understanding metabolism is crucial to addressing some of the biggest health challenges of our time – from obesity and diabetes to cancer and neurodegenerative diseases – and our new joint laboratory will put the UK and France at the forefront of this critical area of research. By bringing together world-leading expertise and cutting-edge technologies, including AI and machine learning, we will deepen our understanding of these complex conditions for the benefit of all.”

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Rebecka Klemp

How the Pope’s Magnifica Humanitas offers a template for individuals to meet the AI moment

Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on artificial intelligence includes a statement that warrants serious attention from technologists and policymakers: “Technology is never neutral.” Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”) is a clarion call to all people to act with courage and solidarity as we enter an age already being transformed by artificial intelligence, the greatest change in human life since the Industrial Revolution. As the pope says, the choice before us—the choice AI presents—is one between the Tower of Babel and the rebuilding of our common humanity. 

In the biblical story of the Tower of Babel, humans sought to build a massive structure that reached all the way to Heaven, only to have their project thwarted when God made those involved unable to understand one another. It was a pursuit fixated on relentless growth, divorced from any concern about God’s commandments or the human cost. It resulted in failure and atomization.

The Book of Nehemiah, however, offers a contrasting narrative, in which the rebuilding of Jerusalem after a period of violence and displacement becomes an opportunity for humanity to show its collaborative resilience. As the encyclical puts it, “The city is reborn, not through the initiative of one man, but through the shared responsibility of all: men, women, priests, artisans, heads of households and young people all play a part. It is an undertaking with God at the center, which rebuilds relationships before rebuilding with stones.” 

Is there any question which road we are currently barreling down? And can there be any doubt which we would do well to walk together? 

We are both Catholics, members of religious communities and longtime advocates within the movement for socially responsible investment. Of particular interest to us and that movement is Pope Leo’s point that AI is not some force of nature or hyperrational, ineffable entity. Instead, he reminds us, AI is ultimately another commercial product, one emerging at a point in history when excessive power over commerce and the wider society has amassed in a vanishingly small number of hands. 

It’s a powerful message. It’s also one that institutional investors have been acting on for years. This encyclical doesn’t break new ground so much as ratify a governance effort that’s already underway, led not by states or international bodies but by shareholders. When governments fail to meaningfully regulate, and corporations cannot be trusted to do what is beneficial beyond their own bottom line, people in society still have the power to set us on the right path, and indeed have the duty to do so. 

Around the world, AI systems are being deployed at scale with remarkably little institutional oversight. There is no AI safety board. The US Federal Trade Commission has jurisdiction over unfair practices but limited authority over algorithmic design. The National Institute of Standards and Technology publishes guidance that most companies ignore. The EU AI Act is partially in force but addresses only a sliver of the deployment surface.

Institutional investors have stepped into this vacuum. Coalitions including the membership of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, representing investors managing over $400 billion in assets, have spent the past several proxy seasons filing resolutions demanding transparency, risk assessment, and accountability around AI deployment. Secular institutional investors have joined them, treating AI governance failures as material business risks.

Shareholders have called tech giants including Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Palantir, and Uber to account and demanded that AI not be used for acts of violence or other violations of human rights. The importance of this aspect of corporate governance was highlighted tragically in the opening hours of the war against Iran, when AI was used to help identify targets for thousands of missile strikes that killed hundreds of people.  

Investors have also challenged executives at CVS and UnitedHealth Group to ensure that AI not be used to undermine the well-being of patients and quality of health care across the United States. 

At companies including Meta and Microsoft, shareholders have decried the environmental impact of AI data centers, which consume vast amounts of energy and precious water resources, and in turn can emit large amounts of greenhouse gases. 

Within creative industries, investors have challenged the leadership at companies like Disney, Netflix, and Warner Bros. to demand transparency about the ways they are using AI and to defend the inimitable human element in storytelling. 

Soon, with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Grok all set to enter the public markets, we will be able to exert similar influence over what are now all privately held entities.

These actions by concerned investors not only call out misdeeds but hold fast to an immutable truth: that it is wrong to use technology to kill, harm, or oppress people. Every human being has a right to safe and effective health care and the opportunity to earn a dignified living. The stories we tell each other matter and require the human creative spark. 

Investor advocates hail from a range of faith traditions. Some have no formal religious faith. Yet in their informed and tenacious advocacy, all these people echo the calls embedded within Pope Leo’s encyclical and act on its declaration that “it is essential that the use of AI, especially when it touches on public goods and fundamental rights, be guided by clear criteria and effective oversight.” 

Encyclicals mark time. A century from now, how will we be remembered for how we met this moment? Will we be seen as having been too timid or shortsighted to prevent a small group of unfathomably wealthy and self-interested people from seizing ever greater control over the human family’s shared destiny? 

Or will the years ahead be remembered as a turning point that helped us rebuild our common humanity? Let this be a time when people of good will and diverse talents come together through their own magnificent humanity to build a future that honors our Creator.

Father Séamus Finn, OMI, is a global leader in faith-based and socially responsible investing and a priest of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a missionary religious congregation.

Sister Susan Francois is the assistant congregation leader and congregation treasurer for the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace.

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Séamus Finn, Susan Francois

All 53 Episodes of a Classic Fox Kids Animated Series are Returning to Streaming

Entertainment

If there is one truly great thing about the streaming age of entertainment, it’s that streaming has made it possible for fans old and new to experience and enjoy not just beloved favorites but shows and movies they may never have had a chance to experience otherwise. It’s also helped bring harder to find classics to larger audiences. This is especially true when it comes to beloved animated treasures that, for many, had been relegated to memories of Saturday mornings and after school blocks of the past and now, a late ‘90s animated kids favorite is not only returning to streaming, but doing so for free.

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Hitting Tubi on June 1st are all 53 episodes of The New Woody Woodpecker Show. The New Woody Woodpecker show first debuted on May 8, 1999, and ran until July 27, 2002, as part of Fox’s Fox Kids programming block. The series, an updated version of the iconic The Woody Woodpecker Show from the ‘70s, followed the adventures of the mischievous titular Woody Woodpecker. Each episode was divided into two segments, one starring Woody and various supporting characters such as Winnie Woodpecker and Knothead & Splinter, with the other starring Chilly Willy, a mute penguin in Antarctica who also gets into various hijinks, usually when trying to get food or escape the cold.

The New Woody Woodpecker Show Is a Late ‘90s Classic (And Features Some Familiar Voice Talent)

The New Woody Woodpecker Show is not only a late ‘90s classic when it comes to kids animation, but it also encapsulates the somewhat subversive, and edgy humor elements of the era. One of the things that makes animation from this era so interesting—and contributes to his lasting nostalgia—is that while it was firmly for kids, its revival of vintage characters made the program approachable and enjoyable for all ages. The series also incorporated a bit of more rebellious humor in its modernization of Woody Woodpecker and other characters, which made it as enjoyable for the adults as the kids. Both ages got something from watching the show.

The series also featured some truly impressive and noteworthy vocal cast, something that both lends to the nostalgia of it all today but also speaks to the quality of the show. Billy West, well known for work on Ren & Stimpy and Futurama, voiced Woody, while the always iconic Mark Hamill brought is impressive vocal talent to the sketchy Buzz Buzzard. E.G. Daily, the voice of Buttercup from The Powerpuff Girls and Tommy Pickles on Rugrats gave Knothead, Woody Woodpecker’s nephew, his own distinctive voice.

While the series didn’t necessarily have the longest run during its time as part of Fox’s Fox Kid programming, the series’ return to streaming this June will give older fans a chance to enjoy this delightful piece of their own childhood all over again, and also do what streaming does best: introduce a whole new generation to an all-time classic.

All episodes of The New Woody Woodpecker show hit Tubi on June 1st.

What do you think? Leave a comment below and join the conversation now in the ComicBook Forum!

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Nicole Drum