Sign up today

Sign up today
Softphone APP for Android &IOS

Proton is now hiring

 


Carney’s $3.8B Nature Plan Calls for Additional Private Capital, Drawing Criticism


Carney’s $3.8B Nature Plan Calls for Additional Private Capital, Drawing Criticism
April 1, 2026
Reading time: 3 minutes

Full Story: The Energy Mix
Chris Bonasia




Pierre Grey's Lakes, Grande Cache, Alberta/Jody MacPherson

Nature conservation groups are weighing in with mixed reactions to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s $3.8-billion nature protection strategy unveiled on Tuesday, with some calling it pragmatic and others criticizing its reliance on market mechanisms.

Carney announced the new plan, A Force of Nature, in Wakefield, Quebec, replacing the previous five-year, $2.3-billion Nature Legacy Fund that expired the same day. The strategy sets out to protect 30% of land and 28% of ocean area by 2030, support infrastructure projects that “work with nature rather than against it,” and deploy “finance tools to fund conservation.” The strategy emphasizes a role for Indigenous leadership, allocating $231 million over five years to enhance Indigenous Guardians programs, and includes the creation of two new national protected areas and expanded conservation action.

Some of the conserved areas highlighted in the strategy are the Seal River Watershed National Park Reserve in Manitoba and the Wiinipaakw Indigenous Protected Area and National Marine Conservation Area in Eastern James Bay. Working landscapes—which the strategy describes as delivering conservation and biodiversity results “while meeting other primary objectives”—include the Salt Spring Island Natural Cemetery in British Columbia, Canadian Forces Base Shilo in south-central Manitoba, and the Queen’s University Biological Station in southeastern Ontario.

The plan also relies in part on private investment. “We can’t do it with public money alone,” Carney said in Wakefield.

The new strategy was kept under wraps until the last minute, leaving conservation groups anxious and guessing, The Hill Times reported.

“Frankly, it did feel before the last 24 hours that maybe nature was literally going to fall through the cracks,” Sierra Club Canada Executive Director Gretchen Fitzgerald told The Energy Mix.

The Sierra Club said in a release it was “cautiously pleased” with the new plan, but also raised concerns about its reliance on market-based approaches, cuts to other environmental initiatives, and the federal government’s potential billion-dollar involvement in the Bay du Nord offshore oil project, which could undermine nature protection.

The Wilderness Committee said the strategy was an attempt to fit conservation commitments into Carney’s “larger push to fast-track resource extraction and large industrial developments.” The group said the government plans to map biodiversity hotspots specifically to “accelerate permitting,” adding that “zero additional detail” was provided on how Ottawa plans to mobilize private capital and financing tools.

Other organizations said entangling the strategy with private investment opens the door to greenwashing. Andrew Van Iterson, manager of the Green Budget Coalition, told The Globe and Mail that while “private sector funds provide an important opportunity,” the Coalition is “very wary and concerned” that the government may be overestimating its role.

But Teika Newton, executive director of the Lake of the Woods Water Sustainability Foundation, told The Mix that while there are various conservation approaches the government could take, “this seems like the most pragmatic path forward” at this time. “I welcome the focus of attention on nature and the environment, at last.”

Newton highlighted investments for enhanced monitoring and data collection that she said will be important for tracking success. But she also cautioned against relying on regional impact assessments for major projects, pointing to examples such as Ontario’s Bill 5, which streamlined environmental reviews while weakening oversight.

Fitzgerald too expressed support for the strategy’s new level of investment. The plan to establish new urban parks is exciting as an approach for “connecting people to nature in their community,” as well as co-benefits for livable, walkable, breathable communities, she added.

But she cautioned against the government’s Bay du Nord commitment while also warning that the new strategy could come into conflict with priorities of the Building Canada Act.

“I’m just a bit concerned that we’re not having a comprehensive approach here with climate and nature, and the two are very interrelated,” Fitzgerald told The Mix.

Privacy watch and updates

  


Privacy watch

News and updates about online privacy

  • Google, Apple, and Meta shared data from more than 3.5 million user accounts with US authorities over the past decade through routine requests alone, a 770% increase since reporting began. When FISA disclosures are included, the total rises to roughly 6.7 million. See the details of the investigation.
  • Another Proton study found that nearly one in four small and medium businesses suffered a cyberattack in the past 12 months. Cyber risk is shaped by human error, inconsistent use of security tools, and giving more data to cloud and AI platforms. See our recommendations for businesses.
  • Apple’s latest iPhone update in the UK introduces age verification at the operating-system level, requiring some people to prove they are over 18 with a credit card or government-issued ID. The move comes after pressure from regulators under the Online Safety Act to do more to protect children online. What it means beyond the UK.
  • The Trump administration is poised to renew a surveillance law known as Section 702 that gives the government the power to spy on people without a warrant. The law is especially controversial in the US because it can be used to target American citizens, who would normally be protected from warrantless surveillance by the Constitution.
  • Instagram is dropping end-to-end encryption for chats, despite years of Meta presenting it as the future of private messaging. Uncertainty remains around what happens to currently encrypted chats.
  • Google has settled a $68 million lawsuit alleging that Google Assistant improperly recorded private conversations after false activations and used that data for targeted ads. It is one more entry in the long line of privacy cases Google has chosen to settle rather than fight in court and risk admitting wrongdoing.

Europe’s planes are about to run out of fuel

 Europe’s planes are about to run out of fuel

Strait of Hormuz fuel crisis

Davide Bonaldo/Getty Images

Mac Miller lyrics that European airlines cannot relate to right now: “I never run out of jet fuel.” The Strait of Hormuz’s closure has disrupted oil supplies so drastically that Europe has “maybe six weeks” of jet fuel left, with flight cancellations coming “soon” unless the waterway reopens, the head of the International Energy Agency told the Associated Press yesterday.

This is “the largest energy crisis we have ever faced,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said. His comments follow an even bleaker warning from the trade group that represents European airports, ACI Europe, which said last week that fuel shortages could commence in as little as three weeks.

European airlines are fastening their oxygen masks:

  • Europe’s largest carrier, Ryanair, suggested this week that it’s on track for fuel shortages by June, while the region’s second-largest airline, easyJet, said it currently has 70% of its summertime jet fuel covered.
  • To counter elevated jet fuel costs, which have roughly doubled since the Iran war began, German carrier Lufthansa will cut some long-haul flights and take up to 40 planes out of rotation.

Around the world, airlines are clawing back cash by raising ticket prices. All major US airlines have hiked baggage fees in recent weeks.

US travel may be better protected (for now)

Europe’s oil refineries have been dwindling for decades, and the continent is the biggest recipient of jet fuel that passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Across the pond, however, the US reigns as the world’s largest net exporter of jet fuel, and it produces most of the juice its airlines need in-house.

Still, major US airlines (even Delta, which has its own oil refinery) project billions of dollars in added costs if fuel prices don’t return to normal. The price spike could reportedly sink Spirit Airlines entirely.

Looking ahead…if the US and Iran reach an agreement to reopen the strait, it could take “up to two years to come back where we were before the war,” Birol said of global oil flow.

Beauty brands turn celebs into billionaires

 

Photo collage of Hailey Bieber, Rihanna, Selena Gomez, and Kylie Jenner with their respective makeup brand's lip products, but with the brand names removed.

Illustration: Morning Brew Design, Photos: Getty Images

For celebrities, hawking tinted creams and lip plumping oil aren’t just side projects. Celeb beauty brands are helping your favorite singer/actor/nepo baby evolve into a full-on business mogul.

Last year, Elf Beauty bought Hailey Bieber’s Rhode for $1 billion. Founded just four years ago, the brand’s sleekly packaged goos seem to go viral every time a new one drops.

Rare Beauty, the brand Selena Gomez launched during the pandemic, is reportedly hovering around a $2.7 billion valuation, with its blush accounting for over 26% of all category sales at Sephora, per YipItData.

Kylie Jenner, meanwhile, sold a majority stake in Kylie Cosmetics to CoverGirl owner Coty in 2019 for $600 million, but reportedly explored buying back the brand in 2023. (Nothing materialized.)

Rihanna is a businesswoman first. The hardest pivot came when pop superstar Rihanna revolutionized the beauty industry by launching Fenty Beauty in 2017. She released 40 shades of foundation (compared to the industry standard of ~20 to match lighter skintones) and brought in $100 million in global revenue in the first two months. Her 50% stake in Fenty Beauty is now worth around $700 million.

Getting started with VoIP.ms

 

Our long-term customers know this by heart, but if you're just getting started with VoIP.ms, your first step will be adding a DID (a.k.a. phone number).

Here’s how to do it step by step:

  1. Log in to your VoIP.ms portal
    Go to the DID Numbers section and select “Order DID.”
  2. Search for a number
    Choose your country, region, then browse available options.
  3. Select and configure
    Pick your number and assign it to a destination (SIP account, IVR, or call forwarding).
  4. Confirm your order
    Review pricing and complete the purchase. Your DID is ready to use right away!
  5. Test your setup
    Make a quick test call to confirm routing is working as expected.

That’s it! You now have a live number ready for inbound calls.

'Buy Canadian' policy flagged by U.S




American booze bans, 'Buy Canadian' policy flagged by U.S. as trade irritants: report
U.S. wants its alcohol returned to all markets after being pulled from shelves in several provinces
The Canadian Press · Posted: Mar 31, 2026 6:22 PM PDT | Last Updated: March 31


Listen to this article
Estimated 4 minutes

Several provinces pulled American booze from liquor stores last year in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's imposition of tariffs on Canada. (Ed White/Reuters)

Social Sharing



Provincial rules around alcohol and the federal government's "Buy Canadian" policy have been flagged in a new report citing several trade irritants between Canada and the U.S.

The annual document prepared by the Office of the United States Trade Representative said market access barriers imposed by provincial liquor control boards "greatly hamper" exports of U.S. wine, beer and spirits to Canada.

Several Canadian provinces pulled American booze from shelves last year after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed tariffs, and the document said the U.S. wants its alcohol to "immediately and permanently" return to all markets.

The document also raised concerns about the federal government's "Buy Canadian" procurement policy that aims to ensure Canadian products and workers are prioritized in contracts worth $25 million or more.

The report says U.S. companies have reported concerns about barriers in competing for contracts, including being forced to share information about their boards of directors or prove their Canadian subsidiary's independence from a U.S. parent company.
How a good old-fashioned boycott got Canada to trade Kentucky bourbon for Canadian whiskyTransport Canada certifies some jets at centre of Trump's aviation tariff threat

Other issues listed in the report include delays with aircraft validation in Canada and high tariffs on U.S. dairy products.

The report said U.S. imports above quota levels are subject to "prohibitively high tariffs," including 245 per cent for cheese and 298 per cent for butter.

The report said U.S. goods exports to Canada totalled $336.5 billion US in 2025, down almost down four per cent from 2024. It also said Canada was the second-largest U.S. goods export market last year.
Trade talks lagging

Trade talks with Canada ahead of the mandatory review of the continental trade pact are lagging behind those with Mexico, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said last month.

Greer told Fox Business that talks are moving ahead with his Mexican counterparts as the Trump administration negotiates changes to the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA.

CUSMA — which was negotiated during the first Trump administration to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement — has shielded Canada and Mexico from the worst impacts of Trump's tariffs. His worldwide 10 per cent duty does not apply to goods that comply with the trade agreement.
WATCH | Canada-U.S. trade talks resume:




Canada-U.S. trade talks restart, ending months-long freeze
March 6|
Duration1:47:09In the first high-level trade meeting since U.S. President Donald Trump called off negotiations with Canada in October, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc met with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Washington on Friday. CBC's Kate McKenna reports the few details we've received surrounding the meeting, and former prime minister Justin Trudeau's deputy chief of staff Brian Clow previews what to expect from the CUSMA talks with Trump this month. Plus, Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield led one of the lawsuits that saw the U.S. Supreme Court strike down Trump's broadest tariffs, and explains his argument as he leads a 24-state lawsuit against the tariffs Trump used to replace them.

Canada is still being slammed by Trump's separate tariffs on industries like steel, aluminum, autos, lumber and cabinets.

The Trump administration has launched investigations under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 of a long list of countries, including Canada, citing forced labour in supply chains. It was seen as a move to restore Trump's higher tariffs following a U.S Supreme Court ruling that reined in the president's tariff powers.

The report on foreign trade barriers said that while Canada has adopted measures intended to stop the importation of products produced using forced labour, "it does not appear that Canada is effectively enforcing its forced labour import prohibition, meaning goods made with forced labour may be able to enter and compete in Canada's market."
Which Trump tariffs affect Canada now?Trump administration expands trade investigations to Canada, dozens of other countries

"This issue may artificially suppress costs, including labour costs, which may give certain goods from and within Canada an unfair advantage," the report said.

Greer has complained that Canadians maintain barriers that make it difficult to hold bilateral trade talks, citing provincial bans on U.S. alcohol.

The relationship between Canada and the United States has been upended during the second Trump administration by the president's tariffs and threats of annexation.
Future of CUSMA in limbo

CUSMA is up for review this year but the future of the continental trade agreement has been left in doubt by Trump. He has called CUSMA irrelevant and has said it may have served its purpose.

Greer also has floated the idea of abandoning the trade pact in favour of two separate bilateral agreements with America's closest neighbours.
Canada-U.S. trade talks have restarted. Here's what's at stake

The CUSMA review sets up a three-way choice for each country to make in July. They can renew the deal for another 16 years, withdraw from it or signal both non-renewal and non-withdrawal — which would trigger an annual review that could keep negotiations going for up to a decade.

Ottawa and Mexico City have both said the priority is to maintain an agreement between all three countries.

LeBlanc led a large trade mission to Mexico last month and a Mexican trade delegation is set to travel to Canada in May.

Bluesky Users Respond With Overwhelming Disgust to Platform’s New AI

 Bluesky Users Respond With Overwhelming Disgust to Platform’s New AI


Futurism · 3 days ago
by Victor Tangermann · Artificial Intelligence



In its early days, Twitter alternative Bluesky tried to paint itself as a safe haven from the onslaught of AI, promising in November 2024 that it had “no intention” of scraping user-generated posts to train AI models.

It was a shot across the bow, clearly aimed at its rival X-formerly-Twitter, which had recently changed its terms of service to allow just that. And since then, backlash to AI slop and relentless AI integrations has grown to new heights.

So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that Bluesky’s abrupt foray into AI isn’t sitting well with its notoriously anti-AI user base.

Specifically, the company’s chief innovation officer Jay Graber, who stepped down as CEO earlier this month to focus on “exploring new ideas” at the company, announced a new AI app called Attie at a conference over the weekend.

Attie, which interim CEO Toni Schneider referred to as a “new product” that’s “not part of the Bluesky app” in an interview with TechCrunch, allows users to essentially vibe code their own custom feed using natural language prompts — or even build their own Bluesky app alternative on top of the service’s Atmosphere protocol, an ecosystem of interoperable social applications.

“You control it, you shape it, without having to write code or know how to set up these feeds,” Schneider enthused.

The CEO seemed well aware of the headwinds against launching consumer-facing AI products in 2026.

“It is an AI product, but it’s an AI product that’s very people-focused,” he told TechCrunch. “We think AI is a very powerful technology, but we want to make sure that we use it to build things that really benefit people.”

“We think AI should serve people, not platforms,” Graber told audiences at this weekend’s announcement. “An open protocol puts this power directly in users’ hands.”

However, given the immediate reactions to the new app, it may struggle to catch on.

“Thanks, we’re good, no need to explain it further,” one user replied to Graber after she announced it in a Saturday post.

“Cool!” another added. “How do we block it?”

“Me, looking for who the f*** wants this,” reads the caption of a meme a different user posted, showing a woman standing on a ladder and gazing into the distance.

Graber appeared to be aware of the inflood of hatred for the idea. When a user told her that “we don’t want it,” she replied with a curt: “then don’t use it — it’s a separate app.”

Graber also reshared a post by a different user who claimed people “on the left” were being “shortsighted” by being willfully blind about AI, and that the argument “‘hope it goes away’ doesn’t have a great track record as a strategy for contesting control of new political domains and technologies.” The implication: Bluesky users are wrong about their resentment over AI and should instead embrace it.

Schneider told TechCrunch that the company is still considering how to monetize its latest feature, and that a fee for using Attie, which is currently in private beta, is on the table.

But considering the outrage the app’s announcement has wrought, it’s unclear at best if any serious numbers of users are jumping to use it — even if it’s free, which could turn Attie into an expensive distraction and a largely ineffective way to draw new users in.

Change is inevitable

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Photographer Cory Silken provides us with a computer monitor calendar for April 2026. Click image to download.

 

Change is inevitable

by Craig Leweck, Scuttlebutt Sailing News
When it’s time, it’s time, and now is the time. Scuttlebutt is for sale.

Since 1997, Scuttlebutt has been providing sailing enthusiasts with their daily download of news, and when you report on the sport for that long, spending each day looking at the activity, you see a lot more than race results. You see the sport changing.

But when I assessed the state of the sport in 2020, I was wrong. You can’t stop advancements, so accept it. Raise the bar and let everyone chase it. If they don’t want to, let them play pickleball. Want to make everyone happy? Sell ice cream. Worrying about affordability is futile. Success has always required extra zeros, and boat still stands for ‘bust out another thousand’.

Everyone talks about AI in the workplace, but sailing loves technology too. Learning to sail is a barrier to entry… let instruments replace skill. Rather than spending years refining ability, buy gear and people to flatten the curve. You can’t take money to the grave.

The America’s Cup, always a source of future trends, is now replacing people. The AC75 Class initially had 11 crew but now has five sailors for the 2027 America’s Cup. Eliminating human error has been the focus, with onboard gadgets instructing when to turn, trim, and pose for the camera. Progress!

The pursuit of television ratings at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games for sailing will have new racing formats to emphasize last second theatrics. World Sailing wants College March Madness too. The shift toward high performance boats has removed the "large people" so athletes will now wear bikini tops and bottoms for the women and tight-fitting shorts for the men. Sex sells - beach volleyball can’t have all the skin.

Winning championships has changed. After a day of racing, I couldn’t get to the bar fast enough, but now debriefs cut into cocktail time, with GPS instrument data telling me what I did wrong. I don’t need reminding; I need Mount Gay to forget it. For sailing parties, Vakaros is developing a dating app to facilitate relationship starting. No liquid courage needed.

Speaking of Vakaros, now that their instruments have turned race starts into a video game, they plan to replace physical marks with virtual marks. If you thought robot marks were the future, think again. No more acrimonious moments at the turns as onboard video and GPS tracking direct traffic, with the yelling now at crew who forgot to charge the battery. Plus, those mark-set volunteers were a lonely bunch.

I have been producing Scuttlebutt Saling News for 25 years, and while media competitors have come and gone, one particular website both gave us credit for its existence and became the bane of ours. While I’d argue about keeping your enemies close, its founder has recently been removed and had his membership rescinded from a club we share. Karma is a bitch!

Anyway, I’m not sure what I will do without working seven days a week, alone, shackled to a screen with daily deadlines, but I’m open to try. People think I do nothing anyway, and AI will soon assure that. As for today being April 1st, that’s possibly a coincidence.  Or not. 

LIV Golf’s future is in doubt

 LIV Golf’s future is in doubt. Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund is on the verge of pulling its financial support from the league, and an announcement about the kingdom’s decision is coming as soon as today, the Financial Times reports. That would likely spell doom for the league that sought to challenge the PGA by luring away players with massive paydays. Saudi’s Public Investment Fund has invested about $5 billion in the tour, which has racked up more losses since its founding than a player who’s always over par. The FT said no final decision had been made as of yesterday, but the Telegraph reported that the league’s executives had been summoned to an emergency meeting. In an email obtained by ESPN, LIV CEO Scott O’Neil told staff that the season would go on “as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle,” though he did not address reports about the loss of funding or the future beyond this year.

US economy grew a sluggish 0.5% in fourth quarter


US economy grew a sluggish 0.5% in fourth quarter, government says, downgrading previous estimate




Gas prices are displayed at a gasoline station, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
By PAUL WISEMAN
Updated 7:29 AM GMT-7, April 9, 2026
Leer en español

WASHINGTON (AP) — The American economy, slowed by last fall’s 43-day government shutdown, grew at a sluggish 0.5% annual pace from October through December, the Commerce Department reported Thursday in downgrade of its previous estimate.

U.S. gross domestic product — the nation’s output of goods and services — decelerated in the fourth quarter after registering impressive growth of 4.4% from July through September and 3.8% from April through June. The latest number was marked down from the Commerce Department’s previous estimate of 0.7% fourth-quarter growth.

Federal government spending and investment fell at a 16.6% annual pace because of the shutdown, lopping 1.16 percentage points off fourth-quarter GDP growth. Consumer spending expanded 1.9%, down a notch from the previous estimate and from 3.5% in the second quarter. Spending on goods — such as cars and clothing — grew just 0.3%, down from 3% in the July-September period.

For all of 2025, the economy grew 2.1% last year, slower than 2.8% in 2024 and 2.9% in 2023.

Business investment, excluding housing, increased at a 2.4% pace, likely reflecting money being poured into artificial intelligence, but the increase was down from 3.2% in the third quarter.

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

 Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Fully Human-Controlled

Waymo takes great pains to never describe its vehicles as giving up autonomy completely. Tesla doesn't seem to care.
BY 

READING TIME 3 MINUTES

 COMMENTS (20)

Tesla robotaxis are not necessarily operating without a human in the loop, even its small number of unsupervised robotaxis that lack safety operators. If you’re a self-driving car fan, that reflects a deflating fact of life about the current state of autonomous vehicles: the companies operating them still don’t trust them on the roads without occasional button pushes from a flesh-and-blood human sitting at a desk somewhere.

But Tesla appears to be unique among its competitors when it comes to the extent to which its vehicles occasionally rely on humans. That is to say: they occasionally surrender control to them completely.

Karen Steakley, director of public policy and business development at Tesla, recently divulged this in a letter to Senator Ed Markey, a Democrat representing Massachusetts (as first reported by Wired). Human operators, Steakley wrote, “are authorized to temporarily assume direct vehicle control as the final escalation maneuver after all other available intervention actions have been exhausted.”

Competitors like Waymo say they allow humans to play a role in the operation of a vehicle on the road, but a more limited one, and they take great pains to make this distinction. Waymo’s description of what went wrong last year when its vehicles seemed to have a widespread meltdown during a blackout in San Francisco touched on this, for instance.

The issue involved a large number of Waymo vehicles encountering four-way stoplights that were blacked out, and sending an unmanageable number of confirmation requests to human workers with Waymo’s “fleet response” division, which we now know is largely based in the Philippines.

According to Waymo’s public relations materials online, rather than, say, “steering” the vehicle remotely, perhaps with a joystick, fleet response workers see camera feeds and 3D representations of the Waymo vehicle’s position within its environment and give feedback. They might simply have to click an answer to a question like Is the street I’m trying to turn onto closed? Or they might suggest a new course of action for getting out of a jam, like pulling into a driveway to let others pass.

They do this in a way that is a bit like telling a unit what to do in a real-time strategy video game, except Waymo insists that the “Waymo Driver”—the hardware and software system that drives the car—can refuse the human suggestion, meaning it never surrenders executive control.

Steakley makes it pretty clear that Tesla lacks Waymo’s compunctions about seizing the car’s autonomy entirely. Tesla employs “remote assistance operators” (RAOs) in Austin, Texas and Palo Alto, California in order to “promptly move a vehicle that may be in a compromising position,” she told Markey in the letter. A human might take “temporary control of the vehicle,” and remotely move it up to 10 miles-per-hour, she explained.

This only happens “if direct access is granted by the Tesla [automated driving system].” Though she also notes that if a rider requests help, they may end up communicating with a Tesla RAO “via bidirectional audio.”

RAOs must also, according to Steakley:

  • have a “valid U.S. driver’s license for a minimum of 3 years”
  • “maintain a license and clean driving record throughout their employment.”
  • “undergo criminal background and Motor Vehicle Record checks”
  • “pass a U.S. Department of Transportation drug test”

Markey issued a report Tuesday, after receiving similar letters in response to  questions about remote operation in these vehicles not just from Tesla and Waymo, but also five other competitors. Markey believes the responses reflect a “patchwork of safety practices across the industry, with significant variation in operator qualifications, response times, and overseas staffing, all without any federal standards governing these operations.”

Gizmodo reached out to Tesla and Waymo about these letters, and about Markey’s report. We will update this article if we hear back.

RG Richardson Communications News

I am a business economist with interests in international trade worldwide through politics, money, banking and VOIP Communications. The author of RG Richardson City Guides has over 300 guides, including restaurants and finance.