Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Amy Held.
President Trump says an unspecified peace deal with Iran will be signed tomorrow.
“To Iran, however, has said an agreement is possible in the coming days, NPR's Deepashivaram”
reports. Trump posted on social media saying the deal is scheduled to be signed tomorrow, Pakistan, which has been facilitating the deal, also indicating an imminent agreement that would be signed virtually, but details are still not yet clear on what the agreement will contain.
Trump says immediately after signing the deal, the straight of horn mues would be "open" to all, and that the agreement will ensure Iran has no nuclear weapon. Trump is also scheduled to meet with allies in the region, including Qatar and Egypt, while at the G7 summit in the coming days, Deepashivaram and PR News. Anthropic abruptly shut down its latest AI models for everyone, after the Trump administration
banned their use by foreign nationals, and here's John Ruitt reports. According to a statement from Anthropic, the government's directive cited unspecified national security concerns. It ordered a suspension of access by foreign nationals to Anthropics, Fable 5, and Mythos 5 models, that includes foreigners inside and outside the US, and even foreigners working
for Anthropic.
“The Mythos AI model has been a source of buzz in recent months, Anthropic decided not”
to release it to the public in March, because the company believed it could potentially help hackers exploit computer security flaws. So it came up with a workaround, Fable 5, an advanced model with extensive safeguards was released this week. Anthropic says it thinks the government is concerned that there may be a way to jailbreak
the model to get around those safeguards, but Anthropic says it disagrees with the ban. John Ruitt and PR News A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to restore signs at national parks, saying changing them to fit a preferred political narrative violates congressional mandates,
appears Chloe Veltman reports. Judge Angel Kelly's Friday ruling orders the administration to restore a slavery exhibit at Independence Park in Philadelphia, and signage acknowledging climate change for something in South Carolina, among other public displays. In March, President Trump ordered the removal or changing of materials that may inappropriately
disparage Americans, or cast the US in a negative light.
“The ruling accuses the administration of censorship and blocks further changes or removals”
and gives the government 21 days to fully restore all altered or removed content. The ruling is a result of a lawsuit by the National Parks Conservation Association and others accusing the Trump administration of, quote, "mouncing a sustained campaign to erase history and undermines science. Neither the Department of the Interior nor the Parks Service responded to NPR's request
for comment." Chloe Veltman MP on News Trump says he intends to nominate one of his former personal attorneys, James McDonald
to serve as the US attorney for the powerful southern district of New York, which has jurisdiction
over Wall Street, and you're listening to NPR News. In the central US, severe thunderstorms could bring high winds, hail, and flash flooding this weekend, heavy storms are also predicted in the northeast, which will help surge in cooler air, while record-breaking heat is set to build in the Pacific Northwest. Socials are anticipating heavy smoke for days in an area about an hour east of San Francisco,
a medical equipment warehouse has been burning since Thursday in Tracy, California, making the air unhealthy for sensitive groups. Firefighters say there are problems with medlines, fire suppression system in the building, the cause of the fire remains under investigation. In Florida, law enforcement is turning to an unexpected source to find missing people when
the search takes them to rivers and swamps. Kathy Carter from Member Station WUSF in Tampa reports, a crime-solving order is helping crack cold cases. In Sarasota County, Florida, my cancel runs through training exercises with splash, an Asian-Small-Claude-Autter.
Splash. Here we go. Yeah. I hear you talking. Oh, you want some more fish.
Turns out, honors are exceptionally suited for underwater recovery work. They can stay submerged for up to eight minutes. All it sees is but going as he's heading out and then he comes back and he grabs my mask. So let me know that he's found something. Hatsil has been training rescue dogs for decades.
He got the idea to train an order in Thailand where fishermen use them to hurt fish into nets. Splash is trained to detect the odor of human remains. So far he's been on 30 missions with nine successful lines. For NPR News, I'm Kathy Carter in Tampa.
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