Massive Expansion of Italy’s Piracy Shield Underway

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Techdirt: Walled Culture has been following closely Italy’s poorly designed Piracy Shield system. Back in December we reported how copyright companies used their access to the Piracy Shield system to order Italian Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to all of Google Drive for the entire country, and how malicious actors could similarly use that unchecked power to shut down critical national infrastructure. Since then, the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), an international, not-for-profit association representing computer, communications, and Internet industry firms, has added its voice to the chorus of disapproval. In a letter (PDF) to the European Commission, it warned about the dangers of the Piracy Shield system to the EU economy […]. It also raised an important new issue: the fact that Italy brought in this extreme legislation without notifying the European Commission under the so-called “TRIS” procedure, which allows others to comment on possible problems […].

As well as Italy’s failure to notify the Commission about its new legislation in advance, the CCIA believes that: this anti-piracy mechanism is in breach of several other EU laws. That includes the Open Internet Regulation which prohibits ISPs to block or slow internet traffic unless required by a legal order. The block subsequent to the Piracy Shield also contradicts the Digital Services Act (DSA) in several aspects, notably Article 9 requiring certain elements to be included in the orders to act against illegal content. More broadly, the Piracy Shield is not aligned with the Charter of Fundamental Rights nor the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU — as it hinders freedom of expression, freedom to provide internet services, the principle of proportionality, and the right to an effective remedy and a fair trial.

Far from taking these criticisms to heart, or acknowledging that Piracy Shield has failed to convert people to paying subscribers, the Italian government has decided to double down, and to make Piracy Shield even worse. Massimiliano Capitanio, Commissioner at AGCOM, the Italian Authority for Communications Guarantees, explained on LinkedIn how Piracy Shield was being extended in far-reaching ways (translation by Google Translate, original in Italian). […] That is, Piracy Shield will apply to live content far beyond sports events, its original justification, and to streaming services. Even DNS and VPN providers will be required to block sites, a serious technical interference in the way the Internet operates, and a threat to people’s privacy. Search engines, too, will be forced to de-index material. The only minor concession to ISPs is to unblock domain names and IP addresses that are no longer allegedly being used to disseminate unauthorized material. There are, of course, no concessions to ordinary Internet users affected by Piracy Shield blunders. In the future, Italy’s Piracy Shield will add:
– 30-minute blackout orders not only for pirate sports events, but also for other live content;
– the extension of blackout orders to VPNs and public DNS providers;
– the obligation for search engines to de-index pirate sites;
– the procedures for unblocking domain names and IP addresses obscured by Piracy Shield that are no longer used to spread pirate content;
– the new procedure to combat piracy on the #linear and “on demand” television, for example to protect the #film and #serietv.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Massive Expansion of Italy’s Piracy Shield Underway

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Techdirt: Walled Culture has been following closely Italy’s poorly designed Piracy Shield system. Back in December we reported how copyright companies used their access to the Piracy Shield system to order Italian Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to all of Google Drive for the entire country, and how malicious actors could similarly use that unchecked power to shut down critical national infrastructure. Since then, the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), an international, not-for-profit association representing computer, communications, and Internet industry firms, has added its voice to the chorus of disapproval. In a letter (PDF) to the European Commission, it warned about the dangers of the Piracy Shield system to the EU economy […]. It also raised an important new issue: the fact that Italy brought in this extreme legislation without notifying the European Commission under the so-called “TRIS” procedure, which allows others to comment on possible problems […].

As well as Italy’s failure to notify the Commission about its new legislation in advance, the CCIA believes that: this anti-piracy mechanism is in breach of several other EU laws. That includes the Open Internet Regulation which prohibits ISPs to block or slow internet traffic unless required by a legal order. The block subsequent to the Piracy Shield also contradicts the Digital Services Act (DSA) in several aspects, notably Article 9 requiring certain elements to be included in the orders to act against illegal content. More broadly, the Piracy Shield is not aligned with the Charter of Fundamental Rights nor the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU — as it hinders freedom of expression, freedom to provide internet services, the principle of proportionality, and the right to an effective remedy and a fair trial.

Far from taking these criticisms to heart, or acknowledging that Piracy Shield has failed to convert people to paying subscribers, the Italian government has decided to double down, and to make Piracy Shield even worse. Massimiliano Capitanio, Commissioner at AGCOM, the Italian Authority for Communications Guarantees, explained on LinkedIn how Piracy Shield was being extended in far-reaching ways (translation by Google Translate, original in Italian). […] That is, Piracy Shield will apply to live content far beyond sports events, its original justification, and to streaming services. Even DNS and VPN providers will be required to block sites, a serious technical interference in the way the Internet operates, and a threat to people’s privacy. Search engines, too, will be forced to de-index material. The only minor concession to ISPs is to unblock domain names and IP addresses that are no longer allegedly being used to disseminate unauthorized material. There are, of course, no concessions to ordinary Internet users affected by Piracy Shield blunders. In the future, Italy’s Piracy Shield will add:
– 30-minute blackout orders not only for pirate sports events, but also for other live content;
– the extension of blackout orders to VPNs and public DNS providers;
– the obligation for search engines to de-index pirate sites;
– the procedures for unblocking domain names and IP addresses obscured by Piracy Shield that are no longer used to spread pirate content;
– the new procedure to combat piracy on the #linear and “on demand” television, for example to protect the #film and #serietv.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Louvre Museum In Paris to Discontinue Nintendo 3DS Audio Guides

The Louvre Museum will discontinue its use of Nintendo 3DS XL consoles as audio guides by September 2025, replacing them with a new system. NintendoSoup reports: For several years the Louvre has been using specially dedicated New Nintendo 3DS XL consoles to give visitors an audio guided tour of the famous museum. According to the museum’s official website however, it seems that the program will be discontinued in September 2025, to be replaced by a new system.

Presumably, this is due to Nintendo slowly phasing out the Nintendo 3DS line in general, having stopped supporting repairs for the console in a few countries. The consoles used by the Louvre would have broken down sooner or later, necessitating a change if they could no longer be sent in for repairs. At the time of this writing, it is not known what will become of the unique special edition consoles that were being used for this purpose.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Louvre Museum In Paris to Discontinue Nintendo 3DS Audio Guides

The Louvre Museum will discontinue its use of Nintendo 3DS XL consoles as audio guides by September 2025, replacing them with a new system. NintendoSoup reports: For several years the Louvre has been using specially dedicated New Nintendo 3DS XL consoles to give visitors an audio guided tour of the famous museum. According to the museum’s official website however, it seems that the program will be discontinued in September 2025, to be replaced by a new system.

Presumably, this is due to Nintendo slowly phasing out the Nintendo 3DS line in general, having stopped supporting repairs for the console in a few countries. The consoles used by the Louvre would have broken down sooner or later, necessitating a change if they could no longer be sent in for repairs. At the time of this writing, it is not known what will become of the unique special edition consoles that were being used for this purpose.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

DeepMind Details All the Ways AGI Could Wreck the World

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica, written by Ryan Whitwam: Researchers at DeepMind have … released a new technical paper (PDF) that explains how to develop AGI safely, which you can download at your convenience. It contains a huge amount of detail, clocking in at 108 pages before references. While some in the AI field believe AGI is a pipe dream, the authors of the DeepMind paper project that it could happen by 2030. With that in mind, they aimed to understand the risks of a human-like synthetic intelligence, which they acknowledge could lead to “severe harm.” This work has identified four possible types of AGI risk, along with suggestions on how we might ameliorate said risks. The DeepMind team, led by company co-founder Shane Legg, categorized the negative AGI outcomes as misuse, misalignment, mistakes, and structural risks.

The first possible issue, misuse, is fundamentally similar to current AI risks. However, because AGI will be more powerful by definition, the damage it could do is much greater. A ne’er-do-well with access to AGI could misuse the system to do harm, for example, by asking the system to identify and exploit zero-day vulnerabilities or create a designer virus that could be used as a bioweapon. DeepMind says companies developing AGI will have to conduct extensive testing and create robust post-training safety protocols. Essentially, AI guardrails on steroids. They also suggest devising a method to suppress dangerous capabilities entirely, sometimes called “unlearning,” but it’s unclear if this is possible without substantially limiting models. Misalignment is largely not something we have to worry about with generative AI as it currently exists. This type of AGI harm is envisioned as a rogue machine that has shaken off the limits imposed by its designers. Terminators, anyone? More specifically, the AI takes actions it knows the developer did not intend. DeepMind says its standard for misalignment here is more advanced than simple deception or scheming as seen in the current literature.

To avoid that, DeepMind suggests developers use techniques like amplified oversight, in which two copies of an AI check each other’s output, to create robust systems that aren’t likely to go rogue. If that fails, DeepMind suggests intensive stress testing and monitoring to watch for any hint that an AI might be turning against us. Keeping AGIs in virtual sandboxes with strict security and direct human oversight could help mitigate issues arising from misalignment. Basically, make sure there’s an “off” switch. If, on the other hand, an AI didn’t know that its output would be harmful and the human operator didn’t intend for it to be, that’s a mistake. We get plenty of those with current AI systems — remember when Google said to put glue on pizza? The “glue” for AGI could be much stickier, though. DeepMind notes that militaries may deploy AGI due to “competitive pressure,” but such systems could make serious mistakes as they will be tasked with much more elaborate functions than today’s AI. The paper doesn’t have a great solution for mitigating mistakes. It boils down to not letting AGI get too powerful in the first place. DeepMind calls for deploying slowly and limiting AGI authority. The study also suggests passing AGI commands through a “shield” system that ensures they are safe before implementation.

Lastly, there are structural risks, which DeepMind defines as the unintended but real consequences of multi-agent systems contributing to our already complex human existence. For example, AGI could create false information that is so believable that we no longer know who or what to trust. The paper also raises the possibility that AGI could accumulate more and more control over economic and political systems, perhaps by devising heavy-handed tariff schemes. Then one day, we look up and realize the machines are in charge instead of us. This category of risk is also the hardest to guard against because it would depend on how people, infrastructure, and institutions operate in the future.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Critics suspect Trump’s weird tariff math came from chatbots

Critics are questioning if Donald Trump’s administration possibly used chatbots to calculate reciprocal tariffs announced yesterday that Trump claimed were “individualized” tariffs placed on countries that have ” the largest trade deficits” with the US.

Those tariffs are due to take effect on April 9 for 60 countries, with peak rates around 50 percent. That’s in addition to a baseline 10 percent tariff that all countries will be subject to starting on April 5. But while Trump expressed intent to push back on anyone supposedly taking advantage of the US, some of the countries on the reciprocal tariffs list puzzled experts and officials, who pointed out to The Guardian that Trump was, for some reason, targeting uninhabited islands, some of them exporting nothing and populated with penguins.

Some overseas officials challenged Trump’s math, such as George Plant, the administrator of Norfolk Island, who told the Guardian that “there are no known exports from Norfolk Island to the United States and no tariffs or known non-tariff trade barriers on goods coming to Norfolk Island.”

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SpaceX just took a big step toward reusing Starship’s Super Heavy booster

SpaceX is having trouble with Starship’s upper stage after back-to-back failures, but engineers are making remarkable progress with the rocket’s enormous booster.

The most visible sign of SpaceX making headway with Starship’s first stage—called Super Heavycame at 9:40 am local time (10:40 am EDT; 14:40 UTC) Thursday at the company’s Starbase launch site in South Texas. With an unmistakable blast of orange exhaust, SpaceX fired up a Super Heavy booster that has already flown to the edge of space. The burn lasted approximately eight seconds.

This was the first time SpaceX has test-fired a “flight-proven” Super Heavy booster, and it paves the way for this particular rocket—designated Booster 14—to fly again soon. SpaceX confirmed a reflight of Booster 14, which previously launched and returned to Earth in January, will happen on next Starship launch With Thursday’s static fire test, Booster 14 appears to be closer to flight readiness than any of the boosters in SpaceX’s factory, which is a short distance from the launch site.

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Garmin’s Paid-Tier AI Doesn’t Seem to Be Doing Much

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Garmin unveiled a subscription tier for its app last week featuring an AI that promises to provide insights on your training. I liked the company’s policies around training and privacy, but hadn’t seen much of the actual AI output when I wrote about it. Now, I’ve spent a week with the feature, which Garmin says is still in beta. Here are my impressions.

The AI insights are just one of the features that rolled out with the new $6.99/month Garmin Connect+ subscription. Some of the other add-ons look a lot more useful, like the Live Activities feature. I have a full rundown here on what you get if you pay for the upgrade. The subscription only covers new features—not existing app features, and not specific features that come with the watch you buy.

AI insights only appear in one limited part of the app

I’ve been poking everywhere in the Garmin Connect app, and I can only find AI insights in one place. That would be the home screen, where I get a little “active intelligence” paragraph right at the top, above my usual workout and health metric cards.  

If you don’t check your Garmin Connect app frequently, you’ll miss out on most of the insights. They don’t pop up on your watch or in notifications on your phone. There’s no chat interface like with Whoop or Oura, where you can ask questions about your data. 

I expected the AI to be more like Strava’s, where a little description/motivational message appears on each activity you do. Strava’s AI is notorious for restating the data from the run description, with added errors, though, so perhaps it’s best they didn’t try to mimic that. 

Three screenshots of the Garmin AI giving basic-ass advice

Credit: Beth Skwarecki

The AI “insights” aren’t very insightful

My first few insights were pretty basic—just comparing my intensity minutes to a goal that I didn’t realize I had—but I figured more interesting analysis was yet to come. 

After a week, though, I haven’t seen it. The most exciting moment was when I caught the AI in a flagrant math error. “You logged two activities today: running and indoor cycling for a total of one hour and twenty-seven minutes,” it said. My activities were noted in their usual place, immediately below this “insight,” and the run was 40:10 while the bike ride was a quick test of this gadget that took less than three minutes. That’s 43 minutes, silly robot. (I’m not the only one who has encountered some bad math: Two scuba divers posted on Reddit that the AI told them they spent more than a month underwater in a single day.)

The AI’s obsession with intensity minutes may be to blame in my case. I can’t make the math work out for this example, but in some other cases, the AI seemed to be adding up intensity minutes and not always including the word “intensity.” (One minute of vigorous exercise counts for two “intensity minutes,” an idea that comes from public health exercise guidelines.) 

Otherwise, the messages were just basic summaries of data that was already viewable elsewhere in the app. I did my best to screenshot every insight I saw, and here’s the tally of topics: 

  • 5 messages about intensity minutes, either comparing them to my goal or weekly or daily averages

  • 3 messages about my stress level or “sleep stress,” a metric I’d never heard of and still can’t figure out what it means

  • 2 messages about my Body Battery (a number that goes up with sleep and down with exercise or stress)

  • 2 messages about steps

  • 2 messages about run activities (with my mileage, pace, and/or time)

  • 2 messages about bike activities (with my time, heart rate, cadence, and/or power)

  • 1 message about my training status being in “recovery”

After a sentence or two with the metrics it’s describing, there would be a sentence generically encouraging me to keep up the good work. I could give feedback as to whether the insight was interesting or not, but there was no way to ask questions or get more information. I still don’t know what “sleep stress” is, or how to get a quick overview of my intensity minutes if I did want to keep track of them. 

It doesn’t seem like anyone is enjoying the AI feature

I’m always the wet blanket on AI hype, so I checked Reddit and Garmin forums to see if anybody is having a better time with it than I am. I couldn’t find anyone who admitted to liking Active Intelligence or gleaning any useful insights from it.

“There is so much that could be done with AI and training software, but all Garmin does is using AI to simply rephrase existing data,” a Garmin forum user said. “Seems like ‘Active Intelligence’ is basically just the most basic summary of your workouts possible,” said a redditor, adding, “I was really hoping that it would be an actual chatbot that you could discuss training with etc to create plans.”

Other redditors wondered why the AI doesn’t create or adjust training plans, possibly even analyzing users’ data to find which workouts tend to correlate with fitness increases. Garmin hasn’t publicly said what future plans they have for AI, just that the feature is currently in beta. 

“I received messages from AI throughout the day and I can say that they have no practical or informational benefit for me,” one redditor said. I’m afraid I have to agree.

NVIDIA confirms the Switch 2 has DLSS

This week’s Nintendo Direct provided much more info about the Switch 2 but didn’t go too deep into the nitty-gritty details of what powers the console. That left NVIDIA, the Mario maker’s hardware partner on the console’s processor and GPU, to fill in some blanks with a blog post published on Thursday — including the first confirmation that it uses Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) tech.

NVIDIA said the Switch 2’s DLSS support helps to give the console “ten times” the graphical performance of the original Switch. The tech lets games render games in a lower resolution, then uses trained AI models and dedicated Tensor Cores to fill in detail.

Saying a system has ten times the graphics performance is likely a simplified marketing claim, and its graphical prowess could vary greatly depending on the title. The console has also yet to be scrutinized with extended real-world use. However, in Engadget’s Sam Rutherford hands-on, he found that the system handled the new Switch 2 versions of Street Fighter 6, Cyberpunk 2077 and Civilization 7 well, with all running “really smooth.”

The back of the Switch 2 in hand.
Sam Rutherford for Engadget

In docked mode, the Switch 2 supports up to 60fps at 4K resolution or 120fps at 1440p or 1080p resolutions. In handheld mode, the 7.9-inch, 1080p screen supports a variable refresh rate (via G-Sync) of up to 120Hz.

“The new RT Cores bring real-time ray tracing, delivering lifelike lighting, reflections and shadows for more immersive worlds,” NVIDIA explained. “Tensor Cores power AI-driven features like Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS), boosting resolution for sharper details without sacrificing image quality. Tensor Cores also enable AI-powered face tracking and background removal in video chat use cases, enhancing social gaming and streaming.”

For more on the new system, check out Engadget’s Switch 2 hands-on and deep dive into everything we know about it.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/nintendo/nvidia-confirms-the-switch-2-has-dlss-175033677.html?src=rss

Explaining How Touchscreens Work, With A Sausage

This is a clip from the BBC’s ‘The Secret Genius of Modern Life’ explaining why sausages work to use touchscreens (I thought it was because they look enough like fingers to fool the screen), and how touchscreens actually work. Whatever happened to magic being an acceptable answer?

Hidden beneath your phone’s glass is an invisible mesh of indium tin oxide — a material that stores and conducts electricity. This creates an electrical field that your finger (a conductor) disrupts when it touches the screen.

“It’s the interaction between the stored charges of these two conductors, your finger and the grid inside your phone, that makes this touchscreen work.”

Or, OR — maybe our phones actually have feelings. Did you ever get high enough to think about that? Although I imagine mine must be pretty depressed living in a linty pocket all day and only seeing the light of day to play Candy Crush in a bathroom.

‘Careless People’ author Sarah Wynn-Williams will testify at a Senate hearing next week

Sarah Wynn-Williams, the former Facebook policy director behind a best-selling memoir about her time at the company, will testify at a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing next week. The testimony will be Wynn-Williams’ first public remarks since Meta initiated emergency arbitration proceedings in an attempt to prevent her from promoting the book.

Wynn-Williams’ upcoming appearance at Congress was confirmed by Senator Josh Hawley, who said in a statement that she would testify about “allegations that Facebook cooperated with the Communist regime in China to build censorship tools, punish dissidents, and make American users’ data available for Chinese use.”

Big News — Facebook whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams will testify NEXT WEEK in public, under oath, before my judiciary subcommittee re: her explosive evidence of Facebook’s cooperation with the Communist regime in China, including FB’s plans to build censorship tools, punish…

— Josh Hawley (@HawleyMO) April 2, 2025

In her book, Careless People, Wynn-Williams recounts Meta executives’ interactions with world leaders and government officials as Facebook’s influence expanded globally in the early 2010s. Her account has resurfaced information about Facebook’s attempts to operate in China, and revealed new details about its overtures to Chinese government officials.

“We do not operate our services in China today. It is no secret we were once interested in doing so as part of Facebook’s effort to connect the world,” Meta spokesperson Dani Lever said in a statement. “This was widely reported beginning a decade ago. We ultimately opted not to go through with the ideas we’d explored, which Mark Zuckerberg announced in 2019.”

Prior to her book’s publication, Wynn-Williams also filed whistleblower complaints with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice about alleged misconduct at the company. While the precise details of those complaints haven’t been made public, next week’s hearing will be a significant opportunity for her to speak publicly about what she witnessed.

The hearing, titled, “A Time for Truth: Oversight of Meta’s Foreign Relations and Representations to the United States Congress,” is scheduled for April 9, at 2:30pm ET.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/careless-people-author-sarah-wynn-williams-will-testify-at-a-senate-hearing-next-week-172509027.html?src=rss

Meta Is Now The UFC Technology Partner, Including For Quest

Meta is now the UFC’s Official Fan Technology Partner, as part of a “multiyear partnership” between the two companies.

The companies say the partnership will see Meta “leverage its leading technologies to deliver unprecedented engagement with hundreds of millions of UFC fans around the world” and “immerse fans deeper into UFC content than ever before”.

The partnership will include Meta AI, smart glasses, Quest, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Threads.

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UFC CEO Dana White announcing the partnership.

“I’ve had a lot of great partners over the years that have helped us grow this sport, but Mark and his team at Meta are going to do things that will blow away UFC fans,” said UFC President and CEO Dana White. “Meta has the greatest minds in tech and they are going to take fan engagement to the next level. We’ve already started to work on some innovations with Meta around a new fighter rankings system that I’ll be sharing soon. The next few years will be an absolute game changer for fans of this sport.”

White joined Meta’s board of directors back in January, and has reportedly been Mark Zuckerberg’s intermediary to the Trump administration, currying favor for Meta with the US president.

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Select UFC fights are available in 2D 180° on Quest in the US already.

Currently, the app Xtadium already lets Quest owners in the US watch select UFC fights in 2D immersive 180 degrees for free, and for UFC Fight Pass subscribers to watch any fight on a large virtual screen.

While the new partnership is wide, covering many of Meta’s products and services, we’re interested to hear whether it could bring 3D immersive video streaming for fights, and perhaps even a volumetric solution one day.

“I love this sport and I’m looking forward to working with the UFC to let fans experience it in new ways”, Mark Zuckerberg said.

How Capcom Plans To Punish Cheaters In Monster Hunter Wilds Arena Quests

How Capcom Plans To Punish Cheaters In Monster Hunter Wilds Arena Quests
Capcom is looking to keep the momentum going for Monster Hunter Wilds after its wildly successful launch. The latest update to the game brings time-based quests for players to complete and earn bragging rights or various in-game rewards. However, as with other online games, cheating can be a problem. To try and ward off these gaming ne’er

TikTok Draws Interest From Amazon And OnlyFans Founders As Sale Deadline Looms

TikTok Draws Interest From Amazon And OnlyFans Founders As Sale Deadline Looms
In January, we reported on a potential TikTok acquisition involving TikTok star MrBeast and some unidentified billionaires. Although that acquisition never materialized, there is a new, last-minute intervention in the works designed to ensure the platform remains functioning in the US. Newly interested bidders, including Jeff Bezos of Amazon

Top 5 Zwift Videos: Bike Upgrades, Zwift Racing League, and Alpe du Zwift

It seems as though Zwift has been on a roll recently: first the 4th challenge, and now bike upgrades! Learn all about bike upgrades in this week’s top video.

We’re also highlighting videos about bike upgrades in ZRL, climbing Alpe du Zwift in under an hour, pre-season FTP tests, and tips and tricks on using Zwift as a beginner.

Zwift Bike Upgrades // Requirements // How It Works

We recently saw the launch of the long-awaited bike upgrades feature on Zwift. Hear from Shane Miller, GPLama, as he explains the basics of Zwift’s new bike upgrading system.

The biggest secret to the new Zwift Bike changes for the Zwift Racing League Finals

How will the new bike changes actually impact Zwifters? Casual Creations shares several important tips to help Zwifters choose their equipment correctly for the Zwift Racing League Finals.

Can I climb Alpe du Zwift in under an hour?

Ryan first climbed Alpe du Zwift in 107 minutes. Now, after a bit over a year of training, he is chasing sub-one-hour. Watch as Ryan attempts to conquer this challenge in his Epic Alpe Race.

FTP Test on Zwift and Afternoon Run Session with Sam Long

In Lionel’s second vlog of the 2025 season, he races the Zwift Games as an all-out FTP test to see where his fitness is at.

Zwift & Indoor Cycling 101

As Zwifter Black British Cyclist Kendizle rides The Big Spin, he shares a boatload of tips and tricks on how to get started with Zwift.

Got a Great Zwift Video?

Share the link below and we may feature it in an upcoming post!

Oakley CYBR sunnies go ultra-minimal with rimless lenses and Unobtanium earsocks

Oakley has released new CYBR ZERO and CYBER DYNO glasses, both featuring a futuristic rimless design.

The new glasses are designed for cycling and other sports, with both utilising the technology we’ve come to expect from Oakley’s cycling sunglasses, including Unobtanium earsocks and Iridium lenses.

Oakley says the glasses have a functional fit that makes them compatible with a variety of faces and have been developed with weight savings in mind.

Both glasses share a similar style with the CYBR DYNO featuring a slightly larger lens.

The new CYBR glasses are available to buy now, with pricing for the CYBR ZERO starting at £158 and the CYBR DYNO starting at £168.

Rimless lineage

Oakley CYBER ZERO
The CYBR ZERO features a smaller lens than the CYBER DYNO. Oakley

Oakley says the CYBR ZERO build on the rimless heritage of the brand’s Radar cycling glasses, with the design said to allow for weight savings with the lens used for the structure.

The glasses are available with Prizm lenses, which Oakley says enhance colour, contrast and detail.

Oakley CYBER ZERO
Vents are cut into the lenses of both glasses for breathability. Oakley

Ligature nose pads are used to secure the glasses alongside O Matter arms that see integrated Unobtainium earsocks.

The brand says its lenses are tested under extreme mass and high-velocity circumstances to provide protection against a wide range of demanding conditions.

Oakley CYBR DYNO
Oakley has prioritised weight savings and visibility with the CYBR range. Oakley

The Oakley CYBR ZERO frames are available in three colours: Polished Navy,  Polished White, Polished Black and Matte Iron Red, while the CYBER DYNO comes in Polished White, Matte Abyss, Matte Myst and Matte White.

Photochromic lenses can be specced, which change tint when exposed to UV light.

Tadej Pogačar smashes Paris-Roubaix KOMs on rapid 213km training ride – a sign of things to come?

Tadej Pogačar, the men’s world road race champion, has just taken several prestigious Strava KOMs along the Paris-Roubaix course.

Ahead of his upcoming debut at the Queen of the Classics, Tadej Pogačar has been out training on the race’s infamous cobbled roads.

In a 212.96km training ride, posted to Strava yesterday, Pogačar rode from northern France to Belgium, averaging an impressive 37.6kph.

Along the way, Pogačar tackled many of Paris-Roubaix’s most feared sectuers, notching up record times on the five-star Mons-en-Pévèle and four-start Auchy-lez-Orchies à Bersée.

He even got a second-place trophy on the five-star Carrefour de l’Arbre, finishing just one second off Wout Van Aert’s KOM time from his third-place finish at the 2023 edition – the second-fastest edition of the race ever (behind last year’s race).

He finished his ride by reconing key climbs from this weekend’s Tour of Flanders, such as the Oude Kwaremont.

Tadej Pogačar's Paris-Roubaix training ride on Strava
Pogačar’s training ride certainly feels like something of a statement. Strava

On this ride, he posted only his third-best time up that climb – though it’s a KOM he already holds from his winning ride at the 2023 edition of that race, so perhaps he didn’t feel a need to dig too deep at that point.

Either way, despite the help of a slight north-northeast tailwind of 25.4 km/h (which counts as a “moderate breeze”, according to the Beaufort Wind Force Scale), Pogačar must have been putting out some serious power on this ride.

That will come as no surprise to anyone who’s watched him race in recent years, of course.

Tadej Pogačar's KOMs from his Paris-Roubaix training ride on Strava
Unsurprisingly, Mons-en-Pévèle is an extremely popular segment on Strava. Strava

It’s one thing to take a KOM while racing with a peloton and teammates, though, and another to take them while out on training rides – especially on famous roads (if you can call them that) such as these.

At the time of writing, for example, Mons-en-Pévèle has seen 39,168 attempts by 23,394 people.

One thing we don’t know, however, is what bike Pogačar used – his Strava file simply lists his bike as “Čolnago”.

The speed would suggest he used his Colnago Y1Rs aero bike, though given Colnago says that only has clearance for 30mm tyres – relatively small by modern Roubaix standards – might he have ridden a new V5Rs all-rounder instead?

Colnago Y1RS aero road bike
Did Pogačar use his Colnago Y1RS to take these KOMs? Liam Cahill / Our Media

This weekend’s Tour of Flanders should give us a taste of what to expect at the Hell of the North, but the dominant trend in recent years has been for riders to use their aero bikes with the biggest tyres they can squeeze in.

The question on everyone’s lips is whether Pogačar can repeat Matheiu Van Der Poel’s trick of winning the historic race in the rainbow jersey. Whatever bike he rides, then, it certainly seems like the legs won’t be an issue.