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‘Elsbeth’ star Carrie Preston speaks on inspiration from ‘Columbo,’ that ‘Good Wife’ reference, and her center stage appearance

SPOILER ALERT: This story includes major plot developments on the first episode of “Elsbeth,” airing on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. 

 

 

— On “Elsbeth,” Carrie Preston reprises her Emmy winning role as the eccentrically shrewd attorney Elsbeth Tascioni, a fan favorite character from the CBS drama “The Good Wife” and its Paramount+ spin-off “The Good Fight.”

— Courtesy of Elizabeth Fisher/CBS

On those shows, Elsbeth’s scatterbrained behavior disarmed her courtroom adversaries — and, just as often, her own clients — only for her to upend everyone’s expectations with some ingenious legal sleight of hand.

 

Robert and Michelle King created all three shows, but rather than another serialized legal series, “Elsbeth” is a crime procedural, relocating its title character from Chicago to New York City as part of a government consent decree requiring the NYPD to allow a lawyer to observe their activities. The conceit places Elsbeth on the other side of the legal equation in the vein of the classic series “Columbo:” The audience knows from the start who did it — in the case of the pilot, a well-respected theater director (Stephen Moyer) who kills a student to cover up their affair — and then watches Preston’s Tascioni try to solve it.

 

Preston talked with Variety about how Peter Falk’s iconic TV detective was an inspiration for Elsbeth from the very beginning, how she approaches performing her character’s daffy intelligence and why fans of “The Good Wife” and “The Good Fight” shouldn’t hold out for cameos any time soon.

— Courtesy of Elizabeth Fisher/CBS

 

How was Elsbeth first described to you for “The Good Wife”?

It’s funny that you asked that, because the first thing that Robert King said to me 14 years ago when they offered me this role was, “We’re looking at her as like a female Colombo.” And here we are 14 years later, basically borrowing the structure of “Colombo” to make the show. She is an unconventional character in the same way that he was, somebody that people don’t see coming.

 

Did you rewatch Elsbeth’s first episode?

I went back recently, because I hadn’t looked at it in 14 years. It was fascinating. They say your cells change every seven years, so I’ve gotten two new complete cycles of cells since I played this part to begin with. But you can see that I was finding my way as we were all figuring out who this person is. I was there as a guest to serve the bigger story, so I didn’t know how far I was being encouraged to go. A couple of seasons later, when they bring me back, I think that was when we all found the flow with the character. The alchemy between the writing and the actor started to gel.

 

Elsbeth makes these hairpin turns of thought from something that seems frivolous to life-or-death serious. How do you find your way into that?

In the very first couple of scripts, they just wrote the word “pause” in parentheses, and I became more interested in what the pause was than what the words were. I started thinking, what is happening in that pause? What if there’s something that’s firing in her brain that nobody else knows? What if they were completely opposite from what I’m about to say?

 

Then they stopped writing the pauses, but I started figuring out where the twists and turns are. I started thinking of it almost like creating a map that I would follow: What am I thinking? What is my body doing? And what am I saying? If all three of those things are at odds, it makes her fun to play, and hopefully surprising to watch.

 

 

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— Variety

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Email: GM told Cruise employees that a 3rd party estimates internal share price of its self-driving unit at $11.80, down from $24.27 just one quarter ago

Greg Bensinger / Reuters:

 

 

—  General Motors’ (GM.N) Cruise saw its internal share price cut by more than half from a quarter ago as the fallout from an October accident continues to weigh on the self-driving car company.

Cruise employees were told the share price had been estimated by a third party at $11.80, according to an email viewed by Reuters. That’s down from a prior estimate of $24.27 just one quarter ago.
“We cannot ignore that this estimate is significantly lower than we’ve seen before and that there are real life impacts for each of us,” wrote Craig Glidden, chief administrative officer for Cruise, in the email.

 

Cruise has been working to recover from an October accident in which a woman was dragged by one of its vehicles after being struck by a human driven car. The company’s permit to operate in California was suspended and Cruise has stopped all testing on public roads in the United States.
Glidden said Cruise has a “longer pathway towards scaled commercialization.” The company last year had plans to roll out self-driving taxis in nearly a dozen U.S. cities but has since cut a quarter of jobs and seen its CEO, co-founder and others leave.

 

It has been a difficult few months for the once-promising Cruise. GM last month said it slashed about $1 billion from Cruise’s annual budget and the firm released a withering safety analysis of the October crash in which evidence was shown that executives withheld important data from regulators, the press and the public.
It is being probed by a variety of government agencies including the Securities and Exchange Commission, Department of Justice and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

 

Cruise is targeting a limited return to city streets with human drivers later this year, likely in Houston or Dallas, according to people familiar with the matter.
However, Cruise executives told some engineering and operations staff in internal meetings in recent weeks that they should not expect to see its robotaxis on city streets again until the fourth quarter, Reuters reported last month. The sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak on Cruise’s behalf. Cruise has denied this characterization.

 

 

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— Techmeme

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With booming AI growth, data centers struggle to meet self-imposed sustainability goals due to electricity increases, which strain power grids

—  Artificial intelligence’s booming growth is radically reshaping an already red-hot data center market, raising questions about whether these sites can be operated sustainably

 

 

Patrick Sisson / New York Times:

 

 

West Texas, from the oil rigs of the Permian Basin to the wind turbines twirling above the High Plains, has long been a magnet for companies seeking fortunes in energy.

 

The carbon footprint from the construction of data centers and the racks of expensive computer equipment is substantial, and the sites’ power needs have grown considerably. Credit: Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Now, those arid ranch lands are offering a new moneymaking opportunity: data centers.

 

Lancium, an energy and data center management firm setting up shop in Fort Stockton and Abilene, is one of many companies around the country betting that building data centers close to generating sites will allow them to tap into underused clean power.

 

“It’s a land grab,” said Lancium’s president, Ali Fenn.

 

In the past, companies built data centers close to internet users, to better meet consumer requests, like streaming a show on Netflix or playing a video game hosted in the cloud. But the growth of artificial intelligence requires huge data centers to train the evolving large-language models, making proximity to users less necessary.

 

But as more of these sites start to pop up across the United States, there are new questions on whether they can meet the demand while still operating sustainably. The carbon footprint from the construction of the centers and the racks of expensive computer equipment is substantial in itself, and their power needs have grown considerably.

 

Just a decade ago, data centers drew 10 megawatts of power, but 100 megawatts is common today. The Uptime Institute, an industry advisory group, has identified 10 supersize cloud computing campuses across North America with an average size of 621 megawatts.

 

This growth in electricity demand comes as manufacturing in the United States is the highest in the past half-century, and the power grid is becoming increasingly strained.

 

The Uptime Institute predicted in a recent report that the sector’s myriad net-zero goals, which are self-imposed benchmarks, would become much harder to meet in the face of this demand and that backtracking could become common.

 

“This is not just about data centers,” said Mark Dyson, a managing director at RMI, a nonprofit organization focused on sustainability. “Data centers are a practice round for a much bigger wave of load growth that we are already seeing and are going to continue seeing in this country coming from electrification of industry, vehicles and buildings.”

 

The data center industry has embraced more sustainable solutions in recent years, becoming a significant investor in renewable power at the corporate level. Sites that leased wind and solar capacity jumped 50 percent year over year as of early 2023, to more than 40 gigawatts, capacity that continues to grow. Still, demand outpaces those investments. And the need for more processing power is backing up the interconnection queue and creating stopgap solutions.

 

Equinix’s data center in San Jose, Calif. The company operates 260 data centers across the globe. Credit: Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Power-hungry data centers in full force further complicate the balance. Data centers in the construction pipeline would, when complete, use as much power annually as the San Francisco metro area, according to a report released on Wednesday by the real estate services company JLL. Most sites coming online this year are already leased; in popular markets, significant space will not open up for at least two years.

“You have to get as many gigawatts live as you possibly can, as fast as you can,” Ms. Fenn of Lancium said. “People are going to cobble that together in whatever way they can.”

 

That has quickly expanded development beyond the established first- and second-tier markets, such as Northern Virginia, Dallas and Silicon Valley.

 

Competition is growing in parts of the country offering cheap land and available power. Amazon, for instance, announced last month that it was planning a $10 billion project in Mississippi, the state’s largest economic development project, which includes data centers and solar generating sites.

 

“Anybody who has any significant source of power has now become a new data center market,” said Jim Kerrigan, managing principal of North American Data Centers, an industry consultancy.

 

A.I. is only a small percentage of the global data center footprint. The Uptime Institute predicts A.I. will skyrocket to 10 percent of the sector’s global power use by 2025, from 2 percent today.

 

“They have been building at a breakneck pace with so many other kinds of drivers for demand,” said Andy Lawrence, executive director of research at the institute. “A.I.’s kind of the froth on top.”

 

Last year, construction of data centers was up 25 percent, according to the real estate firm CBRE. And Nvidia, which supplies most of the high-tech chips powering this technology, last week reported record profit in data center sales, with 2023 revenue hitting $47.5 billion, a 217 percent jump from the year before.

 

The nation’s energy grids cannot handle that kind of demand, said Christopher Wellise, vice president of sustainability at Equinix, a global data center operator. “Technology is moving faster than our infrastructure has evolved,” he said.

 

On top of that, the transition toward electrification and renewable power has created new challenges. Orders for the large transformers needed to deliver power have a three-year backlog, and even the diesel generators that provide backup power can take nearly two years to arrive.

 

Developers are focusing on squeezing additional efficiency out of their operations. Meta has teamed up with a Texas battery storage provider to better use the state’s wind and solar resources. Google signed a deal with Fervo, a company developing utility-scale geothermal resources.

 

 

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Management for Ghetto Gods in Divineland shares reviews

The reviews are in! It’s a hit!

 

GHETTO GODS IN DIVINELAND has playing at Passage Theatre in Trenton, during February and the  performances ended Sunday, Feb. 25.

 

It was a “shot to experience the incredible show in our Speak Your Truth season!” states management.

 

Here’s what the critics have had to say:

 

“Fresh music, social poetry, and communal dance.. rough yet soulful movements… the performance I attended was extremely well-received. The overpacked audience LOVED it.” —Broad Street Review

 

“Lofty romantic ideas abound… so do raw, intense emotions. Sporadic lines catch your ear… There’s also a large dose of humor and irony.” —Princeton Info

 

“The show can be a bridge that not only connects art forms, but hopefully, empowersaudiences by leading them to deeper levels of understanding of fundamentally universal issues.” —Town Topics

 

“…simultaneously street-smart and mythical, with satiric jabs at politicians and the media.” —NJ Arts

 

“It is a gift of invaluable richness, one that I cannot more strongly urge audiences to accept.” —Out in Jersey

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The AACCNJ calls for an immediate moratorium on all public non-emergency public procurement contracts for up to $5M 

TRENTON, N.J. —  The African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey (AACCNJ) seeks the support of the Murphy Administration, NJ State Senate President Nicholas P. Scutari, Assemblyman and Speaker, Craig J. Coughlin, and NJ State Representative, and NJ Legislative Black Caucus Chair, Shavonda E. Sumter, in its request for a moratorium and on all non-emergency public procurement contracts up to five million effective immediately.

 

The AACCNJ formed a task force to spearhead the next steps with the Murphy Administration as a result of the findings of the State’s commissioned study, conducted by Mason Tillman Associates, LTD, which documented the institutional discrimination to African American businesses in NJ. The body of the Task Force believes that the moratorium is important because there are still opportunities that will be presented by the Murphy administration to consider but without an immediate moratorium, the same outcome will occur for those that have benefitted in the past.

 

“The moratorium will be a precursor to finding a remedy to the gross harm done to Black businesses in the state procurement process,” said John E. Harmon, Sr., IOM, Founder, President & CEO, AACCNJ.

 

“We believe this can be done without legislative approval. Contracts are still being doled out as we wait for the next steps. It is business as usual; this step is necessary; and past practices may be accelerated in anticipation of new standards to level the playing field,” said Harmon.

 

The task force is co-chaired by Dr. Denise Anderson, Denise Anderson and Associates and Ferlanda Nixon, Esq., Chief of Public Policy & External Affairs, AACCNJ. Committee Members include John E. Harmon, Sr., President CEO, AACCNJ, Gary Mann, Chairman of the Board, AACCNJ, Tammeisha Smith, Vice Chair of the Board, Stan Prater, Senior Advisor to AACCNJ President & CEO, Tanya Freeman, Esq, Chair of the Board, NY State Black Business Alliance (NYSBBA), Robert Johnson, Esq., Secretary, AACCNJ, Board of Directors, Marcus Dyer, CPA, Treasurer, AACCNJ, Board of Directors, Robert Warrington, Esq., AACCNJ Board of Directors, and Monique Nelson, Executive Chair, UWG.

 

“We anticipate more recommended best practices to ensure a more equitable participation for Black businesses in public procurement as we go forward to codify definitive goals that incentivize inclusion and cement our mutual commitment to have a stronger and more equitable economy with the Murphy administration, and public stakeholders,” said Harmon.

 

“We see the acceptance of this requested moratorium as a good faith effort to advance the state’s procurement efforts more equitably.”

 

AACCNJ Press Release:  The African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey (AACCNJ) hosted a Town Hall Meeting with over three hundred in attendance. Topic: “The Fierce Urgency of Now” – A Presentation on the State’s Disparity Study on Feb. 8, 2024.

 

“As we move forward, we ask the Governor and his administration to also hold a statewide meeting, to discuss the results of the disparity study,” said Harmon.

 

“The Administration needs to establish a race and gender-based program with minority and woman-owned business utilization goals to end the discriminatory practices in its award of contracts,” said Harmon.

 

“Our mutual goal henceforth is to have a more equitable participation in every area of the public sector wherein economic opportunities exist.”

 

“The Study, as expected, revealed that African American businesses received little of the $ 18.5 billion the Murphy administration spent on contracts for construction, professional services and goods and services from 2015 to 2020,” said John E. Harmon, Sr.

 

“While expecting the worst, little did we know that the Study would document African Americans received less than one (1) percent of the $18.5 billion dollars the State awarded to contractors. African American businesses received a pittance despite the fact that we represent, 14 percent of the population, and over 10 percent of the businesses in New Jersey willing and able to contract with the State.”

 

For updates on events and actions related to the recent Disparity Study, please visit aaccnj.com.

 

About the African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey

The African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey (AACCNJ) performs an essential role in the economic viability of New Jersey. While providing a platform for New Jersey’s African American business leaders, to speak with a collective voice, the AACCNJ advocates and promotes economic diversity fostering a climate of business growth through major initiatives centering on education and public policy. The Chamber serves as a proactive advocacy group with a 501(c) 3 tax exemption, which is shared by the National Black Chamber of Commerce.

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Of 2,745 US adult TikTok users: The top 25% post 98% of public videos, typical user rarely posts, 40% find  For You interesting…

—  Around half of adult TikTok users in the U.S. have never posted a video themselves.  And a minority of users produce the vast majority of content

 

Samuel Bestvater / Pew Research Center:

 

A new Pew Research Center study matching the survey responses and on-site behaviors of U.S. adult TikTok users finds that a minority of avid posters create the vast majority of content on the site. And most users post seldom, if at all – instead using TikTok primarily to view and consume content made by others.

 

These findings come at a time when one-third of U.S. adults say they use the site and a growing share get news there. Among our key findings about how the American public is using TikTok:

 

A small share of users are responsible for producing the majority of TikTok content. The top 25% of U.S. adults on TikTok by posting volume produce 98% of all publicly accessible videos from this group. This is in line with the Center’s previous research on Twitter users, which found a similar ratio of highly active users creating the majority of content on the platform.

 

The typical TikTok user posts seldom, if ever. About half of all U.S. adults on the site have never posted a video themselves. And the typical user has not added any information to the “bio” field on their account.

 

The posting behaviors of younger adults do not stand out dramatically from other age groups.Users ages 18 to 34 are much more likely than their older counterparts to use TikTok in the first place. But around half of these younger users have ever posted on the site – similar to the share among users ages 35 to 49.

 

Users who have posted videos on TikTok are more active on the platform in general than non-posters. Posters typically follow more users, have more followers themselves, are more likely to have filled out their account bio and are somewhat more likely to find the content of their “For You” page extremely interesting.

 

TikTok users are more likely than not to find their “For You” page interesting.TikTok is defined by its algorithmically curated “For You” page, and users generally like the content the algorithm serves them. Some 40% of users say this content is either extremely or very interesting to them, far more than the 14% in total who say it is not too or not at all interesting.

 

The study began with a survey conducted in August 2023 of 2,745 U.S. adult TikTok users. It includes direct observation of the accounts and posting behavior of 869 respondents who volunteered to share their account handle for research purposes.

 

 

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Microsoft announces AI Generative Erase for users to remove objects, people from images in its Photos app on Windows 10 and higher

Sean Hollister / The Verge:

 

 

This good dog is about to go off-leash. GIF: Microsoft

— Google and Samsung aren’t the only ones baking magical AI selective photo erasers into their devices — they’re about to become table stakes for Windows PCs too.

 

Microsoft has just announced Generative erase, a feature that lets you do similar things in the Photos app that comes bundled with Windows.

 

Above and below, you can see how Microsoft disappears a dog’s leash and some unintentional photobombers using the power of generative AI:

 

While that may not be quite as nifty a party trick as other AI fakery you’ve seen, you won’t need to buy a new Pixel or Galaxy to integrate this into your life, either. Microsoft says it’s not only rolling this out to Windows 11, but also backporting all of the Photos’ AI edit features to Windows 10, in addition to Windows 11 for Arm64 devices. Those include a background removal feature as well.

 

These tools are for Windows Insiders for now, though. Says Microsoft: “This update is beginning to roll out to Windows Insiders in all channels today (including Windows Insiders on Windows 10 in the Release Preview Channel). Make sure to update your app to version number 2024.11020.21001.0 or higher.”

 

The company’s blog post doesn’t say whether AI-edited photos will come with metadata or watermarks so you can distinguish them from unedited ones.

 

 

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Samsung: Galaxy Book4 series, with Intel Core Ultra chips and AMOLED touchscreens, available in US, UK, other markets Feb. 26

The Galaxy Book 4 Ultra, Book 4 Pro, and Book 4 Pro 360 are all coming soon.

 

 

Mark Tyson / Tom’s Hardware:

 

 

—  Samsung has announced that its first AI PC series will become available son Feb. 26.

 

The Samsung Galaxy Book 4 series consists of three base designs: Galaxy Book 4 Ultra, Book 4 Pro, and Book 4 Pro 360. All feature embedded Intel NPUscourtesy of one of Core Ultra 9/7 processors.

Other common yet desirable qualities of the Galaxy Book 4 family are a Dynamic AMOLED 2X touch screen with 120% DCI-P3, AKG quad speakers with Dolby Atmos, lengthy battery life, a new discrete Samsung Knox security chip, and enhanced connectivity as standard.

 

In the video embeded above, Samsung details ways the NPU will be useful to accelerate AI on the laptop. For example, we see AI in action in Adobe creative software and using Microsoft Copilot assistance for various smart and labor-saving tasks in Windows. (though at the moment, that’s cloud-based). Another major focus of the brief video is on smart connectivity, which is particularly tightly integrated for owners of Samsung’s Android phones.

 

Though Samsung has great claims for the audio-visual experience on offer from all the above laptops and boasts about the utility delivered by its onboard AI, readers should, as always, check for reviews on sites like Tom’s Hardware. We reviewed the Galaxy Book 3 Ultra last April, and it was surprisingly good though. Of course, the AI PC experience delivered by Samsung will also rely on partner software, and we are at a stage where developers are still establishing compelling use cases for PCs with onboard NPUs.

 

Samsung US hasn’t listed or detailed any of the new Galaxy Book 4 devices at the time of writing, though it is selling off Book 3 models in an event that ends on February 25. We note Samsung Canada has all the models available for pre-order, though. The Canadian page is selling multiple configurations of all three designs with configuration options for GPU, CPU, and storage (depending upon the model) at prices ranging from CAD$999 (USD$740) to CAD$2,999 (USD$2,222). Pricing also seems to be shown in South Korean and Indian markets.

 

 

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How Sam Waterston’s Jack McCoy exited ‘Law & Order’

Jack McCoy is officially done in the courtroom. Sam Waterston appeared in his final episode of “Law & Order” on Thursday, Feb. 22.

 

Following a conviction and going against the mayor’s wishes to not question his son, he revealed to ADA Nolan (Hugh Dancy) that he was resigning.

 

“I’ve been thinking about this for a while. It’s time. It just is,” Jack said, revealing that since he went against the mayor’s wishes, the leader will do everything in his power to make sure Jack loses the election — and it will work.

 

“He’s going to bury everyone who wronged him, including you — especially you,” he continued. “If I step aside now, the governor will be able to appoint someone — someone with integrity.”

 

Jack then raised his glass for a cheers, stating, “It’s been a hell of a ride.” The hour ended with him outside, looking up at the courthouse.

 

Waterston, 83, joined the mothership series in 1994, starring in a leading role through the series’ original end in 2010. He returned in 2022 when the show was revived for its 21st season. He’s also played Jack McCoy on spinoffs “Law & Order: SVU” and “Law & Order: Trial by Jury” and the movie, “Exited: A Law & Order Movie.”

 

Earlier this month, Waterston released a statement about his exit. “Greetings, you wonderful people,” he began. “It’s a pleasure to talk directly like this to the backbone of Law & Order’s absolutely amazing audience. The time has come for me to move on and take Jack McCoy with me. There’s sadness in leaving, but I’m just too curious about what’s next. An actor doesn’t want to let himself get too comfortable. I’m more grateful to you than I can say. L&O’s continuing and amazing long run, along with its astounding come-back, is all thanks to you and to Dick Wolf, but for whose vision, patience, perseverance, and unique combination of creative and business talents, none of this would have happened. I feel very blessed. I hope to see you all on the flip side.”

 

Tony Goldwyn will be replacing McCoy as the new district attorney. Ahead of his debut, he shared photos from the set on Instagram, captioning the stills, “Some very large shoes to fill! First episode finished as DA Nicholas Baxter. Thanks to the L&O fam for being so welcoming!” He will be introduced during the March 14 episode.

 

 

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— Variety

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AT&T on Feb. 22 outage: ‘Caused by the application and execution of an incorrect process’ while expanding its network, ‘not a cyber attack’

—  AT&T says they have “restored wireless service to all our affected customers.”

 

ABC News:

 

 

A temporary network disruption that affected AT&T customers in the U.S. Thursday was caused by a software update, the company said.

A man walks past the AT&T store in New York’s Times Square, June 17, 2015. — Brendan McDermid/Reuters, FILE

 

AT&T told ABC News in a statement ABC News that the outage was not a cyberattack but caused by “the application and execution of an incorrect process used as we were expanding our network.”

 

“We are continuing our assessment of today’s outage to ensure we keep delivering the service that our customers deserve,” the statement continued.

 

The software update went wrong, according to preliminary information from two sources familiar with the situation.

 

Sources have told ABC News that there was nothing nefarious or malicious about the incident.

 

The outage was not caused by an external actor, according to a source familiar with the situation. AT&T performs updates regularly, according to the source.

 

In an earlier statement to ABC News, AT&T said some customers were “experiencing wireless service interruptions” and advised them to make calls over Wi-Fi.

 

The company issued an update later Thursday afternoon saying that its network had been fully restored.

 

“We have restored wireless service to all our affected customers. We sincerely apologize to them. Keeping our customers connected remains our top priority, and we are taking steps to ensure our customers do not experience this again in the future,” the company said in a message on its website.

 

Two sources briefed on the situation told ABC News that the FBI and Department of Homeland Security (DHS), among other agencies, had been urgently investigating to determine whether the AT&T outage was the result of a cyberattack or a hack, or simply some sort of technical malfunction.

 

As of 5 a.m. ET, the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) reported, according to a confidential memo obtained by ABC News, that “the cause of the outage is unknown and there are no indications of malicious activity.” CISA is an agency within DHS tasked with monitoring cyber threats.

 

The FCC has been in touch with AT&T to figure out what caused the outage, according to National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby.

 

Kirby told reporters Thursday afternoon that DHS and the FBI were looking into the outage as well and working with the tech industry and network providers to see what can be done “from a federal perspective to enhance their investigative efforts to figure out what happened here.”

 

“The bottom line is we don’t have all the answers,” he said. “We’re working very hard to see if we can get to the ground truth of exactly what happened.”

 

Several police departments and municipalities warned local residents of what they described as a nationwide outage. In turn, officials urged callers to contact emergency services by alternative means.

 

“There is a nationwide AT&T outage that is preventing wireless customers from making and receiving any phone calls (including to 9-1-1),” the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, which serves the Charlotte, North Carolina area, said in a post on X.

 

The county government in Fairfax, Virginia, released a similar warning.

 

“There is a nationwide AT&T outage that is preventing wireless customers from making and receiving any phone calls (including to 9-1-1),” the Fairfax County Government said on X. “Try calling from a landline or ask a friend or family member to call 9-1-1 on your behalf.”

 

In response to an earlier request from ABC News, CISA said they had no comment on the outage.

 

AT&T serves more than 100 million customers across mobile and broadband services, according to the company’s website.

 

Verizon and T-Mobile both told ABC News that their respective networks are not experiencing outages but customers may experience difficulty when contacting individuals affected by outages at other providers.

 

“Verizon’s network is operating normally. Some customers experienced issues this morning when calling or texting with customers served by another carrier. We are continuing to monitor the situation,” a Verizon spokesperson said.

 

T-Mobile similarly told ABC News, “We did not experience an outage. Our network is operating normally. Down Detector is likely reflecting challenges our customers were having attempting to connect to users on other networks.”

 

 

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— Techmeme