The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Monday, June 15, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 16°C ☀️ 💨 11 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 18°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h (gusts 25) Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 16°C ☀️ 💨 11 km/h (gusts 28) Good
55 km
Parry Sound 16°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h (gusts 30) Good
165 km
Sudbury 19°C 🌤️ 💨 23 km/h (gusts 34) Good
Toronto
☀️ 16°C
Clear
H: 17° / L: 9° · Wind SSW 11 km/h (gusts 18) · Humidity 69%
Tue 🌦️ 19° / 11° 💧30%
Wed 🌧️ 21° / 12° 💧65%
Thu ⛈️ 21° / 14° 💧92%
Fri ⛈️ 22° / 14° 💧8%
Sat 21° / 12° 💧10%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 16°C
Clear
H: 17° / L: 10° · Wind WSW 11 km/h (gusts 28) · Humidity 58%
Tue ☁️ 23° / 11° 💧18%
Wed 🌦️ 19° / 12° 💧57%
Thu 🌧️ 17° / 12° 💧93%
Fri 🌦️ 18° / 11° 💧15%
Sat ☁️ 17° / 10° 💧11%
Sudbury
🌤️ 19°C
Mostly Clear
H: 21° / L: 8° · Wind SW 23 km/h (gusts 34) · Humidity 44%
Tue ☁️ 22° / 9° 💧7%
Wed 🌦️ 19° / 12° 💧34%
Thu 🌧️ 20° / 12° 💧83%
Fri ⛈️ 22° / 10° 💧39%
Sat ☁️ 19° / 8° 💧28%

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times serves up their daily paper with all the excitement of a truncated polling summary about white working-class voters and economic sentiment — truly riveting stuff that reads like someone hit 'publish' mid-sentence.

World

🌍 World News

Journalist hit by Israeli strike while reporting in Lebanon

A Press TV journalist caught shrapnel while doing their job in southern Lebanon, proving once again that 'war correspondent' remains one of the world's more hazardous career choices. Just another day of reporting the news while dodging the news-makers.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

N.L. police warn parents after youth targeted by extortion group through Roblox

Newfoundland police are warning parents that extortion groups are now hunting kids through Roblox, because apparently even virtual block-building games aren't safe from real-world scumbags. It's a grim reminder that predators will exploit any platform where children gather, even one made of digital Lego bricks.

CBC Canada

📈 Tech Stocks

Oil executives send a blunt message to Americans on gas prices

Oil executives delivered their customary 'thoughts and prayers but no price relief' message to Americans struggling with gas costs. Because nothing says 'we care about your financial pain' quite like a boardroom full of people whose bonuses could fund a small nation's energy budget.

Yahoo Finance

Why Western Digital’s stock was the S&P 500’s biggest gainer on Monday

Western Digital's stock soared as investors suddenly realized that companies controlling where you store your cat photos might actually have pricing power. Who knew that in our data-hoarding society, the digital equivalent of warehouse space would become Wall Street's new darling.

MarketWatch

Centene to offer buyouts to some employees as health insurer cuts costs

Centene is graciously offering some employees the opportunity to voluntarily remove themselves from the payroll, though they're keeping the actual numbers as mysterious as their claims approval process. Nothing says 'transparent cost-cutting' like refusing to specify how many people you're hoping will take the hint and leave.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

All the news about Anthropic’s new AI fight with the White House

The White House threw Anthropic a curveball by ordering them to block foreign access to their shiny new Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models just three days after launch. Now Anthropic finds itself juggling disputes with both the Pentagon and the White House — because apparently one government fight wasn't enough drama for their corporate calendar.

The Verge AI

Meta’s new ‘AI Mode’ on Facebook pulls from public info across its platforms

Meta's desperately flinging AI features at Facebook like spaghetti at a wall, hoping something will stick users to their platform long enough to forget they're losing the AI race. Their new 'AI Mode' mines public data across Meta's empire, because nothing says innovation like repurposing your existing surveillance apparatus.

TechCrunch AI

Trump’s Anthropic shutdown just made the case for non-American AI

Trump's demand that Anthropic block foreign access to their best AI models just handed every non-American AI company a golden marketing opportunity on a silver platter. Nothing quite advertises the risks of American tech dominance like Washington forcing a company to lock out its own employees over national security theater.

The Verge AI

SpaceX is public: Everything you need to know post-IPO

SpaceX finally went public after years of Elon keeping the rocket company as his private playground, and TechCrunch is treating it like the business event of the century. The IPO coverage promises to reveal who's about to get rich and who might get burned, though knowing Musk's track record, probably both simultaneously.

TechCrunch AI

Big Tech’s desperate last push at AI regulation

Big Tech lobbyists are making their final desperate sprint toward AI regulation that would override state laws with one convenient federal framework — basically trying to replace fifty different headaches with one massive migraine. Their months-long chase for this 'holy grail' suggests they're either very optimistic or very bad at reading the political room.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

20 years of Intel Macs: Why Apple switched, and why it switched again

Apple's Intel Mac era officially enters the tech graveyard after two decades of existence, bookended by dramatic architecture switches that left developers questioning their life choices twice. The marriage was productive but ultimately doomed — like most relationships where one partner keeps redesigning the other's entire foundation every few years.

Ars Technica

Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth Admits the Company’s AI Reorg Was ‘Atrocious’

Meta's CTO just pulled off the corporate equivalent of 'my bad' after what he diplomatically called an 'atrocious' AI reorganization apparently turned the workplace into a morale wasteland. Bosworth's memo promises the return of workplace perks and better communication, because nothing says 'we value you' quite like admitting we accidentally created an organizational disaster.

Wired AI

Why do South Koreans love AI so much?

South Korea has embraced AI with the enthusiasm of a nation that already lives in 2030, where even airport immigration is handled by machines that probably judge your passport photo less harshly than humans do. The country's AI adoption makes Silicon Valley look quaint, though whether this represents utopian efficiency or dystopian convenience depends on your tolerance for being facial-scanned at every turn.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

A backdoor in a LinkedIn job offer

Someone discovered a backdoor hidden in what appeared to be a legitimate LinkedIn job posting, because apparently even fake employment opportunities come with malware these days. The post gained enough traction on Hacker News to remind us that the job market wasn't dystopian enough already.

Hacker News

The US government’s Anthropic models ban was never about an AI jailbreak

The Trump administration forced Anthropic to yank its cybersecurity AI models in what appears to be less about actual security concerns and more about flexing governmental muscle. The move serves as a stark reminder that even Silicon Valley's darlings aren't above getting their digital wrists slapped when politics enter the chat.

TechCrunch

Facebook’s new AI Mode search gets its info from public posts

Meta's new AI Mode will mine your public Facebook posts to generate search results, because nothing says 'helpful AI' quite like Uncle Bob's conspiracy theories informing algorithmic responses. The feature joins Meta's growing suite of AI tools, continuing the company's tradition of finding new ways to monetize your oversharing habits.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)