Good morning. We’re covering the release of a U.S. soldier from North Korea and a deadly fire at a wedding in Iraq. |
Plus the new ChatGPT can ‘see’ and ‘talk.’ |
| Pvt. Travis King on a news broadcast in Seoul last month.Anthony Wallace/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
|
American soldier who fled to North Korea is in U.S. custody |
King’s first stop after leaving North Korea was China, where American officials were waiting for him. The private was then put on a plane and flown to a U.S. military facility. King was to be reunited with his family in the U.S. and given physical and mental health support. |
Officials said the U.S. learned from Sweden — which serves as the diplomatic go-between for the U.S. in North Korea — several weeks ago that the North Koreans had decided to expel King. That kicked off indirect negotiations between Washington and North Korea, and direct discussions with China, including talks between Jake Sullivan, the U.S. national security adviser, and Foreign Minister Wang Yi of China during high-level discussions in Malta this month, a senior White House official said. |
U.S. officials praised the Chinese government for its assistance in facilitating King’s departure from the country, but insisted that China did not participate in mediating the talks with North Korea. A senior administration official said President Biden made no concessions to North Korea. |
| The aftermath of the fire late Tuesday at Al Haithem wedding hall in Iraq.Khalid Al-Mousily/Reuters |
|
A deadly fire at a wedding hall in Iraq |
Witnesses said that the fire started while the bride and the groom began the traditional “slow dance.” As they danced, flares — much larger versions of the sparklers sometimes used on birthday cakes — were lit. Flames and sparks leaped upward and set decorations alight, igniting a blaze that spread with astonishing speed. |
There was speculation that flammable building materials in the hall had contributed to the fire’s rapid spread. The Iraqi prime minister, Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, called for an investigation. |
| Donald Trump in South Carolina yesterdayDoug Mills/The New York Times |
|
Judge rules that Trump committed fraud |
The ruling granted Attorney General Letitia James one of the biggest punishments she has sought in a civil case which accuses Trump of overvaluing his holdings by as much as $2.2 billion. She is seeking a penalty of about $250 million in a trial scheduled to begin as early as Monday. |
| Slovakia has been inundated with disinformation on social media ahead of an election on Saturday.Jakub Gavlak/EPA, via Shutterstock |
|
| A researcher stands in a fairy circle in the Namib Desert, Namibia, in 2015.Jen Guyton/Nature Picture Library, via Alamy |
|
For decades, scientists have debated the origin of fairy circles, the strange, polka-dot-like patterns of barren earth that have been found in the Namib Desert from Angola to parts of South Africa. |
| Jackie Molloy for The New York Times |
|
The new ChatGPT can ‘see’ and ‘speak’ |
On Monday, OpenAI announced that ChatGPT will be able to “see, hear and speak” through two new features that will be offered first to paying customers over the next few weeks. |
ChatGPT users can snap a photo of their refrigerator’s contents and receive recipe ideas, for example. Users will also be able to speak and get responses delivered in a synthetic voice. Kevin Roose, our tech columnist, found this feature to be the most intriguing. |
He tested it by chatting about work-related stress and asking ChatGPT to help analyze a recent dream. Talking to Siri and Alexa, even at their best, he writes, can be wooden and flat. But after a few hours of voice conversations, he began to feel something new: warmth. Listen to the advice ChatGPT gave our columnist. |
| Christopher Testani for The New York Times |
|
That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Justin |
P.S. Can you connect these famous characters with their novels? Take our quiz. |
|