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A group of prominent lawyers claimed to be objective last month as they urged a federal judge to take “caution” when imposing antitrust remedies against Googles online search empire — but many of them have cozy ties to Big Tech, The Post has learned.

US District Judge Amit Mehta is expected to rule by August on the best way to rein in Googles illegal dominance over online search after ruling last year that the company was a monopolist. The Justice Department, rather than merely punishing past misdeeds, wants Google and CEO Sundar Pichai to sell the Chrome web browser, among other remedies.

On May 6, a group of former DOJ and Federal Trade Commission antitrust enforcers submitted an amicus brief warning the federal judge against aggressive remedies. The lawyers said their brief was made in support of neither party and was intended to guide Mehta on following the proper remedy standard.”

However, many of briefs coauthors have direct or indirect links to Google and other Big Tech firms. That includes Joe Sims, who last year dismissed criticism of Googles widespread evidence destruction as silly, and Willard Tom, who once defended Google in the high-profile antitrust lawsuit filed by Fortnite maker Epic Games.

Their arguments closely match those of the defense offered by Google, which claims the DOJ’s proposals go far beyond the bounds of antitrust law and that the court risks jeopardizing American AI leadership and even national security.

The lawyers’ links to Big Tech raised alarms with Googles critics, including Sacha Haworth, executive director at the Tech Oversight Project, who told The Post that it speaks volumes that the only people rushing to Googles defense are people paid by Google to care.

If Google is broken up, it will be a win for our digital economy that will lead to lower prices and more choices for consumers, Haworth added.

Aside from a forced divestment of Chrome, the DOJ wants Google to share its search data with rivals. The agency has also asked Mehta to consider the potential impact of Googles massive investments in AI-powered search when crafting any remedies.

Elsewhere, the feds want Google to be barred from paying billions to companies like Apple to ensure its search engine is set as the default option on most smartphones. They also propose a forced divestiture of Googles Android software if initial remedies prove ineffective.

Weve long said the DOJs proposals go miles beyond the Courts decision,” a Google spokesperson said in a statement. “We appreciate that a wide range of experts, academics and businesses agree.

An amicus brief also known as a friend of the court brief generally includes information that interested third parties want to flag for the judges consideration before reaching a verdict.

In a filing, the brief’s coauthors noted that they were not paid by any outside party and that no outside party had contributed to the writing.

Contributors included Tad Lipsky, who heads up the competition advocacy program at George Mason Universitys Global Antitrust Institute which has received millions in funding from Google and other Big Tech firms while frequently arguing for a light touch on antitrust enforcement.

Sims retired as a partner at law firm Jones Day in 2016. In July 2024, Jones Day successfully secured dismissal of a class-action suit accusing Google of antitrust violations tied to its Maps service.

Last August, Sims raised eyebrows when he argued that Mehta was silly for criticizing Google over its deletion of employee chat logs during the DOJs search trial in violation of court orders to preserve evidence.

No firm has an obligation to create a paper trail for people or entities that may want to attack it, Sims wrote on X. If anything, it has a fiduciary obligation to do just the opposite.

Tom is a former partner at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius who represented Google against Fortnite maker Epic Gamess antitrust lawsuit until his retirement in July 2022. Google eventually lost the suit in a bombshell ruling that has major implications for its Google Play app store.

Richard Parker previously represented Apple in the ebooks case bought the DOJ and currently works at Milbank Tweed, a firm that advised Google in the search trial and helped argue its ongoing appeal of the Epic Games verdict.

The brief notes that Parker contributed in “his personal capacity” and had “not worked for Google on this matter or any other matter.”

Terry Calvani worked law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer from 2005 to 2019 a period of time in which the firm served as an outside counsel for Google in several lawsuits. From 2020 to 2025, Calvini was a senior adviser at strategic communications firm Brunswick Group, which counts Google as a client.

Several enforcers who backed the amicus brief, including Sims and Lipsky, are listed as authors for Truth on the Market a competition law-focused blog with close ties to the Big Tech-funded International Center for Law and Economics.

Jon Neuchterlein is a nonresident senior fellow at the Technology Policy Institute, which acknowledges on its website that it has received from donations from the likes of Google, Amazon, and Apple, among other tech firms.

From 2015 to 2024, Neuchterlein was a partner at the law firm Sidley Austin. During his tenure, the firm counted Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Intel among its clients.

In their brief, the antitrust lawyers urged Mehta to take caution when considering two elements of the DOJs proposal the forced Chrome divestiture and the search data-sharing requirement to avoid overstepping the bounds of antitrust law.

Antitrust remedies in a monopoly maintenance case are intended to terminate the unlawful conduct and prevent its recurrence, and remediate proven harm to competition caused by the illegal conduct, the brief said.

The lawyers added that remedies that further than that or that are not narrowly designed to achieve those goals can undermine the purpose of the antitrust laws by inhibiting the very robust competition that those laws are intended to promote.

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Prosecutors call for 11-year jail sentence for Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

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Prosecutors call for 11-year jail sentence for Sean 'Diddy' Combs

Federal prosecutors in New York are urging a judge to sentence Sean “Diddy” Combs to more than 11 years in prison.

Following the hip-hop mogul’s conviction on prostitution-related charges, they also want him to be fined $500,000 (£372,000), according to court filings.

Last week, defence lawyers urged a 14-month sentence. Due to time served, that would enable him to walk free almost immediately – following his arrest in September last year.

But he could, in theory, face up to 20 years in jail after being found guilty of two counts of transportation for engagement in prostitution. Each charge carries a maximum sentence of 10 years.

Judge Arun Subramanian, a US district judge, is due to sentence Combs in Manhattan on Friday.

Sean "Diddy" Combs reacts after verdicts are read of the five counts against him, during Combs' sex trafficking trial in New York City, New
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Combs reacts after the verdicts are read in July

During his trial, prosecutors said Combs coerced two of his former girlfriends to take part in what were described as “freak offs”.

He was found guilty of transporting male prostitutes across state lines to take part in those events.

Both women testified that Combs physically attacked them and threatened to cut off financial support if they refused to take part.

However, while jurors believed Combs broke the law over using sex workers, they did not find the sexual encounters involving the women were non-consensual, which is what prosecutors had argued.

Combs was cleared of the more serious charges of sex-trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.

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In a written legal submission, his defence team has detailed “inhumane” conditions at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York.

They said the food sometimes contains maggots, that the rapper is routinely subjected to violence, and that he has “not breathed fresh air in nearly 13 months”.

They also said his “career and reputation have been destroyed”.

His legal team said Combs had been “adequately punished” already, was sober “for the first time in 25 years”, and had helped other inmates by creating an educational programme on business management and entrepreneurship.

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China’s DeepSeek launches next-gen AI model. Here’s what makes it different

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China's DeepSeek launches next-gen AI model. Here's what makes it different

Anna Barclay | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Chinese startup DeepSeek’s latest experimental model promises to increase efficiency and improve AI’s ability to handle a lot of information at a fraction of the cost, but questions remain over how effective and safe the architecture is.  

DeepSeek sent Silicon Valley into a frenzy when it launched its first model R1 out of nowhere last year, showing that it’s possible to train large language models (LLMs) quickly, on less powerful chips, using fewer resources.

The company released DeepSeek-V3.2-Exp on Monday, an experimental version of its current model DeepSeek-V3.1-Terminus, which builds further on its mission to increase efficiency in AI systems, according to a post on the AI forum Hugging Face.

“DeepSeek V3.2 continues the focus on efficiency, cost reduction, and open-source sharing,” Adina Yakefu, Chinese community lead at Hugging Face, told CNBC. “The big improvement is a new feature called DSA (DeepSeek Sparse Attention), which makes the AI better at handling long documents and conversations. It also cuts the cost of running the AI in half compared to the previous version.”

“It’s significant because it should make the model faster and more cost-effective to use without a noticeable drop in performance,” said Nick Patience, vice president and practice lead for AI at The Futurum Group. “This makes powerful AI more accessible to developers, researchers, and smaller companies, potentially leading to a wave of new and innovative applications.”

The pros and cons of sparse attention 

An AI model makes decisions based on its training data and new information, such as a prompt. Say an airline wants to find the best route from A to B, while there are many options, not all are feasible. By filtering out the less viable routes, you dramatically reduce the amount of time, fuel and, ultimately, money, needed to make the journey. That is exactly sparse attention does, it only factors in data that it thinks is important given the task at hand, as opposed to other models thus far which have crunched all data in the model.

“So basically, you cut out things that you think are not important,” said Ekaterina Almasque, the cofounder and managing partner of new venture capital fund BlankPage Capital.

Sparse attention is a boon for efficiency and the ability to scale AI given fewer resources are needed, but one concern is that it could lead to a drop in how reliable models are due to the lack of oversight in how and why it discounts information.

“The reality is, they [sparse attention models] have lost a lot of nuances,” said Almasque, who was an early supporter of Dataiku and Darktrace, and an investor in Graphcore. “And then the real question is, did they have the right mechanism to exclude not important data, or is there a mechanism excluding really important data, and then the outcome will be much less relevant?”

This could be particularly problematic for AI safety and inclusivity, the investor noted, adding that it may not be “the optimal one or the safest” AI model to use compared with competitors or traditional architectures. 

DeepSeek, however, says the experimental model works on par with its V3.1-Terminus. Despite speculation of a bubble forming, AI remains at the centre of geopolitical competition with the U.S. and China vying for the winning spot. Yakefu noted that DeepSeek’s models work “right out of the box” with Chinese-made AI chips, such as Ascend and Cambricon, meaning they can run locally on domestic hardware without any extra setup.

Deepseek trains breakthrough R1 model at a fraction of US costs

DeepSeek also shared the actual programming code and tools needed to use the experimental model, she said. “This means other people can learn from it and build their own improvements.”

But for Almasque, the very nature of this means the tech may not be defensible. “The approach is not super new,” she said, noting the industry has been “talking about sparse models since 2015” and that DeepSeek is not able to patent its technology due to being open source. DeepSeek’s competitive edge, therefore, must lie in how it decides what information to include, she added.

The company itself acknowledges V3.2-Exp is an “intermediate step toward our next-generation architecture,” per the Hugging Face post.

As Patience pointed out, “this is DeepSeek’s value prop all over: efficiency is becoming as important as raw power.”

“DeepSeek is playing the long game to keep the community invested in their progress,” Yakefu added. “People will always go for what is cheap, reliable, and effective.”

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Ronan Keating, Keith Duffy, Shane Lynch and Mikey Graham will perform a headline show – and promise to remember Stephen Gately too

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Ronan Keating, Keith Duffy, Shane Lynch and Mikey Graham will perform a headline show – and promise to remember Stephen Gately too

Boyzone are reuniting for their biggest ever headline show next summer, inspired by the success of their recent documentary Boyzone: No Matter What.

Ronan Keating, Keith Duffy, Shane Lynch and Mikey Graham will perform live at Emirates Stadium, London, on Saturday 6 June 2026.

It will be the first time they’ve performed together since a five-night run at the London Palladium in 2019, and will be the largest show of their entire career anywhere in the world.

In January, a three-part documentary celebrated their success, as well as revealing the dark side of being in a boyband in the 1990s.

One of the biggest pop groups of the era, the five-working class lads from Dublin formed in 1993, put together by talent manager Louis Walsh. They broke into the UK charts the following year.

Six number one hits and five number one albums followed, with 25 million records sold across the world.

Stephen Gately’s untimely death back in 2009, as a result of an undiagnosed heart condition, means the full band will never again take to the stage, but the remaining band members say the show will be a time to remember Gately.

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Read more: Ronan Keating on boyband fame in the 90s

Boyzone said: “We’ve been truly blown away and humbled by the response to the documentary this year. The love we’ve felt from fans all over the world has inspired us to create the ultimate experience together, headlining our own stadium show.

“The four of us can’t wait to stand together again and enjoy One For The Road.”

Ticket pre-sale kicks off on Tuesday 7 October at 9am, with remaining tickets going on general sale 9am on Friday 10 October.

With hits including Words, No Matter What and Love Me For A Reason, the band have four BRITs and an Ivor Novello award, and after reuniting in 2007, they performed four sell-out UK arena tours between 2008-2019.

Boyzone: No Matter What is available on Sky and streaming service Now

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