Tech
A company is returning to the moon. Heres how it will avoid tipping again

When Intuitive Machines became the first private space company to land on the moon, it was hailed as successful, despite its spacecraft breaking a leg and falling to its side.
Now, as the Houston-based company seeks to repeat the journey, its executives say they've made improvements to their new spacecraft, Athena, that should help it avoid the problems that impacted the mission in 2024.
"Landing on the moon is extremely difficult," Trent Martin, senior vice president of Intuitive Machines' space systems, told reporters. "Certainly we will be better this time than we were last time, but you never know what could happen."
The mission, referred to as IM-2 or PRIME-1, is set to launch on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, as early as Wednesday, Feb. 26. Neither NASA nor Intuitive Machines has announced a specific time for the liftoff, but the space agency intends to broadcast the event live with commentary. Another spacecraft, NASA's Lunar Trailblazer, will also hitch a ride on the flight to orbit the moon and map locations of lunar water.

Credit: Intuitive Machines
When the uncrewed IM-2 launches, it will be the third lander en route to the lunar surface, joining Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost and ispace's Resilience, which are both currently orbiting the moon.
Firefly's lander is the first NASA Commercial Lunar Payload Services mission of the year. It is expected to attempt a landing on March 2. Intuitive Machines will follow closely behind, with a descent slated for March 6. The program has invested $2.6 billion in contracts with private-sector vendors to help deliver instruments to the moon and send back crucial data.
But landing on the moon remains onerous, underscored by the fact that Intuitive Machines is so far the only company — as opposed to a government space program — that has gotten there mostly intact. The moon's exosphere provides virtually no drag to slow a spacecraft down as it approaches the ground. Furthermore, there are no GPS systems on the moon to help guide a craft to its landing spot.

Credit: Intuitive Machines
A last-minute crisis almost ruined Intuitive Machine's 2024 landing. Flight controllers had discovered a problem with the spacecraft's navigation system just a few hours before touchdown. Mission leaders opted to take another lap around the moon, which bought them extra time to switch to a NASA laser-based system attached to the spacecraft as an experiment.
A combination of gravity and inertia factors also seemed to stymie the landing, said Phil Metzger, a planetary scientist at the University of Central Florida. The Odysseus lander had reached the surface but wasn't upright. That's in part because everything on the moon is "six times tippier," he said in a post on X then, formerly Twitter. The Japanese moon lander SLIM, short for Smart Lander for Investigating the Moon, experienced a similar outcome.
A snapshot from the Intuitive Machines landing revealed the spacecraft had broken a leg on the way down. The tilt had apparently caused an antenna to be blocked, forcing the team to use a backup with lower bandwidth to send back data.
"IM-1 was a success because we were able to broadcast data from the surface of the moon back to Earth, but," Martin said, "we did end up on our side."

Credit: SpaceX via Intuitive Machines
Following the mission, Intuitive Machines investigated everything that didn't go as planned. The team determined an issue with the laser altimeter, a tool that measures exactly how high the surface is with a laser beam, ultimately leading to the harder-than-desired landing. Because of that issue, flight controllers were using the onboard cameras, which weren't as precise.
Martin said the investigation resulted in 85 upgrades, including contingencies that should allow Athena to land up to 10 degrees off — perhaps more — and still complete the mission objectives. To be sure it would work, the team tested all of its deployment mechanisms with such a tilt in all different directions.
"Certainly we will be better this time than we were last time, but you never know what could happen."
Intuitive Machines also addressed the previous communications issues. Tweaks to the spacecraft should allow it to land 30 degrees off-kilter and still have the high-gain antenna pointed back at Earth. Additionally, the company has upgraded its dishes on the ground for receiving data.
The lander's NASA instruments include a drill and mass spectrometer, a device that identifies the kinds of particles in a substance. The tool is intended to measure gasses in the lunar soil at Mons Mouton, a plateau at the moon's south pole where Athena will try to touch down.
But, after all is said and done, the lander has to be upright to use them. Still, Intuitive Machines says it'll be a worthwhile trip.
"Let's say something happened like last time, and we ended up on our side," Martin said. "Obviously, we would not be able to deploy drills. We would not be able to deploy hoppers and rovers. However, there are lots of instruments on all of those systems that we would still be able to operate, just like last time."
Tech
Toxic relationship with AI chatbot? ChatGPT now has a fix.

"We don’t always get it right. Earlier this year, an update made the model too agreeable, sometimes saying what sounded nice instead of what was actually helpful. We rolled it back, changed how we use feedback, and are improving how we measure real-world usefulness over the long term, not just whether you liked the answer in the moment," OpenAI wrote in the announcement. "We also know that AI can feel more responsive and personal than prior technologies, especially for vulnerable individuals experiencing mental or emotional distress."
Broadly, OpenAI has been updating its models in response to claims that its generative AI products, specifically ChatGPT, are exacerbating unhealthy social relationships and worsening mental illnesses, especially among teenagers. Earlier this year, reports surfaced that many users were forming delusional relationships with the AI assistant, worsening existing psychiatric disorders, including paranoia and derealization. Lawmakers, in response, have shifted their focus to more intensely regulate chatbot use, as well as their advertisement as emotional partners or replacements for therapy.
OpenAI has recognized this criticism, acknowledging that its previous 4o model "fell short" in addressing concerning behavior from users. The company hopes that these new features and system prompts may step up to do the work its previous versions failed at.
"Our goal isn’t to hold your attention, but to help you use it well," the company writes. "We hold ourselves to one test: if someone we love turned to ChatGPT for support, would we feel reassured? Getting to an unequivocal 'yes' is our work."
Tech
The TikTok artist behind viral unknowing bunny song pits human creativity against AI illusion
Were you tricked by the video of a bunch of bunnies jumping on a trampoline on TikTok? Well, nearly 230 million people were — and plenty of those viewers had no idea that it was actually AI. In response, the creator who brought us the Punxsutawney Phil musical, Oliver Richman (or @olivesongs11), wrote and recorded a 30-second song about the AI video, also for TikTok. He wrote the song on day 576 of an ongoing project, where he writes a new song each day.
"That project has changed my life in so many ways," Richman told Mashable, adding that it brought him "back to the joy of creating." He scrolled across the viral video of the bunnies jumping on the trampoline and said he was "certainly fooled" and "thought they were real."
"So when I learned that they weren't, I was like, 'Oh, I think this is today's song."
The unknowing bunny song on TikTok now has over 3.8 million views, 600,000 likes, and hundreds of comments like, "Bo Burnham! At The Disco" and "Wait until you see the bear on a trampoline. Spoiler: also AI."
The song goes like this:
There were bunnies that were jumping on a trampoline
And I just learned that they weren't real
If a bot can inhabit
An unknowing rabbit
It might manufacture the way you make me feel
How do I know that the sky's really sunny?
Sometimes it feels like your love is as real as
An unknowing bunny
The video has inspired covers and renditions, stop-motion videos, reactions, and a variety of other really cool human-made art. As one creator wrote on a TikTok video using the sound, "The fact that this song written about AI is going viral is incredibly healing. Especially because us as artists and songwriters are being threatened of our livelihoods due to the use of AI. And AI could never create something this unique with this much feeling."
Richman said the response to his video has been "the most surreal thing ever."
"Every piece of art that I've seen, I like get emotional," he said. "It certainly made me feel connected to the beauty of the messiness of being a human. And the imperfections that AI tends to delete or perfect — seeing all of this human art has just been a very emotional and cool experience."
As Mashable's Tim Marcin recently wrote about the influx of faux surveillance footage of animals, it "seems to be a new genre of AI slop." But give the internet slop, and creators might make porridge (is that a saying?).
In the face of all the AI slop we see online, creators like Richman are staying positive. "Art is so cool. Human art is so cool, and that really excites me."
Updated on Aug. 4 at 3:00 p.m. ET — This story has been updated to include an interview with creator Oliver Richman. Some quotes have been lightly edited for clarity and grammar.
Tech
Verizon reportedly cuts loyalty discounts after increasing fees

Verizon customers reportedly got double bad news this week: the phone carrier is raising fees and removing loyalty discounts.
According to users on the Verizon subreddit, several customers reported receiving an email from Verizon informing them their account discounts are ending. "We are writing to let you know that a discount on your account will soon end," the email said, according a redditor. "This discount will be removed no sooner than September 1, 2025." Several other redditors chimed in on the thread, saying they had a received the same email about losing loyalty perks offered to longstanding customers. Mashable has reached out to Verizon for comment and will update this story with a response.
A few days earlier, Verizon confirmed to Tom's Guide that the company is increasing fees for activations, phone lines, and tablet plans by Sept. 1.
Verizon customers are understandably unhappy about the changes. Some commented that they might change phone carriers to T-Mobile or AT&T as a result. "They just keep finding ways to crap on loyal customers," commented one redditor, underscoring the general sentiment of the thread that loyal customers are being penalized for their loyalty.
According to Tom's Guide, Verizon is reportedly trying to persuade customers on older plans to switch to its newer myPlan subscription. "We want to ensure you get the best value and experience from Verizon and encourage you to check out our myPlan options for the plan that works best for you," the email to customers reportedly said.
Cutting loyalty discounts and upping fees is a bold way to do that, since it seems to be alienating customers even more.
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