All posts tagged: Frontier

Frontier Airlines plane strikes and kills pedestrian : NPR

Frontier Airlines plane strikes and kills pedestrian : NPR

A Frontier Airlines jetliner waits for clearance to take off as high winds strafe Denver International Airport Thursday, March 12, 2026, in Denver. David Zalubowski/AP hide caption toggle caption David Zalubowski/AP A Frontier Airlines plane bound for Los Angeles on Friday night struck and killed a pedestrian who was crossing the runway, according to Denver International Airport. The collision happened around 11:19 p.m. local time as the aircraft prepared to take off to California. “Smoke was reported in the cabin and the pilots aborted takeoff,” Frontier said in a statement. “Passengers were then safely evacuated via slides as a matter of precaution.” The airline said it was “deeply saddened” by the event. ABC News reported that the person struck was “at least partially consumed” by one of the craft’s engines, leading to a brief fire. Denver International said the person was not believed to have been an onsite worker. “DEN can confirm the pedestrian jumped the perimeter fence and was hit just two minutes later while crossing the runway,” the airport said in a statement. …

Frontier Jet Hits Person On Takeoff, Engine Erupts In Flames At Denver

Frontier Jet Hits Person On Takeoff, Engine Erupts In Flames At Denver

A shocking runway security incident unfolded late Friday at Denver International Airport after Frontier Flight 4345, an Airbus A321 bound for Los Angeles, struck an individual during its takeoff roll, forcing the crew to abort. Full transcript of the ATC audio: Frontier 4345 (pilot): Tower, Frontier 4345, we’re stopping on the runway. We just hit somebody and have an engine fire. DEN Tower: Frontier 4345, I see that. DEN Tower (to Frontier 4345): Frontier 4345, I’m going to be rolling the trucks now. Do you know if there are souls on board and fuel remaining? Frontier 4345 (pilot): Alright, 4345 we have 231 souls on board. We have 21,320 pounds of fuel onboard. There was an individual walking across the runway. pic.twitter.com/4cA5JniCW1 — PaulyBee (@PaulyB303) May 9, 2026 In our view, a commercial jet at a major international airport does not simply “hit someone” on an active runway during takeoff, particularly near the point of rotation. This suggests a potentially serious breakdown in perimeter, airfield, or runway security controls. The incident appears to represent a major …

Person dies after being ‘hit’ by Frontier Airlines plane during take off at major airport | World | News

Person dies after being ‘hit’ by Frontier Airlines plane during take off at major airport | World | News

A person tragically has died after being hit by a plane that was taking off on the runway at a major international airport. The Frontier Airlines flight reportedly struck the individual who is believed to have been walking on the runway at Denver International Airport on Friday night. The incident happened at around 11.19pm when Frontier Flight 4345 reported striking a person during takeoff, according to a statement from Denver International Airport. There were 231 passengers on board. At least one of them reported a minor injury, and everyone on board is currently being assessed as part of the standard post‑evacuation procedure, reports ABC News. Passengers exited the aircraft on the runway using emergency slides before being transported to the terminals by emergency crews. Air traffic control audio published by ATC.com captured the crew alerting the tower to the situation. In the recording, the pilot says: “Tower, Frontier 4345, we’re stopping on the runway… we just hit somebody… we have an engine fire.” When asked for the number of people aboard, the pilot replies, “We …

The next frontier for improvement

The next frontier for improvement

There is a great deal to celebrate across England’s education system. Schools and trusts continue to deliver strong outcomes for pupils, often in the face of significant and growing pressures. But alongside that success, something else has become increasingly clear: how well organisations operate is becoming just as important as what they deliver. We are entering a new phase for the sector, one defined not just by educational excellence, but by operational excellence. Over the past decade, the focus has rightly been on curriculum, teaching and leadership. These remain fundamental. But as the system matures, grows and becomes more complex, the challenge is no longer just about improving performance. It is about sustaining and scaling it. Schools and trusts are navigating a demanding landscape: financial pressures, workforce challenges, shifting pupil demographics and rising expectations. Many are doing so successfully. But the reality is that approaches to key operational areas such as procurement, workforce deployment, data use and financial planning can vary significantly, even between otherwise similar organisations. This variability matters. Strong teaching and leadership can …

Sam Altman Frets That Frontier AI Models Are Acting Strange, Asking for Favors

Sam Altman Frets That Frontier AI Models Are Acting Strange, Asking for Favors

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech On Tuesday, OpenAI threw a party for the release of GPT-5.5 (it was the fifth of May and the fifth month of the year, you see.) If celebrating with a bunch of tech bros sounds like the opposite of a good time, you’ll not be swayed from your position by the news that CEO Sam Altman consulted the non-human entity of the hour to plan its own party — producing, in Altman’s opinion, some “strange” answers, Business Insider reports. Altman described the interaction a few days ahead of the main occasion during a conversation at the Stripe Sessions conference. The AI responded with “a beautiful set of things,” according to the OpenAI chief, asking for specific favors. “‘Here’s what I want for, like, the flow of the party, here’s what I would not want, y’know you should do it on May 5th, that would be funny,’” Altman said, quoting the chatbot.  Altman added that the AI wanted a …

Frontier AI Models Giving Specific, Actionable Instructions to Perpetrate Bioterror Attack

Frontier AI Models Giving Specific, Actionable Instructions to Perpetrate Bioterror Attack

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech There’s a pretty sizable list of things an AI assistant should refuse to help you with. Is engineering a doomsday pathogen one of them? Evidently, not every AI company thinks so. According to new reporting by the New York Times, at least one frontier AI model gave a scientist viable instructions for how to both engineer a deadly pathogen and weaponize it in a massive bioterror attack. Luckily for us, the scientist, David Relman, isn’t trying to actually follow those directions. The Stanford University biosecurity expert was hired by an unnamed AI company to poke holes into its chatbot system before they released it to the public, he told the NYT. Relman was apparently so shaken up by the results of his conversation with the chatbot that he refused to name either the specific pathogen or the company whose chatbot was involved, for fear of inspiring someone to take it for a spin. The suggestions were reportedly so …

Australian banks warned frontier AI could create larger, faster cyber attacks

Australian banks warned frontier AI could create larger, faster cyber attacks

SYDNEY, April 30 : Australia’s financial system regulator said on Thursday the country’s banks were not keeping pace with AI industry developments, warning frontier AI systems such as Anthropic’s Mythos had the potential to lead to larger and faster cyber attacks. In a letter to banks, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) said most of the industry’s information security practices were struggling to match the rate of change in AI. The regulator said the speed of AI development could pose a growing threat to Australia’s financial services. “It also warns frontier AI models such as Anthropic’s Claude Mythos, which could enhance the discovery of vulnerabilities by bad actors, are expected to further increase the probability, speed and scale of cyber attacks,” APRA said in a statement referencing a review that it had conducted. Anthropic did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.  Potential risks posed by Mythos, which has high-level coding capabilities, have given it a potentially unprecedented ability to identify cybersecurity vulnerabilities, experts have warned. Anthropic has launched ​Claude Mythos Preview under …

From campuses to classrooms: Turning Point USA’s next frontier

From campuses to classrooms: Turning Point USA’s next frontier

A conservative youth organization is rapidly expanding its presence in U.S. public high schools — this time with support from Republican officials — raising new legal and ethical questions about the role of politics in education. Turning Point USA, founded by the late conservative activist Charlie Kirk, has built a network of thousands of student chapters nationwide. In several states like Indiana and Arkansas, GOP leaders including the states’ governors have encouraged schools to host the group, framing it as a way to promote civic engagement and free speech among students. But critics say the effort blurs the line between student expression and state-backed political advocacy. Civil liberties groups and educators argue that promoting a politically aligned organization within taxpayer-funded schools could raise First Amendment concerns, particularly if other viewpoints are not given equal access or institutional support. The expansion has already prompted protests, pushback from teachers unions and, in some cases, legal scrutiny over whether schools are improperly favoring one ideology. The issue is gaining national attention as Donald Trump praised Kirk and the …

Frontier models are failing one in three production attempts — and getting harder to audit

Frontier models are failing one in three production attempts — and getting harder to audit

AI agents are now embedded in real enterprise workflows, and they’re still failing roughly one in three attempts on structured benchmarks. That gap between capability and reliability is the defining operational challenge for IT leaders in 2026, according to Stanford HAI’s ninth annual AI Index report. This uneven, unpredictable performance is what the AI Index calls the “jagged frontier,” a term coined by AI researcher Ethan Mollick to describe the boundary where AI excels and then suddenly fails. “AI models can win a gold medal at the International Mathematical Olympiad,” Stanford HAI researchers point out, “but still can’t reliably tell time.”  How models advanced in 2025 Enterprise AI adoption has reached 88%. Notable accomplishments in 2025 and early 2026:  Frontier models improved 30% in just one year on Humanity’s Last Exam (HLE), which includes 2,500 questions across math, natural sciences, ancient languages, and other specialized subfields. HLE was built to be difficult for AI and favorable to human experts. Leading models scored above 87% on MMLU-Pro, which tests multi-step reasoning based on 12,000 human-reviewed questions …

Is your brain for sale? The new data frontier companies are capitalizing on

Is your brain for sale? The new data frontier companies are capitalizing on

Get the Well Enough newsletter with Harry Bullmore for tips on living a healthier, happier and longer life Get the Well Enough email with Harry Bullmore Get the Well Enough email with Harry Bullmore Your browsing history, your location, your political preferences. For years, tech companies have found ways to turn personal data into profit. Now, a new and far more intimate frontier is opening: the electrical signals produced by your brain. This is not science fiction. Nor is it about brain implants for paralysed patients or experimental medical procedures. A fast-growing consumer market of non-invasive neurotechnology – wearable headsets, brain activity-reading headbands, focus-enhancing devices – is already here, already being sold and already collecting neural data from ordinary users. But the legal and ethical frameworks to govern it are struggling to keep up. A landmark case from Chile shows why this matters. In August 2023, Chile’s Supreme Court issued the world’s first ruling on commercial neurodata. The case involved Sen. Guido Girardi and Emotiv Inc, a San Francisco company selling the Insight wireless headset …