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Flight 11: SpaceX Tests New Starship Landing Burns, Ship Banking Maneuvers, Subsonic Guidance Algorithms
October 14, 2025

SpaceX launched Starship Flight 11 from Pad 1 at Starbase on October 13, at about 2323 UTC, marking the final flight test for the Version 2 iteration of the megarocket system and the last use of the current Pad 1 configuration.

The mission concluded with the Super Heavy booster performing a controlled splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico and the Ship 38 upper stage successfully splashing down in the Indian Ocean about one hour and six minutes after liftoff, following a suborbital trajectory that included a payload deployment demonstration, an in-space engine relight test, and a dynamic banking maneuver during reentry.

Flight 11 also marked this Super Heavy(B15)'s second flight, following a successful catch during Flight 8 in March 2025, and it was the third booster caught by the launch tower at Pad A. For this mission, SpaceX reused 24 of its 33 Raptor 2 engines, with the booster performing a landing burn starting with 13 engines and transitioning to five for added redundancy before splashing down in the Gulf of Mexico.

Following launch, the flight followed a suborbital profile similar to previous tests, with the Super Heavy booster executing a new landing burn engine configuration planned for future Block 3 boosters. The booster performed a boostback burn, followed by a landing burn, and splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico approximately 6.5 minutes after liftoff.

Accorging to SpaceX, "This was the final flight of the second-generation Starship and first generation Super Heavy booster, as well as the final launch from the current configuration of Pad 1. Every major objective of the flight test was achieved, providing valuable data as we prepare the next generation of Starship and Super Heavy.

"The flight test began with Super Heavy igniting all 33 Raptor engines and ascending over the Gulf. The successful first-stage ascent was followed by a hot-staging maneuver, with Starship’s upper stage igniting its six Raptor engines to continue its flight to space.

"Following stage separation, the Super Heavy booster completed its boostback burn to put it on a course to a pre-planned splashdown zone off the coast of Texas using 12 of the 13 planned engines. Under the same angle of attack tested on the previous flight, the booster descended until successfully igniting all 13 planned engines (including one that did not relight during the boostback burn) for the high-thrust portion of the landing burn. The booster successfully executed a unique landing burn planned for use on the next generation booster. Super Heavy hovered above the water before shutting down its engines and splashing down."

Ship 38 mission objectives include, deploying eight Starlink satellites simulators (totaling ~16,000 kg) to simulate payload release; in-space Raptor relight for deorbit maneuvers; and heat shield stress tests by intentionally removing tiles without ablative backups to expose bare steel and assess plasma exposure.

The mission deployed eight Starlink mass simulators into a suborbital trajectory, simulating the deployment of next-generation (V3) Starlink satellites. Another key objective was the demonstration of a single Raptor engine relight in space, occurring approximately 38 minutes into the flight, which validates critical capabilities for deep-space missions. Heat shield modifications were tested by removing tiles lacking an ablative backup section in vulnerable areas to stress-test the thermal protection system during reentry.

Ship 38, the final Block 2 Starship vehicle, completed its mission with a controlled reentry into Earth's atmosphere, passing through transonic and subsonic regimes before initiating its landing burn. It executed a dynamic banking maneuver during descent, testing subsonic guidance algorithms needed for future return-to-launch-site landings. The ship successfully splashed down in the Indian Ocean northwest of Western Australia at approximately 1:06:25 after liftoff.

According to SpaceX, "After completing a full-duration ascent burn, Starship achieved its planned velocity and trajectory. During flight, Starship successfully deployed eight Starlink simulators and executed the third in-space relight of a Raptor engine, demonstrating a critical capability for future deorbit burns.

"Starship re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere and was able to gather extensive data on the performance of its heatshield as it was intentionally stressed to test the limits of the vehicle’s capabilities. In the final minutes of flight, Starship performed a dynamic banking maneuver to mimic the trajectory that future missions returning to Starbase will fly. Starship then guided itself using its four flaps to the pre-planned splashdown zone in the Indian Ocean, successfully executing a landing flip, landing burn, and soft splashdown."

This flight was the eleventh test of the Starship system and the final flight for the Block 2 Starship and Super Heavy vehicles. Booster 15, which previously flew on Flight 8, was reused with 24 flight-proven Raptor engines and was intended to test configurations for the upcoming Block 3 booster.

According to SpaceX, "Focus now turns to the next generation of Starship and Super Heavy, with multiple vehicles currently in active build and preparing for tests. This next iteration will be used for the first Starship orbital flights, operational payload missions, propellant transfer, and more as we iterate to a fully and rapidly reusable vehicle with service to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars, and beyond"

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U.S. Bars EU Censorship Officials From Entering The Country

The U.S. State Department, under Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has imposed visa restrictions barring five Europeans from entering the United States, accusing them of leading efforts to pressure American tech firms to censor or suppress American viewpoints online.

The move announced Tuesday, is part of a broader President Trump administration campaign against foreign influence over online speech, using immigration law rather than platform regulations or sanctions.

The targeted individuals include former European Union Commissioner Thierry Breton, leaders of German anti-hate group HateAid, and heads of organizations focused on so-called disinformation and digital hate

Breton, former EU Commissioner for Digital Affairs, was sanctioned for his role in enforcing the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which has clashed with tech companies like Elon Musk’s X. He previously sent a letter to Musk demanding compliance with the DSA ahead of a Trump interview.

Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, was targeted for his organization’s 2022 “Disinformation Dozen” report, which highlighted anti-vaccine figures including Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Clare Melford, CEO of the Global Disinformation Index, was sanctioned for allegedly using U.S. taxpayer funds to advocate for censorship and blacklisting of American speech.

Josephine Ballon and Anna-Lena von Hodenberg, leaders of HateAid, were sanctioned for their ostensible work combating so-called online hate and disinformation, with the group calling the U.S. actions an “authoritarian attack on free speech.”

The State Department cited these individuals as part of a “global censorship-industrial complex” that advances foreign government censorship campaigns targeting American speakers and companies.

The sanctions are based on a visa policy announced in May 2025 that restricts entry for foreigners deemed responsible for censorship of protected speech in the U.S. The Department of Homeland Security may initiate removal proceedings against those already in the country.

The move follows a broader trend of U.S. officials, including Vice President JD Vance, criticizing European nations for censorship, particularly over content related to the Covid-19 lab leak theory and other political topics.

The EU has not yet responded publicly to the sanctions, but European officials have expressed concern over the U.S. actions undermining European sovereignty.

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A pirate activist group known as Anna’s Archive has claimed to have scraped and begun releasing a massive archive of Spotify’s music catalog, asserting it has backed up nearly all of the platform’s most popular tracks. As of Tuesday. Spotify has confirmed the breach.

Anna’s Archive claims to have scraped 86 million audio files from Spotify, representing approximately 99.6% of total listens on the platform, with the entire archive totaling around 300 terabytes in size.

The archive includes metadata for 256 million tracks—covering an estimated 99.9% of Spotify’s catalog—already released via torrent, with the actual music files planned for future release in order of popularity. The group has also indicated that individual file downloads may be added if there is sufficient demand.

The group states this constitutes the “world’s first preservation archive” for music, prioritizing tracks by popularity and aiming to protect humanity’s musical heritage from potential loss due to disasters or corporate decisions.

The full release of the music torrents are expected to in the coming days, organized by popularity and quality—160 kbit/s for popular tracks and 75 kbit/s for less popular ones to conserve space.

Spotify has confirmed the incident and stated that it has identified and disabled the user accounts involved in the unlawful scraping. The company emphasized its ongoing commitment to protecting artists and rights holders, noting it has implemented new safeguards against such anti-copyright attacks, and is actively monitoring for suspicious behavior.

Anna’s Archive, known for its shadow library of books and academic papers, frames the action as a preservation effort rather than pure piracy, arguing that existing digital archives are overly focused on popular content and high-quality files. The group acknowledges that Spotify does not contain all music ever produced but considers it a strong starting point.

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December 23, 2025
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China Builds EUV Prototype Machine To Challenge Western Advanced Chipmaking Dominance

China has completed a prototype extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine in a high-security Shenzhen laboratory, marking a major milestone in its drive for semiconductor independence through a state-led 'Manhattan Project-style' initiative.

The machine, operational since early 2025 and now undergoing testing, was built by a team of former ASML(Advanced Semiconductor Materials Lithography) Holding engineers like Lin Nan, who filed key patents. They reverse-engineered the Dutch company’s technology, using parts from older ASML systems and secondary markets to circumvent Western export controls.

While the prototype successfully generates EUV light, it has not yet produced functional chips, with analysts estimating a realistic timeline for working chip production between 2030 and 2035, despite an official government target of 2028.

The project, launched as a six-year national effort under President Xi Jinping’s strategic priorities, is coordinated by Huawei and overseen by Ding Xuexiang, a close confidant of Xi and head of the Central Science and Technology Commission.

Former ASML engineers were recruited with substantial incentives, including signing bonuses of up to $700,000, and worked under aliases with false identification cards to maintain secrecy.

The prototype occupies nearly an entire factory floor and is operated within a highly isolated, secure compound where staff often sleep on-site, with strict communication restrictions and surveillance.

Despite ASML CEO Christophe Fouquet’s public statements in 2024 and 2025 that China would need "many, many years" to develop EUV capability, the existence of the prototype suggests Beijing’s timeline may be accelerating significantly.

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The breakthrough challenges long-standing U.S.-led export controls that have barred China from acquiring advanced EUV systems since 2018, with the Biden administration expanding restrictions in 2022.

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Advanced chip manufacturing machine generates extreme ultraviolet light to etch tiny circuits for AI, smartphones, and military systems—tech once monopolized by ASML

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