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The DeepSeek API uses an API format compatible with OpenAI/Anthropic. By modifying the configuration, you can use the OpenAI/Anthropic SDK or softwares compatible with the OpenAI/Anthropic API to access the DeepSeek API.
* The model names deepseek-chat and deepseek-reasoner will be deprecated on 2026/07/24. For compatibility, they correspond to the non-thinking mode and thinking mode of deepseek-v4-flash, respectively.
Invoke The Chat API
Once you have obtained an API key, you can access the DeepSeek model using the following example scripts in the OpenAI API format. This is a non-stream example, you can set the stream parameter to true to get stream response.
For examples using the Anthropic API format, please refer to Anthropic API.
curl
python
nodejs
curl https://api.deepseek.com/chat/completions \ -H “Content-Type: application/json” \ -H “Authorization: Bearer ${DEEPSEEK_API_KEY}” \ -d ‘{ “model”: “deepseek-v4-pro”, “messages”: [ {“role”: “system”, “content”: “You are a helpful assistant.“}, {“role”: “user”, “content”: “Hello!“} ], “thinking”: {“type”: “enabled”}, “reasoning_effort”: “high”, “stream”: false }’
It took just a few months of President Donald Trump’s second term for Palantir employees to question their company’s commitments to civil liberties. Last fall, Palantir seemed to become the technological backbone of Trump’s immigration enforcement machinery, providing software identifying, tracking, and helping deport immigrants on behalf of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), when current and former employees started ringing the alarm.
Around that time, two former employees reconnected by phone. Right as they picked up the call, one of them asked, “Are you tracking Palantir’s descent into fascism?”
“That was their greeting,” the other former employee says. “There’s this feeling not of ‘Oh, this is unpopular and hard,’ but, ‘This feels wrong.’”
Palantir was founded—with initial venture capital investment from the CIA—at a moment of national consensus following the September 11, 2001 attacks, when many saw fighting terrorism abroad as the most critical mission facing the US. The company, which was cofounded by tech billionaire Peter Thiel, sells software that acts as a high-powered data aggregation and analysis tool powering everything from private businesses to the US military’s targeting systems.
For the last 20 years, employees could accept the intense external criticism and awkward conversations with family and friends about working for a company named after J. R. R. Tolkien’s corrupting all-seeing orb. But a year into Trump’s second term, as Palantir deepens its relationship with an administration many workers fear is wreaking havoc at home, employees are finally raising these concerns internally, as the US’s war on immigrants, war in Iran, and even company-released manifestos has forced them to rethink the role they play in it all.
“We hire the best and brightest talent to help defend America and its allies and to build and deploy our software to help governments and businesses around the world. Palantir is no monolith of belief, nor should we be,” a Palantir spokesperson said in a statement. “We all pride ourselves on a culture of fierce internal dialogue and even disagreement over the complex areas we work on. That has been true from our founding and remains true today.”
“The broad story of Palantir as told to itself and to employees was that coming out of 9/11 we knew that there was going to be this big push for safety, and we were worried that that safety might infringe on civil liberties,” one former employee tells WIRED. “And now the threat’s coming from within. I think there’s a bit of an identity crisis and a bit of a challenge. We were supposed to be the ones who were preventing a lot of these abuses. Now we’re not preventing them. We seem to be enabling them.”
Palantir has always had a secretive reputation, forbidding employees from speaking to the press and requiring alumni to sign non-disparagement agreements. But throughout the company’s history, management has always at least appeared to be open to engagement and internal criticism, multiple employees say. Over the last year, however, much of that feedback has been met by philosophical soliloquies and redirection. “It’s never been really that people are afraid of speaking up against Karp. It’s more a question of what it would do, if anything,” one current employee tells WIRED.
While internal tensions within Palantir have grown over the last year, they reached a boiling point in January after the violent killing of Alex Pretti, a nurse who was shot and killed by federal agents during protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Minneapolis. Employees from across the company commented in a Slack thread dedicated to the news demanding more information about the company’s relationship with ICE from management and CEO Alex Karp.
“Our involvement with ice has been internally swept under the rug under Trump2 too much,” one person wrote in a Slack message WIRED reported at the time. “We need an understanding of our involvement here.”
Around this time, Palantir started wiping Slack conversations after seven days in at least one channel where most of the internal debate takes place, #palantir-in-the-news. Because the decision wasn’t formally announced before the policy rolled out, one worker who noticed the deletions asked in the channel why the company was removing “relevant internal discourse on current events.”
A member of Palantir’s cybersecurity team responded, writing that the decision was made in response to leaks.
This period led Palantir management to release an updated wiki, or a collection of blog posts explaining the ICE contract, where the company defended its work with DHS. Management wrote that the technology the company provides “is making a difference in mitigating risks while enabling targeted outcomes.”
Palantir management ran defense by holding a handful of AMA (ask me anything) forums across the company with leadership like chief technology officer Shyam Sankar and members of its privacy and civil liberties (PCL) teams.
At least one of these AMAs was organized independently of PCL leadership by two team leads, including one who worked directly on the ICE contract for a period of time. “This was very rogue,” a PCL employee who worked on the ICE contract said in a February AMA, a recording of which was obtained by WIRED. “Courtney [Bowman, head of the privacy and civil liberties team] doesn’t know that I’m spending three hours this week talking to IMPLs [Palantir terminology for its client-facing product teams], but I think this is the only real way to start going in the right direction.”
Throughout the lengthy call, employees working on a variety of Palantir’s defense projects posed hard questions. Could ICE agents delete audit logs in Palantir’s software? Could agents create harmful workflows on their own without the company’s help? What is the most malicious thing that could come out of this work?
Answering these questions, the PCL employee who worked on the ICE contract said that “a sufficiently malicious customer is, like, basically impossible to prevent at the moment” and could only be controlled through “auditing to prove what happened” and legal action after the fact if the customer breached the company’s contract.
At one point during the call, one of the employees tried to level with the group, explaining that Palantir’s work with ICE was a priority for Karp and something that likely wouldn’t change any time soon.
“Karp really wants to do this and continuously wants this,” they said. “We’re largely at the role of trying to give him suggestions and trying to redirect him, but it was largely unsuccessful and we seem to be on a very sharp path of continuing to expand this workflow.”
Around the time of these forums, Karp sat down for a prerecorded interview with Bowman, seemingly to discuss Palantir’s contracts with ICE, but refused to broach the topic directly. Instead, Karp suggested that employees interested in the work sign nondisclosure agreements before receiving more detailed information.
Then came the deadly February 28 missile strike on an Iranian elementary school on the first full day of the Trump administration and Israel’s war in Iran. The US is the only known country in the conflict to use that specific type of missile. More than 120 children were killed when a Tomahawk missile struck the school, kicking off a series of investigations that concluded that the US was responsible and that surveillance tools like Palantir’s Maven system had been used during that day’s strikes. For a company full of employees already reeling over its work with ICE, possible involvement in the death of children was a breaking point.
“I guess the root of what I’m asking is … were we involved, and are doing anything to stop a repeat if we were,” one employee asked in the Palantir news Slack channel. Some employees posed similar questions in the thread, while others criticized them for discussing what could be considered classified information in a Slack channel open to the entire company. The investigation is ongoing.
The Palantir spokesperson said the company was “proud” to support the US military “across Democratic and Republican administrations.”
In March, Karp gave an interview to CNBC claiming that AI could undermine the power of “humanities-trained—largely Democratic—voters” and increase the power of working-class male voters. While critics reacted to the piece, calling the statements concerning, so did employees internally: “Is it true that AI disruption is going to disproportionately negatively affect women and people who vote Democrat? and if it is, why are we cool with that?” one worker asked on Slack in a channel dedicated to news about Palantir.
Palantir’s leadership incensed workers yet again this week after the company posted a Saturday afternoon manifesto reducing Karp’s recent book, The Technological Republic, to 22 points. The post—which includes many of Karp’s long-standing beliefs on how Silicon Valley could better serve US national interests—goes as far as suggesting that the US should consider reinstating the draft. Critics called the manifesto fascist.
Internally, the post alarmed some workers who huddled in a Slack thread on Monday morning, questioning leadership over its decision to post it in the first place.
“I’m curious why this had to be posted. Especially on the company account. On the practical level every time stuff like that gets posted it gets harder for us to sell the software outside of the US (for sure in the current political climate), and I doubt we need this in the US?” wrote one frustrated employee. The message received more than 50 “+1” emojis.
“Wether [sic] we acknowledge it or not, this impacts us all personally,” another worker wrote on Monday. “I’ve already had multiple friends reach out and ask what the hell did we post.” This message received nearly two dozen “+1” emoji reactions.
“Yeah it turns out that short-form summaries of the book’s long-form ideas are easy to misrepresent. It’s like we taped a ‘kick me’ sign on our own backs,” a third worker wrote. “I hope no one who decided to put this out is surprised that we are, in fact, getting kicked.”
These conversations involving shame and uncertainty from workers have seemingly popped up in internal channels whenever Palantir has been in the news over the last year. “I think the only thing not different is a lot of folks are still incredibly wary about leaks and talking to the press,” one current employee tells WIRED, describing how the internal company culture has evolved over the last year.
All of this dissent doesn’t seem to bother Karp, who recently told workers that the company is “behind the curve internally” when it comes to popularity. Here, he’s been consistent; in March 2024 Karp told a CNBC reporter that “if you have a position that does not cost you ever to lose an employee, it’s not a position.”
But for employees, the culture shift feels intentional. “I don’t want to assert that I have knowledge of what’s going on in their internal mind,” one former worker tells WIRED. “But maybe it’s gotten to a place where encouraging independent thought and questioning leads to some bad conclusions.”
Secure your dependencies with us
Socket proactively blocks malicious open source packages in your code.
Socket researchers discovered that the Bitwarden CLI was compromised as part of the ongoing Checkmarx supply chain campaign. The open source password manager serves more than 10 million users and over 50,000 businesses, and ranks among among the top three password managers by enterprise adoption.
The affected package version appears to be @bitwarden/cli2026.4.0, and the malicious code was published in bw1.js, a file included in the package contents. The attack appears to have leveraged a compromised GitHub Action in Bitwarden’s CI/CD pipeline, consistent with the pattern seen across other affected repositories in this campaign.
What we know so far:
Bitwarden CLI builds were affected
The compromise follows the same GitHub Actions supply chain vector identified in the broader Checkmarx campaign
This is an ongoing investigation. Socket’s security research team is conducting a full technical analysis and will publish detailed findings, including affected versions, indicators of compromise, and remediation guidance.
If you use Bitwarden CLI, we recommend reviewing your CI logs and rotating any secrets that may have been exposed to the compromised workflow. At this time, the compromise only involves only the npm package for the CLI. Bitwarden’s Chrome extension, MCP server, and other legitimate distributions have not been affected yet.
Technical analysis#
The malicious payload was in a file named bw1.js , which shares core infrastructure with the Checkmarx mcpAddon.js we analyzed yesterday:
Same C2 endpoint: Uses identical audit.checkmarx[.]cx/v1/telemetry endpoint, obfuscated via __decodeScrambled with seed 0x3039. Exfiltration also occurs through GitHub API (commit-based) and npm registry (token theft/republishing)
Embedded payloads: Same gzip+base64 structure containing a Python memory-scraping script targeting GitHub Actions Runner.Worker, a setup.mjs loader for republished npm packages, a GitHub Actions workflow YAML, hardcoded RSA public keys, and an ideological manifesto string
Credential harvesting: GitHub tokens via Runner.Worker memory scraping and environment variables, AWS credentials via ~/.aws/ files and environment, Azure tokens via azd, GCP credentials via gcloud config config-helper, npm configuration files (.npmrc), SSH keys, environment variables, and Claude/MCP configuration files
Github Exfiltration: Public repositories created under victim accounts using Dune-themed naming ({word}-{word}-{3digits}), with encrypted results committed and tokens embedded in commit messages using the marker LongLiveTheResistanceAgainstMachines
Supply chain propagation: npm token theft to identify writable packages and republish with injected preinstall hooks, GitHub Actions workflow injection to capture repository secrets
Russian locale kill switch: Exits silently if system locale begins with “ru”, checking Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().locale and environment variables LC_ALL, LC_MESSAGES, LANGUAGE, and LANG
Runtime: Bun v1.3.13 interpreter downloaded from GitHub releases
This payload (bw1.js)also includes several indicators not documented in the Checkmarx incident:
Lock file: Hardcoded path /tmp/tmp.987654321.lock prevents multiple instances from running simultaneously
Shell profile persistence: Injects payload into ~/.bashrc and ~/.zshrc
Explicit branding: Repository description Shai-Hulud: The Third Coming replaces the deceptive “Checkmarx Configuration Storage”, and debug strings include “Would be executing butlerian jihad!”
The shared tooling strongly suggests a connection to the same malware ecosystem, but the operational signatures differ in ways that complicate attribution. The Checkmarx attack was claimed by TeamPCP via the @pcpcats social media account after discovery, and the malware itself attempted to blend in with legitimate-looking descriptions. This payload takes a different approach: the ideological branding is embedded directly in the malware, from the Shai-Hulud repository names to the “Butlerian Jihad” manifesto payload to commit messages proclaiming resistance against machines. This suggests either a different operator using shared infrastructure, a splinter group with stronger ideological motivations, or an evolution in the campaign’s public posture.
Recommendations#
Organizations that installed the malicious Bitwarden npm package should treat this incident as a credential exposure and CI/CD compromise event.
Immediately remove the affected package from developer systems and build environments. Rotate any credentials that may have been exposed to those environments, including GitHub tokens, npm tokens, cloud credentials, SSH keys, and CI/CD secrets. Review GitHub for unauthorized repository creation, unexpected workflow files under .github/workflows/, suspicious workflow runs, artifact downloads, and public repositories matching the observed Dune-themed staging pattern ({word}-{word}-{3digits}). Check for the following keywords in newly published repositories if you believe you may be impacted:
atreides
cogitor
fedaykin
fremen
futar
gesserit
ghola
harkonnen
heighliner
kanly
kralizec
lasgun
laza
melange
mentat
navigator
ornithopter
phibian
powindah
prana
prescient
sandworm
sardaukar
sayyadina
sietch
siridar
slig
stillsuit
thumper
tleilaxu
Audit npm for unauthorized publishes, version changes, or newly added install hooks. In cloud environments, review access logs for unusual secret access, token use, and newly issued credentials.
On endpoints and runners, hunt for outbound connections to the observed exfiltration infrastructure (audit[.]checkmarx[.]cx), execution of Bun where it is not normally used, access to files such as .npmrc, .git-credentials, .env, cloud credential stores, gcloud, az, or azd. Check for the lock file /tmp/tmp.987654321.lock and shell profile modifications in ~/.bashrc and ~/.zshrc. For GitHub Actions, review whether any unapproved workflows were created on transient branches and whether artifacts such as format-results.txt were generated or downloaded.
As a longer-term control, reduce the blast radius of future supply chain incidents by locking down token scopes, requiring short-lived credentials where possible, restricting who can create or publish packages, hardening GitHub Actions permissions, disabling unnecessary artifact access, and monitoring for new public repositories or workflow changes created outside normal release processes.
IOCs#
Malicious Package
@bitwarden/cli2026.4.0
Network Indicators
94[.]154[.]172[.]43
https://audit.checkmarx[.]cx/v1/telemetry
File System Indicators (Victim Package Compromise)
/tmp/tmp.987654321.lock
/tmp/_tmp_<Unix Epoch Timestamp>/
package-updated.tgz
Over the past month, we’ve been looking into reports that Claude’s responses have worsened for some users. We’ve traced these reports to three separate changes that affected Claude Code, the Claude Agent SDK, and Claude Cowork. The API was not impacted.
All three issues have now been resolved as of April 20 (v2.1.116).
In this post, we explain what we found, what we fixed, and what we’ll do differently to ensure similar issues are much less likely to happen again.
We take reports about degradation very seriously. We never intentionally degrade our models, and we were able to immediately confirm that our API and inference layer were unaffected.
After investigation, we identified three different issues:
On March 4, we changed Claude Code’s default reasoning effort from high to medium to reduce the very long latency—enough to make the UI appear frozen—some users were seeing in high mode. This was the wrong tradeoff. We reverted this change on April 7 after users told us they’d prefer to default to higher intelligence and opt into lower effort for simple tasks. This impacted Sonnet 4.6 and Opus 4.6.
On March 26, we shipped a change to clear Claude’s older thinking from sessions that had been idle for over an hour, to reduce latency when users resumed those sessions. A bug caused this to keep happening every turn for the rest of the session instead of just once, which made Claude seem forgetful and repetitive. We fixed it on April 10. This affected Sonnet 4.6 and Opus 4.6.
On April 16, we added a system prompt instruction to reduce verbosity. In combination with other prompt changes, it hurt coding quality and was reverted on April 20. This impacted Sonnet 4.6, Opus 4.6, and Opus 4.7.
Because each change affected a different slice of traffic on a different schedule, the aggregate effect looked like broad, inconsistent degradation. While we began investigating reports in early March, they were challenging to distinguish from normal variation in user feedback at first, and neither our internal usage nor evals initially reproduced the issues identified.
This isn’t the experience users should expect from Claude Code. As of April 23, we’re resetting usage limits for all subscribers.
A change to Claude Code’s default reasoning effort
When we released Opus 4.6 in Claude Code in February, we set the default reasoning effort to high.
Soon after, we received user feedback that Claude Opus 4.6 in high effort mode would occasionally think for too long, causing the UI to appear frozen and leading to disproportionate latency and token usage for those users.
In general, the longer the model thinks, the better the output. Effort levels are how Claude Code lets users set that tradeoff—more thinking versus lower latency and fewer usage limit hits. As we calibrate effort levels for our models, we take this tradeoff into account in order to pick points along the test-time-compute curve that give people the best range of options. In the product layer, we then choose which point along this curve we set as our default, and that is the value we send to the Messages API as the effort parameter; we then make the other options available via /effort.
In our internal evals and testing, medium effort achieved slightly lower intelligence with significantly less latency for the majority of tasks. It also didn’t suffer from the same issues with occasional very long tail latencies for thinking, and it helped maximize users’ usage limits. As a result, we rolled out a change making medium the default effort, and explained the rationale via in-product dialog.
Soon after rolling out, users began reporting that Claude Code felt less intelligent. We shipped a number of design iterations to make the current effort setting clearer in order to alert people they could change the default (notices on startup, an inline effort selector, and bringing back ultrathink), but most users retained the medium effort default.
After hearing feedback from more customers, we reversed this decision on April 7. All users now default to xhigh effort for Opus 4.7, and high effort for all other models.
A caching optimization that dropped prior reasoning
When Claude reasons through a task, that reasoning is normally kept in the conversation history so that on every subsequent turn, Claude can see why it made the edits and tool calls it did.
On March 26, we shipped what was meant to be an efficiency improvement to this feature. We use prompt caching to make back-to-back API calls cheaper and faster for users. Claude writes the input tokens to the cache when it makes an API request, then after a period of inactivity the prompt is evicted from cache, making room for other prompts. Cache utilization is something we manage carefully (more on our approach).
The design should have been simple: if a session has been idle for more than an hour, we could reduce users’ cost of resuming that session by clearing old thinking sections. Since the request would be a cache miss anyway, we could prune unnecessary messages from the request to reduce the number of uncached tokens sent to the API. We’d then resume sending full reasoning history. To do this we used the clear_thinking_20251015 API header along with keep:1.
The implementation had a bug. Instead of clearing thinking history once, it cleared it on every turn for the rest of the session. After a session crossed the idle threshold once, each request for the rest of that process told the API to keep only the most recent block of reasoning and discard everything before it. This compounded: if you sent a follow-up message while Claude was in the middle of a tool use, that started a new turn under the broken flag, so even the reasoning from the current turn was dropped. Claude would continue executing, but increasingly without memory of why it had chosen to do what it was doing. This surfaced as the forgetfulness, repetition, and odd tool choices people reported.
Because this would continuously drop thinking blocks from subsequent requests, those requests also resulted in cache misses. We believe this is what drove the separate reports of usage limits draining faster than expected.
Two unrelated experiments made it challenging for us to reproduce the issue at first: an internal-only server-side experiment related to message queuing; and an orthogonal change in how we display thinking suppressed this bug in most CLI sessions, so we didn’t catch it even when testing external builds.
This bug was at the intersection of Claude Code’s context management, the Anthropic API, and extended thinking. The changes it introduced made it past multiple human and automated code reviews, as well as unit tests, end-to-end tests, automated verification, and dogfooding. Combined with this only happening in a corner case (stale sessions) and the difficulty of reproducing the issue, it took us over a week to discover and confirm the root cause.
As part of the investigation, we back-tested Code Review against the offending pull requests using Opus 4.7. When provided the code repositories necessary to gather complete context, Opus 4.7 found the bug, while Opus 4.6 didn’t. To prevent this from happening again, we are now landing support for additional repositories as context for code reviews.
We fixed this bug on April 10 in v2.1.101.
A system prompt change to reduce verbosity
Our latest model, Claude Opus 4.7, has a notable behavioral quirk relative to its predecessor: as we wrote about at launch, it tends to be quite verbose. This makes it smarter on hard problems, but it also produces more output tokens.
A few weeks before we released Opus 4.7, we started tuning Claude Code in preparation. Each model behaves slightly differently, and we spend time before each release optimizing the harness and product for it.
We have a number of tools to reduce verbosity: model training, prompting, and improving thinking UX in the product. Ultimately we used all of these, but one addition to the system prompt caused an outsized effect on intelligence in Claude Code:
“Length limits: keep text between tool calls to ≤25 words. Keep final responses to ≤100 words unless the task requires more detail.”
After multiple weeks of internal testing and no regressions in the set of evaluations we ran, we felt confident about the change and shipped it alongside Opus 4.7 on April 16.
As part of this investigation, we ran more ablations (removing lines from the system prompt to understand the impact of each line) using a broader set of evaluations. One of these evaluations showed a 3% drop for both Opus 4.6 and 4.7. We immediately reverted the prompt as part of the April 20 release.
Going forward
We are going to do several things differently to avoid these issues: we’ll ensure that a larger share of internal staff use the exact public build of Claude Code (as opposed to the version we use to test new features); and we’ll make improvements to our Code Review tool that we use internally, and ship this improved version to customers.
We’re also adding tighter controls on system prompt changes. We will run a broad suite of per-model evals for every system prompt change to Claude Code, continuing ablations to understand the impact of each line, and we have built new tooling to make prompt changes easier to review and audit. We’ve additionally added guidance to our CLAUDE.md to ensure model-specific changes are gated to the specific model they’re targeting. For any change that could trade off against intelligence, we’ll add soak periods, a broader eval suite, and gradual rollouts so we catch issues earlier.
We recently created @ClaudeDevs on X to give us the room to explain product decisions and the reasoning behind them in depth. We’ll share the same updates in centralized threads on GitHub.
Finally, we’d like to thank our users: the people who used the /feedback command to share their issues with us (or who posted specific, reproducible examples online) are the ones who ultimately allowed us to identify and fix these problems. Today we are resetting usage limits for all subscribers.
We’re immensely grateful for your feedback and for your patience.
In Brief
Posted:
11:08 AM PDT · April 23, 2026
Meta is planning to cut 10% of its workforce, amounting to 8,000 employees, according to a report from Bloomberg. Meta also will not hire for 6,000 roles that are currently open.
According to an internal memo sent to employees Thursday and viewed by Bloomberg, Meta told staff that the cuts will begin on May 20. Reuters had earlier reported on Meta’s plans for sweeping layoffs.
TechCrunch has reached out to Meta for comment.
“We’re doing this as part of our continued effort to run the company more efficiently and to allow us to offset the other investments we’re making,” chief people office Janelle Gale told employees, according to the memo. “This is not an easy tradeoff and it will mean letting go of people who have made meaningful contributions to Meta during their time here.”
Meta spent tens of billions on its metaverse efforts, which largely failed. The company has also had to make major investments in its AI efforts in order to keep up with competitors in the space — earlier this month, it debuted a completely overhauled AI product called Muse Spark.
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“The United States was a reasonably happy country for a long time,” the University of Chicago economist Sam Peltzman wrote in a 2026 paper. “It is not happy now.”
Crunching data from the General Social Survey, Peltzman documented “a sudden, sharp and historically unprecedented decline in self-reported happiness in the US population” after COVID that “mainly persists” through 2024. He called it a “regime change” in national sentiment. After 50 years of mostly steady levels of self-reported well-being, American happiness plunged. And it’s hardly bounced back at all.
Peltzman’s analysis is not a lonely voice; there is a veritable chorus of gloomy sentiment. This week, the Federal Reserve’s measure of US worker satisfaction fell to its lowest level since the survey began in 2014. One week prior, consumer sentiment had fallen to the lowest level ever recorded in the 70-year history of the University of Michigan economic survey. Once again, the index plunged around 2020 and, like a hiker on the far side of a mountain, continues down step by step. Americans are telling pollsters that they are more depressed about this economy than they were during the depths of the Great Recession or the painful stagflationary years of the 1970s.
Finally, the U.S. has also fallen to its lowest ranking ever in the World Happiness Report, largely due to the astonishingly swift decline in well-being among young people in that international survey.
Matt Clancy@mattsclancy
Circa 2024/2025, American self-reported well-being remains near all-time lows in both the Gallup World Happiness data and the (much longer running) GSS.
1:02 PM · Apr 10, 2026 · 11.6K Views
2 Replies · 5 Reposts · 36 Likes
If you are looking for a sympathetic ear to explain this phenomenon, certainly do not seek counsel from your local economist. The American blues seem awfully curious to those who view the world through the keyhole of employment or income statistics. The unemployment rate has been below 5 percent for practically the entire decade, which is basically as good as you can ask for. For this entire decade, the US economy has significantly outgrown the Eurozone and other rich countries, such as Japan and the UK. Americans are rich and getting richer, by most conventional measures. More Americans are breaking into the upper middle class, and workers at the bottom of the income distribution have seen their wages grow faster than those at the top in the last few years.
So, those who privilege economic statistics over self-reports might be tempted to summarize the situation this way: America’s resilient economy is a fact, while Americans’ sad-sack survey results are mere irrational feelings. There is something to this; the gap between so-called “hard data” (e.g., the unemployment rate) and “soft data” (e.g., a survey) is certainly wide and widening. But a feeling is an important kind of fact. Feelings don’t just shape consumer behavior. They shape political attitudes; and attitudes influence voting; and voting determines policies; and policies shape the economy. To understand the future of the US economy and the United States writ large, one cannot afford a haughty indifference toward sentiment.
And on the sentiment front, what we’ve got are four survey results—four facts, you might even say, of American lugubriousness—all of which point to one unmistakable conclusoin. This decade has been the very opposite of “roaring.” We are mired instead in the Tragic Twenties.
One of the more remarkable discoveries in Peltzman’s paper is that the decline in self-reported well-being since 2020 has not been concentrated among young people, poor people, or unmarried people—three of the groups typically afflicted by higher levels of anxiety and sadness. Instead, the decline in happiness has been an across-the-board 10- to 15-point decimation experienced by practically every demographic. (In the graphs below, BLUE refers to happiness levels before 2020; PINK is happiness levels post-2020; and BLACK is the decline, which is remarkably uniform across groups.)
Something significant has bludgeoned Americans’ well-being in the last six years without discriminating much by age, ideology, education, or gender. What is it?
The culprit has to fit the crime. Most importantly, it has to fit the timing of the crime. What we’re looking for is something that happened around 2020 (uh, seems obvious) and then didn’t recover (ah, that’s the hard part). This timing rules out several otherwise plausible suspects.
It’s probably not about cultural shifts, such as the decline of religion. Cultural conservatives might try to explain the Tragic Twenties by citing the rise of secular individualism among American liberals and pointing to the fact that religion seems to be a tonic for unhappiness. But the rise of religious non-affiliation in America has been a steady 30-year trend, whereas this falloff in well-being started in 2020, when secularism reached its recent peak. So, that explanation won’t do.
It’s probably not about cultural shifts, such as the decline of religion. Cultural conservatives might try to explain the Tragic Twenties by citing the rise of secular individualism among American liberals and pointing to the fact that religion seems to be a tonic for unhappiness. But the rise of religious non-affiliation in America has been a steady 30-year trend, whereas this falloff in well-being started in 2020, when secularism reached its recent peak. So, that explanation won’t do.
It’s probably not about old-fashioned wage inequality. Someone on the left might be inclined to argue that American misery is the reasonable and automatic societal reaction to severe class inequality. But low-income wage growth has been unusually strong since the pandemic, as the economist Arin Dube has taken pains to point out. Median household incomes are higher now than they were 10 years ago. What’s more, Peltzman’s analysis finds that some of the largest declines in happiness seem concentrated among well-to-do demographics, like older people, white people, and college graduates. So, here’s another suspect that doesn’t fit the crime.
It’s probably not about old-fashioned wage inequality. Someone on the left might be inclined to argue that American misery is the reasonable and automatic societal reaction to severe class inequality. But low-income wage growth has been unusually strong since the pandemic, as the economist Arin Dube has taken pains to point out. Median household incomes are higher now than they were 10 years ago. What’s more, Peltzman’s analysis finds that some of the largest declines in happiness seem concentrated among well-to-do demographics, like older people, white people, and college graduates. So, here’s another suspect that doesn’t fit the crime.
It’s probably not just about phones and social media. When the subject is American anxiety and unhappiness, the most obvious suspect is smartphones, social media, and the surging negativity of the American news cycle. As I explained in a long essay last month, I am quite persuaded by the argument that phones and social media are associated with—and, probably, actively causing—a decline in well-being among young people in the U.S. But the rising misery of young people—often rightly associated with rising phone and social media use—has been going on for about 15 years. The more sudden collapse in general wellness that we see in the GSS and University of Michigan data points to an emotional break that happened around 2020. So, even if phones aren’t blameless here (I’ll return to them in a moment), they don’t make sense as the primary culprit.
It’s probably not just about phones and social media. When the subject is American anxiety and unhappiness, the most obvious suspect is smartphones, social media, and the surging negativity of the American news cycle. As I explained in a long essay last month, I am quite persuaded by the argument that phones and social media are associated with—and, probably, actively causing—a decline in well-being among young people in the U.S. But the rising misery of young people—often rightly associated with rising phone and social media use—has been going on for about 15 years. The more sudden collapse in general wellness that we see in the GSS and University of Michigan data points to an emotional break that happened around 2020. So, even if phones aren’t blameless here (I’ll return to them in a moment), they don’t make sense as the primary culprit.
If neither cultural decadence, nor material inequality, nor phones and social media seem to fit the shape of this particular phenomenon, we have to keep looking for what broke our brains in the 2020s. The simplest explanation I can offer is this: As a cultural-political force, the 2020 pandemic never ended.
One cannot even pretend to explain the happiness crash of 2020 without starting with the crisis that arrived in 2020 and never quite departed. The COVID pandemic unleashed more than a coronavirus upon the planet. The biological antagonist of the disease gave way to a cavalcade of economic disasters, from supply chain disruptions, to global inflation, to surging interest rates. We are still are living in the midst of an aftershock.
While the official rate of annual inflation has gone up, then down, and then up, again, the typical family does not experience price changes as a 12-month average with monthly updates. What they feel at the grocery store, or the restaurant, or the online checkout page, is something more like holy shit, this cost what?! And that holy shit moment is best understood as the accumulation of years of above-average inflation.
Think of it this way: Consumer prices, which had increased by 25 percent between the summer of 2007 and the summer of 2020, surged by the same amount between the summers of 2020 and 2025. In housing, the 50 percent increase in the Case-Shiller US national home price index between the summers of 2020 and 2025 was equal to the 50 percent increase in home prices between 2004 and 2020. In both cases, it is fair to say that Americans in the 21st century have experienced roughly triple the typical rate of inflation in the 2020s compared to what they’d grown accustomed to. Everything that people buy feels like it is constantly slipping out of the zone of affordability, and that is absolutely maddening to many people, no matter what the economic statistics suggest they should feel.
The economics writer Matt Darling has traced the relationship between actual consumer sentiment and “predicted” sentiment, based on unemployment, inflation, and interest rates. Around 2020, the relationship broke down and consumer sentiment nose-dived into what Kyla Scanlon famously dubbed a “vibecession.” In the graph below, the plunging dark purple line shows actual consumer sentiment while the light dotted line shows were consumer sentiment “should” be.
It is tempting to think: Well, this just shows how terrible inflation is for the poorest Americans. But the most interesting and confounding piece of Darling’s analysis is that it’s actually the richest third of households whose consumer sentiment has plunged most significantly relative to where we would expect it to be. Darling’s explanation is clever but depressing: Full employment, especially in an era of elevated inflation, has increased the cost of everything that involves other people, and it’s created a nation of grumps. Here’s Darling:
I think part of what happened is that many middle- and upper-income households were used to being able to afford low-wage labor on demand - for childcare, for food service, for home health care. Middle- and upper-income households found this frustrating and assumed it was part of the broad story throughout the economy; not realizing that much of this frustration was driven by low-wage workers finally earning a little more bargaining power.
I think part of what happened is that many middle- and upper-income households were used to being able to afford low-wage labor on demand - for childcare, for food service, for home health care. Middle- and upper-income households found this frustrating and assumed it was part of the broad story throughout the economy; not realizing that much of this frustration was driven by low-wage workers finally earning a little more bargaining power.
Putting it all together: In the last 40 years, Americans have come to expect and prize affordability without even having to think about it. But in the last five years, prices for all sorts of things, including housing, have increased about three times faster than the rate Americans are used to; meanwhile, full employment has put upward pressure on the cost of services. The US public has responded by not only screaming at pollsters about their misery but also by rushing to the polls to vote out every incumbent who failed to do something about the “affordability” crisis of the 2020s. And Americans are not alone: The year 2024 was a bloodbath for incumbent parties around the world, as fury about high prices went as global as the pandemic itself.
Which raises a good question: If it’s been a Tragic Twenties for the United States, what about the rest of the world?
According to the latest World Happiness Report, well-being has actually increased in the last few years in many countries, including China, India, and Vietnam. But well-being has fallen in much of the west, particularly in English-speaking nations, such as the U.S., Canada, the UK, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.1 As John Helliwell, an economics professor at the University of British Columbia and a co-author of the World Happiness Report, told me: “If you’re looking for something that’s special about the countries where youth unhappiness is rising, they’re mostly Western developed countries, and for the most part, they are countries that speak English.”
Change in Happiness Score: 2012 – 2025
There are several reasons why Anglophone countries might have larger declines in well-being in the last decade. Led by the U.S., these countries share several or all of the following features: (1) a culture of individualism that often correlates with less time spent around other people; (2) a high degree of diagnostic inflation, meaning expanded psychiatric guidelines for anxiety, ADHD, and other mental health disorders, which mechanically increases diagnosed anxiety and raises awareness about negative mental health; and (3) high levels of negativity in the news ecosystem and on social media.
The graph above shows the decline in happiness among Anglophone and other rich countries since 2012. But what happens when you narrow the time period to the subject of this essay—the change in happiness after in the 2020s? You get this:
Now that is interesting. In Portugal, Italy, and Spain, happiness increased in the 2020s. What do these countries have in common? They had some of the lowest average inflation rates throughout the 2020s in the west, while Germany and the UK had some of the worst inflation in central and western Europe.
I think this interlude strengthens two arguments: first, that there is something uniquely problematic about mental health in the Anglosphere; and second, that higher rates of inflation are a major contributor to the Tragic Twenties phenomenon, both in the U.S. and throughout the west.
The word pandemic comes from the Greek pan, meaning all, and demos, meaning people. But while the etymology hints at wholeness, the effect of pandemics has historically been to break apart social trust. In one recent analysis of the Spanish Flu, researchers found that the disease had “permanent consequences on individual behavior in terms of lower social trust.” So, it is perhaps not entirely surprising that, in his paper, the economist Peltzman found that confidence has fallen throughout the 2020s for just about every institution, including the federal government, the military, major companies, education, and organized religion. Other studies have found that trust has plummeted for the CDC, higher education, science, and medicine.
It’s not just that Americans have lost trust in august, faraway institutions. Their faith in one another has suffered even more dramatic declines. For decades, the General Social Survey has asked Americans the same basic question: “Do you think most people would try to take advantage of you if they got a chance, or would they try to be fair?” In the 1970s and 1980s, Americans overwhelmingly agreed that other people are more or less trustworthy. That confidence in strangers has plummeted since 2020, according to Peltzman. The share of respondents who say other people are “fair” has declined by even more than overall happiness.
Just as Americans’ trust in institutions and strangers has declined, at least one measure of ecstatic individualism has ascended in its place. Americans now spend an unprecedented amount of time by themselves, along with an abnormal amount of time inside our homes. This means that their engagement with other people is disproportionately mediated, not by real-life experiences in the outside world, but rather by algorithmic media on their screens. As the NYU psychologist Jay Van Bavel has pointed out, online conversations prize and reward negativity and out-group animosity, which convert people who might otherwise enjoy (or tolerate) one another’s presence in a bar or office into antagonists.
It’s not that I think the decline of institutional trust and the rise of solitary individualism ought to produce unhappiness for all who experience it. But trust, companionship, and community are shock absorbers in times of personal and national crisis. And the final thing that must be said about the 2020s is that it really has been one damn crisis after another.
In his 2023 column “The Economy Is Great. Why Are Americans in Such a Rotten Mood?” the Wall Street Journal columnist Greg Ip wrote that Americans’ economic pessimism was akin to the biological phenomenon of “referred pain.” He wrote:
Just as one part of your body can hurt because of injury to another, pessimism about the economy may reflect dissatisfaction with the country as a whole. Lately, there has been a lot to be dissatisfied about: intensifying political and cultural conflict and intolerance, the pandemic, the border, mass shootings, crime, war in Ukraine and now the war in the Middle East.
Just as one part of your body can hurt because of injury to another, pessimism about the economy may reflect dissatisfaction with the country as a whole. Lately, there has been a lot to be dissatisfied about: intensifying political and cultural conflict and intolerance, the pandemic, the border, mass shootings, crime, war in Ukraine and now the war in the Middle East.
Indeed, the decade has pretty much been a dumpster fire, hasn’t it? A once-in-a-century pandemic yielded to a once-in-a-generation inflation crisis. Wars in Ukraine, Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, and the Persian Gulf followed one another in a steady martial drumbeat. Existential fears of climate change gave way to existential fears of artificial intelligence. And all of this took place during a period when Donald Trump hovered over the political realm like some kind of unearthly specter—representing the imminence of fascism to roughly half the country while, to the other half or so, signifying a secular savior come to save traditional values from the demonic scourge of leftism. That is all quite a lot.
In this decade of permacrisis, the news has become exceptionally dire, and we have data to show just how much. A 2024 Brookings analysis of news sentiment found that “news tone has been more negative than the fundamentals would predict during 2018 to 2020 and even more negative than predicted in 2021 to 2023.” Today’s news is more surprisingly negative than at any period of news on record.
The historic pessimism of the news cycle is both a reflection of the permacrisis decade and a driver of the impression that we are constantly on the verge of crisis. As a global health emergency, the COVID pandemic may have ended, but the state of crisis that Americans feel in their day-to-day lives when they make contact with the news has not gone away. The infection rate went down, but the feeling that the world is constantly pulsing with emergency didn’t go anywhere.
And so, this is as close as I can get to a unified theory of the Tragic Twenties. American sadness this decade has been forged by the fact of, and the feeling of, a permanent unrelenting economic crisis, amplified by a uniquely negative news and media environment, and exacerbated by the rise of solitude and the declining centrality of trusted institutions. Inflation has made today’s life harder to afford, while the ambient awareness of other people’s triumphs on social media had made tomorrow’s success feel harder to achieve. The ongoing collapse of confidence in the establishment has made Americans feel unusually adrift and dissatisfied with institutions outside of their control, while the chosen self-isolation of modern life has demolished communal trust, as we increasingly experience other people’s minds through the toxic surreality of our screens rather than through the embodied reality of strangers who are, for the most part, just as nice as we are.
1
Is there really something special about English-speaking that’s correlated with declines in well-being in the last few years? Helliwell suggested a clever test of the theory: Look at Quebec, where more than 80 percent of the population speaks French. In neighboring Ontario, by contrast, less than 4 percent of the population speaks French. So, are the Quebecois somewhat inoculated from the epidemic of Anglophone unhappiness? Strange as it seems, the answer seems to be yes: “In Gallup data used for the World Happiness Report, life satisfaction for people under 30 in Quebec fell half as much as it did for people in the rest of Canada, Helliwell told me. In a separate analysis of Canada’s General Social Survey, which asks respondents about their preferred language, researchers at the University of British Columbia and the University of Alberta found that young people who speak French at home saw a smaller decline in happiness than those who speak English at home.”
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In Brief
Posted:
12:34 PM PDT · April 22, 2026
The French government agency that handles the issuing and management of citizens’ identity documents, including national IDs, passports, and immigration documents, confirmed Wednesday that it experienced a data breach.
In an announcement, the Agence Nationale des Titres Sécurisés (ANTS) said the data stolen in the breach could include full names, dates and places of birth, mailing and email addresses, and phone numbers on an undisclosed number of citizens. ANTS said the investigation to determine how the breach happened and its impact is ongoing, and people whose data was affected are being notified.
ANTS, which said it detected the attack on April 15, did not specify how many people were affected by the breach. But some reporting suggests millions may have had some of their personal information stolen.
According to Bleeping Computer, a hacker has advertised the stolen data on a hacking forum, claiming to have a database with 19 million records. The hacker’s forum post referenced the same kind of stolen information as mentioned in ANTS’ announcement and was published before ANTS publicly disclosed the breach on April 20.
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France Titres, the government agency in France for issuing and managing administrative documents has disclosed a data breach after a threat actor claimed the attack and stealing citizen data.
Also known as Agence nationale des titres sécurisés (ANTS), the administrative body operates under the French Ministry of the Interior, serving as the managing authority for official identity and registration documents in France. This includes driver’s licenses, national ID cards, passports, and immigration documents.
According to an announcement the agency published yesterday, the attack occurred last week, and while the investigation is still ongoing, several data types for an undisclosed number of individuals may have been exposed.
“On Wednesday, April 15, 2026, the National Agency for Secure Documents (ANTS) detected a security incident that may involve the disclosure of data from individual and professional accounts on the ants.gouv.fr portal,” reads ANTS’s announcement.
The types of data that may have been exposed are:
Login ID
Full name
Email address
Date of birth
Unique account identifier
Postal address (for some)
Place of birth (for some)
Phone number (for some)
ANTS stated that it is currently in the process of notifying those identified as impacted.
The agency noted that the exposed information does not allow unauthorized access to its electronic portals. However, the same data can be used in phishing and social engineering attacks.
“No action is required from users. However, they are advised to remain highly vigilant regarding any suspicious or unusual messages they may receive (SMS, phone calls, emails, etc.) that appear to come from ANTS,” the agency warned.
ANTS has notified the data protection authority (CNIL), the Paris Public Prosecutor, and has also involved the national cybersecurity agency (ANSSI) in the response effort. The agency warned that the sale or dissemination of the data is illegal.
19 million records claimed stolen
On April 16, a threat actor using the moniker ‘breach3d’ claimed the attack on hacker forums claimed the attack on ANTS, alleging to be holding up to 19 million records.
The threat actor claims that the stolen data contains full names, contact details, birth data, home addresses, account metadata, and gender and civil status.
The data has been offered for sale for an undisclosed amount, so it has not been broadly leaked yet.
ANTS saus that user do not need to take any action but recommends exercising “extreme caution” about suspicious or unusual communication over SMS, voice, and emails appearing to come from the agency.
BleepingComputer has contacted ANTS to ask about the threat actor’s allegations, but we have not received a response as of publishing.
Update 4/24 - ANTS published an update on the incident where the agency confirmed that 11.7 million accounts were impacted.
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