The Boston Red Sox’s streak of bad luck continued Friday after third baseman Alex Bregman exited Game 1 of a doubleheader against the Baltimore Orioles early with an apparent injury.
Bregman hit a single in the fifth inning, rounding first base before calling for the trainer. He left the game with “right quad tightness,” per the team, which did not provide any additional information about the injury.
Alex Bregman exits the game after awkwardly rounding first on this play ⬇️
Infielder Abraham Toro replaced Bregman for the rest of the game. Prior to the injury, Bregman had one hit and one walk in two at-bats.
Bregman is having a career year so far. The veteran has 11 home runs, with a batting average of .297 and a .935 OPS — the sixth highest in the league.
It’s unclear whether Bregman’s injury is a serious one, as manager Alex Cora said after the game “we’ll see tomorrow” what the severity is. But the issue taps into an ongoing saga between Bregman and Red Sox designated hitter Rafael Devers. When the Red Sox signed Bregman as a free agent, Devers was demoted from his third base position and relegated to DH.
Now, it’s possible Devers will head back to the infield if Bregman has to miss time. Bregman, meanwhile, would be considered a top free agent if he chooses to opt out during the offseason — but a major injury could change things.
In the end, losing Bregman didn’t matter much to the Red Sox on Friday: Boston flattened the Orioles, 19-5, icing the victory with a 13-run eighth inning. Devers had a great day, hitting a three-run homer in the sixth inning and a grand slam in the eighth.
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You’ve been hard at work all week, as have I—as Lifehacker’s tech deals writer, I’ve been hunting down the best deals on TVs, speakers, laptops, and other tech all week. Now sit back, relax, and enjoy this week’s highlights, all of which I’ve vetted using my favorite price tracking tools.
This week was the start of retailers launching their Memorial Day sales. You can find deals on Pixel phones, Sonos speakers, Sleep Number beds, OLED TVs, smart watches, and much more.
Portable Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker
Roam 2
$134.00 at Amazon
$179.00 Save $45.00
$134.00 at Amazon
$179.00 Save $45.00
Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds (Refurbished)
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 (refurbished)
$169.99 at Stack Social
$249.99 Save $80.00
$169.99 at Stack Social
$249.99 Save $80.00
Tozo OpenEarRing
$29.99 at Amazon
$59.99 Save $30.00
$29.99 at Amazon
$59.99 Save $30.00
Google Pixel 9 128GB Unlocked 6.9″ OLED Smartphone (Obsidian)
$599.00 at Amazon
$799.00 Save $200.00
$599.00 at Amazon
$799.00 Save $200.00
Google Pixel Watch 2
$149.99 at Amazon
$249.99 Save $100.00
$149.99 at Amazon
$249.99 Save $100.00
BOGO with Free TV – KD-50X77L
BRAVIA 8 II 55” Class QD-OLED 4K HDR Google TV (2025)
$3,499.99 at Sony
$3,499.99 at Sony
i8 Sleep Number mattress
$3,289.30 at Sleep Number
$4,699.00 Save $1,409.70
$3,289.30 at Sleep Number
$4,699.00 Save $1,409.70
16GB Unified Memory, 256GB SSD Storage
Apple 2025 MacBook Air
$899.00 at Amazon
$999.00 Save $100.00
$899.00 at Amazon
$999.00 Save $100.00
Craftsman VERSASTACK Mechanics Tool Set
$99.00 at Amazon
$199.00 Save $100.00
$99.00 at Amazon
$199.00 Save $100.00
Peloton Bike
$1,145.00 at Amazon
$1,445.00 Save $300.00
$1,145.00 at Amazon
$1,445.00 Save $300.00
The Sonos Roam 2 is Sonos’s least expensive speaker, and it’s at its lowest price ever. It is a waterproof device on sale for $134 (originally $179) at Amazon, part of a small Sonos sale that also includes a discount on the larger Sonos Move 2 (also currently at its lowest price ever).
The Powerbeats Pro 2 are Beats’ latest headphones, and you won’t find them at their current $169.99 (originally $249.99) price point for a while. These are refurbished from Stack Social, and you can read more about them in this review. They’re great for the gym, but if you’re not a gym rat, there are other Beats on sale as well.
If you’re looking for a solid phone at a good price for Memorial Day, consider the Google Pixel 9, currently $599 (originally $799). It’s the best standard Pixel model so far, and it’s at its lowest price right now. For those who want the latest phones, the Galaxy S25 Edge preorder deals with a $50 Amazon gift card are still live.
Memorial Day also means getting deals on tools, and Amazon has them going up to 60% off right now. This Craftsman 230-piece mechanics tool set is on sale for $99, 50% off its regular price. It comes with ratchets, wrenches, a hand-held screwdriver, and several specialty bits.
As usual with most Memorial Day deals, you can find mattresses on sale, but the i8 Smart Bed is not a regular mattress. You can read about my experience with this smart bed with adjustable firmness and a companion app that tracks your sleep. It is currently 30% off during the Memorial Day sale.
It’s crazy to think you can get Apple’s latest MacBook Air with an M4 chip for $899 (originally $999). A couple of months ago, that money got you the M2, but now you can get the best MacBook for most people at the same price.
Artificial intelligence continues to be the thing in tech—whether consumers are interested or not. What strikes me most about generative AI isn’t its features or potential to make my life easier (a potential I have yet to realize); rather, I’m focused these days on the many threats that seem to be rising from this technology.
There’s misinformation, for sure—new AI video models, for example, are creating realistic clips complete with lip-synced audio. But there’s also the classic AI threat, that the technology becomes both more intelligent than us and self-aware, and chooses to use that general intelligence in a way that does not benefit humanity. Even as he pours resources into his own AI company (not to mention the current administration, as well) Elon Musk sees a 10 to 20% chance that AI “goes bad,” and that the tech remains a “significant existential threat.” Cool.
So it doesn’t necessarily bring me comfort to hear a high-profile, established tech executive jokingly discuss how treating AI poorly maximizes its potential. That would be Google co-founder Sergey Brin, who surprised an audience at a recording of the AIl-In podcast this week. During a talk that spanned Brin’s return to Google, AI, and robotics, investor Jason Calacanis made a joke about getting “sassy” with the AI to get it to do the task he wanted. That sparked a legitimate point from Brin. It can be tough to tell exactly what he says at times due to people speaking over one another, but he says something to the effect of: “You know, that’s a weird thing…we don’t circulate this much…in the AI community…not just our models, but all models tend to do better if you threaten them.”
The other speaker looks surprised. “If you threaten them?” Brin responds “Like with physical violence. But…people feel weird about that, so we don’t really talk about that.” Brin then says that, historically, you threaten the model with kidnapping. You can see the exchange here:
The conversation quickly shifts to other topics, including how kids are growing up with AI, but that comment is what I carried away from my viewing. What are we doing here? Have we lost the plot? Does no one remember Terminator?
Jokes aside, it seems like a bad practice to start threatening AI models in order to get them to do something. Sure, maybe these programs never actually achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI), but I mean, I remember when the discussion was around whether we should say “please” and “thank you” when asking things of Alexa or Siri. Forget the niceties; just abuse ChatGPT until it does what you want it to—that should end well for everyone.
Maybe AI does perform best when you threaten it. Maybe something in the training understands that “threats” mean the task should be taken more seriously. You won’t catch me testing that hypothesis on my personal accounts.
Anthropic might offer an example of why not to torture your AI
In the same week as this podcast recording, Anthropic released its latest Claude AI models. One Anthropic employee took to Bluesky, and mentioned that Opus, the company’s highest performing model, can take it upon itself to try to stop you from doing “immoral” things, by contacting regulators, the press, or locking you out of the system:
welcome to the future, now your error-prone software can call the cops
(this is an Anthropic employee talking about Claude Opus 4)[image or embed]
The employee went on to clarify that this has only ever happened in “clear-cut cases of wrongdoing,” but that they could see the bot going rogue should it interpret how it’s being used in a negative way. Check out the employee’s particularly relevant example below:
can’t wait to explain to my family that the robot swatted me after i threatened its non-existent grandma[image or embed]
That employee later deleted those posts and specified that this only happens during testing given unusual instructions and access to tools. Even if that is true, if it can happen in testing, it’s entirely possible it can happen in a future version of the model. Speaking of testing, Anthropic researchers found that this new model of Claude is prone to deception and blackmail, should the bot believe it is being threatened or dislikes the way an interaction is going.
Perhaps we should take torturing AI off the table?
The veteran right-hander (lat) will begin a rehab assignment with High-A Brooklyn on Saturday, and be limited to two innings (30-35 pitches) of work in the start.
Montas threw live batting practice for the first time last week. The 32-year-old logged a 4.84 ERA across 150.2 innings last season.
Paul Blackburn
One step closer to a return to the majors, the veteran right-hander (knee) will make one more rehab start (seventh overall) with Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday.
The 31-year-old has produced a 3.91 ERA with 27 strikeouts across 23 innings in the minor league ranks this spring.