logo
NASA shuts down X accounts as fears swirl about massive cuts to science initiatives

NASA shuts down X accounts as fears swirl about massive cuts to science initiatives

Yahoo11-06-2025
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has started consolidating dozens of its social media accounts. It'll archive platforms in coming weeks focused on the moon, the Earth's climate, the Perseverance Mars rover, and the Orion spacecraft: the Artemis program vehicle that will one day take astronauts back to the lunar surface.
Some of the rudderless agency's accounts told their hundreds of thousands — or even millions — of followers not to be alarmed.
'Don't worry, my mission isn't going anywhere,' accounts for the Perseverance and Curiosity Mars rovers and the Voyager spacecraft assured on Monday.
NASA said its social media portfolio had grown to more than 400 accounts spread out across dozens of platforms.
'While each account has served an important purpose in telling our story, our focus is to improve the user experience through more cohesive messaging. We are reducing the overall number of accounts for a simplified presence that continues to inform, educate, and inspire the public,' NASA's Commercial Crew program account explained.
But followers voiced concerns that streamlining communications — reportedly from 400 accounts down to just 35 — may make communication even more of a challenge for NASA. Some said NASA was 'Thanos snapping,' or described the cull as "Red Wedding Stuff.'
'This account is/was a pioneer of social media,' space journalist Elizabeth Howell said of the Curiosity Rover account.
Not everyone agreed. Spaceflight photographer John Kraus said the effort was 'long overdue' and the 'right direction,' noting that the Orion and Space Launch Systems accounts could be relegated to focus on one for the entire Artemis program.
'How can we inspire the next generation when over 100 accounts on a single platform flood it with frequent posts — often multiple times daily — prioritizing posting for the sake of their own existence over quality content? It's overwhelming,' he said of X. Jared Isaacman, Trump's former pick for NASA administrator, signaled his support for that take.
It comes amid renewed concerns regarding further reductions in personnel and the recently released Fiscal Year 2026 budget proposal.
A summary of the proposal said the Office of Communications would be restructured by eliminating functions 'not statutorily mandated,' consolidating duplicative functions, and automating 'routine tasks.' There are reports claiming this effort is already underway.
Shifting focus largely on human spaceflight, the agency's proposal would slash funding for crucial initiatives that have been the product of decades of research at NASA. Those would include 41 space missions, the agency's climate monitoring satellites and top climate lab, the ongoing Mars Sample Return mission, and upcoming missions to Venus. In all, total funding would be cut by nearly a quarter, and the Planetary Society says there would be a 'devastating 47 percent cut to the agency's science program.' The budget still needs to pass through Congress.
'If enacted, this plan would decimate NASA. It would fire a third of the agency's staff, waste billions of taxpayer dollars, and turn off spacecraft that have been journeying through the Solar System for decades. Humanity would no longer explore the universe as it does today, and our ability to confront deep, cosmic questions would be set back an entire generation,' astrophysicist Dr. Asa Stahl wrote.
Jacqueline McCleary, an assistant professor of physics at Northeastern University, called the proposed budget a 'strategic mistake.'
'Even if you want to dismantle a project or dismantle a satellite, it takes time, it takes resources,' McCleary said. 'You can't just lock the doors and [let] it sit in a warehouse forever. Sudden cuts like these are paradoxically very wasteful of taxpayer money because they're not controlled.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Google (GOOGL) and NASA Team Up to Develop AI Tool to Keep Astronauts Healthy
Google (GOOGL) and NASA Team Up to Develop AI Tool to Keep Astronauts Healthy

Business Insider

time36 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

Google (GOOGL) and NASA Team Up to Develop AI Tool to Keep Astronauts Healthy

As space missions get longer and travel farther from Earth, keeping astronauts healthy becomes more difficult. On the International Space Station, crews can count on real-time calls to Houston, regular deliveries of medicine, and a quick ride home after six months. But that support won't be possible on future missions to the Moon or Mars. That's why NASA is starting to prepare for a future where astronauts need to rely more on themselves for medical care. To help solve this challenge, NASA and Google (GOOGL) are working together on an AI-powered tool called the Crew Medical Officer Digital Assistant. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Interestingly, this tool is designed to guide astronauts in diagnosing and treating health problems when no doctor is available or when they can't contact Earth. It runs on Google Cloud's Vertex AI platform and uses speech, text, and images to guide the crew with diagnoses and care. Although Google provides the cloud services and training tools, NASA owns the app's code and helps adjust the AI models to better suit space conditions. So far, the tool has been tested on three health issues: an ankle injury, flank pain, and ear pain. A team of three doctors, who included an astronaut, judged how well the assistant performed, with accuracy scores ranging from 74% to 88%. NASA plans to improve the system by adding data from medical devices and training it to recognize space-specific health problems, like those caused by microgravity. While it's unclear if Google will bring this tool to hospitals on Earth, experts believe that the lessons learned in space could one day help improve healthcare on the ground as well. Is Google Stock a Good Buy? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Moderate Buy consensus rating on GOOGL stock based on 26 Buys and nine Holds assigned in the past three months. Furthermore, the average GOOGL price target of $216.48 per share implies 7.4% upside potential.

NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy
NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy

As human-spaceflight missions grow longer and travel farther from Earth, keeping crews healthy gets more challenging. Astronauts on the International Space Station can depend on real-time calls to Houston, regular cargo deliveries of medicines, and a quick ride home after six months. All of that may soon change as NASA and its commercial partners, like Elon Musk's SpaceX, look to conduct longer-duration missions that would take humans to the Moon and Mars. That looming reality is pushing NASA to gradually make on-orbit medical care more 'Earth-independent.' One early experiment is a proof-of-concept AI medical assistant the agency is building with Google. The tool, called Crew Medical Officer Digital Assistant (CMO-DA), is designed to help astronauts diagnose and treat symptoms when no doctor is available or communications to Earth are blacked out. The multi-modal tool, which includes speech, text and images, runs inside Google Cloud's Vertex AI environment. The project is operating under a fixed-price Google Public Sector Subscription agreement, which includes the cost for cloud services, the application development infrastructure and model training, David Cruley, customer engineer at Google's Public Sector business unit, told TechCrunch. NASA owns the source code to the app and has helped fine-tune the models. The Google Vertex AI platform provides access to models from Google and other third parties. The two organizations have put CMO-DA through three scenarios: an ankle injury, flank pain, and ear pain. A trio of physicians, one being an astronaut, graded the assistant's performance across the initial evaluation, history-taking, clinical reasoning, and treatment. The trio found a high degree of diagnostic accuracy, judging the flank pain evaluation and treatment plan to be 74% likely correct; ear pain, 80%; and 88% for the ankle injury. The roadmap is deliberately incremental. NASA scientists said in a slide deck about the effort they are planning on adding more data sources, like medical devices, and training the model to be 'situationally aware' – that is, attuned to space medicine-specific conditions like microgravity. Cruley was vague about whether Google intends to pursue regulatory clearance to take this type of medical assistant into doctor's offices here on Earth, but it could be an obvious next step if the model is validated on orbit. The tool not only could improve the health of astronauts in space, 'but the lessons learned from this tool could also have applicability to other areas of health,' he said. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy
NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy

TechCrunch

time10 hours ago

  • TechCrunch

NASA and Google are building an AI medical assistant to keep Mars-bound astronauts healthy

As human-spaceflight missions grow longer and travel farther from Earth, keeping crews healthy gets more challenging. Astronauts on the International Space Station can depend on real-time calls to Houston, regular cargo deliveries of medicines, and a quick ride home after six months. All of that may soon change as NASA and its commercial partners, like Elon Musk's SpaceX, look to conduct longer-duration missions that would take humans to the Moon and Mars. That looming reality is pushing NASA to gradually make on-orbit medical care more 'Earth-independent.' One early experiment is a proof-of-concept AI medical assistant the agency is building with Google. The tool, called Crew Medical Officer Digital Assistant (CMO-DA), is designed to help astronauts diagnose and treat symptoms when no doctor is available or communications to Earth are blacked out. The multi-modal tool, which includes speech, text and images, runs inside Google Cloud's Vertex AI environment. The project is operating under a fixed-price Google Public Sector Subscription agreement, which includes the cost for cloud services, the application development infrastructure and model training, David Cruley, customer engineer at Google's Public Sector business unit, told TechCrunch. NASA owns the source code to the app and has helped fine-tune the models. The Google Vertex AI platform provides access to models from Google and other third parties. The two organizations have put CMO-DA through three scenarios: an ankle injury, flank pain, and ear pain. A trio of physicians, one being an astronaut, graded the assistant's performance across the initial evaluation, history-taking, clinical reasoning, and treatment. The trio found a high degree of diagnostic accuracy, judging the flank pain evaluation and treatment plan to be 74% likely correct; ear pain, 80%; and 88% for the ankle injury. Techcrunch event Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise. Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise. San Francisco | REGISTER NOW The roadmap is deliberately incremental. NASA scientists said in a slide deck about the effort they are planning on adding more data sources, like medical devices, and training the model to be 'situationally aware' – that is, attuned to space medicine-specific conditions like microgravity. Cruley was vague about whether Google intends to pursue regulatory clearance to take this type of medical assistant into doctor's offices here on Earth, but it could be an obvious next step if the model is validated on orbit. The tool not only could improve the health of astronauts in space, 'but the lessons learned from this tool could also have applicability to other areas of health,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store