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48 votes
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How did racist mass texts bypass some anti-spam guardrails after the US election?
13 votes -
A young man used AI to build a nuclear fusor and now I must weep
22 votes -
DeepSeek FAQ
20 votes -
TikTok is coming back online after US President-elect Donald Trump pledged to restore it
27 votes -
TikTok makes app unavailable for US users ahead of ban
54 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission takes action against GoDaddy for alleged lax data security for its website hosting services
19 votes -
Donald Trump says he'll 'likely' give TikTok a ninety-day extension to avoid US ban
19 votes -
US Supreme Court unanimously backs law banning TikTok if it’s not sold by its Chinese parent company
48 votes -
US President Joe Biden won't enforce TikTok ban
31 votes -
The trouble with Elon Musk
47 votes -
New York starts enforcing $15 broadband law that ISPs tried to kill
51 votes -
Supreme Court seems ready to back Texas law limiting access to pornography
20 votes -
TSMC may have approval to create 2nm chips in the US
24 votes -
US introduces additional export restrictions on AI-chips
14 votes -
Matt Mullenweg deactivates WordPress accounts of contributors planning a fork
55 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg defends Meta's latest pivot in three-hour Joe Rogan interview
24 votes -
TikTok says it plans to shut down site for US unless Supreme Court strikes down law forcing it to sell
38 votes -
Google faces US trial for collecting data on users who opted out
39 votes -
Tencent designated as a Chinese military company by US
29 votes -
US based The Heritage Foundation plans to ‘identify and target’ Wikipedia editors
81 votes -
OpenAI boss Sam Altman denies sexual abuse allegations made by sister, Ann Altman
29 votes -
New California law prohibits using AI as basis to deny insurance claims
51 votes -
US appeals court rejects net neutrality: The internet cannot be treated as a utility
80 votes -
Amazon’s latest seller squeeze - Amazon changes terms of compensation for lost third party inventory
22 votes -
The average American spent 2.5 months on their phone in 2024
35 votes -
Pornhub is now blocked in almost all of the US South
53 votes -
Net neutrality rules struck down by US appeals court
26 votes -
More US telcos confirm Salt Typhoon breaches as White House weighs in
20 votes -
Copyright abuse is getting Luigi Mangione merch removed from the internet – artists, merch sellers, and journalists making and posting Luigi media have become the targets of bogus DMCA claims
65 votes -
MasterCard sells my transaction data in "anonymised" form; but I get targeted spam related to credit card use. How does it work?
26 votes -
OpenAI whistleblower found dead in San Francisco apartment. Suchir Balaji, 26, claimed the company broke copyright law.
35 votes -
US officials urge Americans to use encrypted apps amid unprecedented cyberattack
50 votes -
Chatbots urged teen to self-harm, suggested murdering parents, Texas lawsuit says
24 votes -
AI slop is already invading Oregon’s local journalism
16 votes -
Are ‘ghost engineers’ real? Seeking Silicon Valley’s least productive coders.
23 votes -
Do not buy NZXT | Predatory, evil rental computer scam investigated
62 votes -
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger forced out by board frustrated with slow progress
26 votes -
Mozilla begs courts to allow Google search deal for Firefox to continue
59 votes -
Elon Musk asks court to block OpenAI from converting to a for-profit corporation
13 votes -
What are the cons of Google being forced to give up its control of Chrome?
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default...
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default search engine, it goes me thinking about Chrome/Chromium.
I know that the courts are trying to force Google to give up its control of Chrome (I don't even know how that is possible for the government to tell a tech company that it is not allowed to develop a tech product it created itself) but it seems to me that Google maintaining Chrome is not really a problem in and of itself. there are many browsers available to folks and if you as a user want to be completely plugged into the google ecosystem at the detriment of your online privacy, that is your choice to make.
the real issue seems to me that a user should have the exact same experience browsing a google website on chrome vs an alternative.
But that made me wonder if (like stopping Google being able to pay to be the default search engine) Google was forced to give up its control of Chrome, what are the possible negative consequences of that to users? and would forcing Google to instead relinquish its control of chromium alleviate those issues?
28 votes -
Supreme Court wants US input on whether ISPs should be liable for users’ piracy, in $1 billion Sony v. Cox case
38 votes -
Craig Newmark, of Craigslist, is giving away $300 million to improve cybersecurity infrastructure
22 votes -
United States Department of Justice will push Google to sell Chrome to break search monopoly
79 votes -
Top US senator calls Salt Typhoon ‘worst telecom hack in our nation’s history’
37 votes -
I don't own a cellphone. Can this privacy-focused network change that?
19 votes -
‘Do not pet’: A robotic dog named “Spot” made by Boston Dynamics is the latest tool in the arsenal of the US Secret Service
20 votes -
What's worse than ads and AI? Ads in your AI, so Google is testing it.
30 votes -
In memoriam: Thomas E. Kurtz, 1928–2024
14 votes -
Chegg is on its last legs after ChatGPT sent its stock down 99%
35 votes