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13 votes
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Innovation Lab showcases the construction industry’s tech future. Or to get to the point: A robot dog
4 votes -
Human rights and "technical protection measures" (DRM) - Lessons from twenty-two years of the US DMCA
9 votes -
Inside Amazon’s secret program to spy on workers’ private Facebook groups
7 votes -
US indictments and raids of piracy group members in "The Scene" throw top-tier piracy world into chaos
28 votes -
Google proposes new village next to Mountain View tech hubs
5 votes -
Geofence warrants - Smartphone location data is giving US law enforcement new surveillance tools
6 votes -
Silicon Valley has deep pockets for African startups – if you’re not African
10 votes -
One year later, has the Huawei ban been effective?
5 votes -
Six former eBay executives and employees charged with aggressive cyberstalking campaign targeting a couple who published an online newsletter critical of the company
23 votes -
Why and where you should plant your flag
12 votes -
United States Postal Service (USPS) files patent for a blockchain-based voting system
24 votes -
Amazon liable for defective third-party products rules CA Appellate Court
6 votes -
Reddit CEO defends their intention to run Trump ads ahead of election, outlines their plans to move comments on ads into subreddits
51 votes -
The clean network: A US Department of State proposal to provide 5G free of China's interference
3 votes -
Microsoft faces complex technical challenges in TikTok carveout
5 votes -
US President Donald Trump issues executive orders taking effect in forty-five days that ban "transactions" with Chinese owners of TikTok (ByteDance) and WeChat (Tencent)
19 votes -
The Trump campaign is currently spending $5.4 million per week on Facebook ads, almost assuredly making it the platform's largest advertiser
@Judd Legum: The Trump campaign is currently spending $5.4 MILLION PER WEEK on Facebook That's a $280 million annual rate.The Trump campaign is almost certainly Facebook's largest advertiser In 2019, Home Depot was the largest advertiser, spending $178.5 million pic.twitter.com/4BjWknL73H
13 votes -
A summary of the developments over the weekend regarding Microsoft's potential acquisition of TikTok
8 votes -
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin confirms TikTok is under review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US following national security concerns
11 votes -
Seventeen-year-old in Tampa, Florida arrested and accused of "masterminding" the compromises of prominent Twitter accounts on July 15, charged with thirty felonies
34 votes -
Apple surpasses Saudi Aramco to become world’s most valuable company
12 votes -
US Congress made Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google CEOs sweat during antitrust enforcement hearing
10 votes -
US congressional antitrust hearing with the the CEOs of Amazon, Google, Apple, and Facebook
4 votes -
Here’s Donald Trump’s plan to regulate social media
7 votes -
Intel drops two high ranking Intel staff in the last six weeks
On June 11th Jim Keller (Senior Vice President of Intel’s Silicon Engineering Group) retired immediately - Former tenure at AMD, Tesla, and Apple. - Link Next on June 27th Murthy Renduchintala...
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On June 11th Jim Keller (Senior Vice President of Intel’s Silicon Engineering Group) retired immediately - Former tenure at AMD, Tesla, and Apple. - Link
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Next on June 27th Murthy Renduchintala (Chief Engineering Officer) departs due to a massive layoff - Link
An interesting note is that Ann Kelleher who is a 24-year Intel veteran will lead the development of 7-nanometer and 5-nanometer chip technology processes.
Editorial
With ARM, AMD, Nvidia, TSMC leading the charge, Intel might start their downward run. They are now relying on TSMC for fab capacity in hopes to outbid AMD and constrain supply. AMD is quickly growing in the enterprise space and providing comparable performance.
I believe we (consumers) are in for a great few years of accelerated CPU development.
8 votes -
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Lawyers demand US Military stop violating free speech on Twitch
10 votes -
US phone carriers may soon be able to block all calls from robocallers' carriers
16 votes -
MIT researchers created a deepfake of Nixon delivering the 'In Event Of Moon Disaster' speech
8 votes -
UK, US, and Canada accuse Russia of trying to steal information from coronavirus vaccine researchers
15 votes -
Twitter disables video in Trump retweet after Linkin Park files copyright complaint
10 votes -
After ten years in tech isolation, I’m now outsider to things I once had mastered
33 votes -
The US phone bill security hole in HIPAA
5 votes -
Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s war against the media
16 votes -
Why is a tech executive installing security cameras around San Francisco?
10 votes -
TikTok is getting caught up in the geopolitical conflict between China and the US
8 votes -
Xerox PARC is fifty
10 votes -
Trump, Twitter, Facebook, and the future of online speech - The debate over censorship and Section 230 is thorny, contentious, and, above all, outdated
8 votes -
US officials are ramping up criticism of the GDPR, which they say protects cybercriminals
17 votes -
Pressure mounts as Starbucks, Coca-Cola join Facebook ad boycott; Facebook updates policy
9 votes -
YouTube TV sharply increases monthly subscription to $64.99
8 votes -
Bill requires employers to keep implanted microchips voluntary for workers
17 votes -
Wrongfully accused by an algorithm
7 votes -
Terrible, dangerous EARN IT act set to move forward in the senate; attack on both encryption and free speech online
27 votes -
EU digs in on digital tax plan, after US quits talks
5 votes -
How the USA’s massive failure to close the digital divide got exposed by the coronavirus
5 votes -
US Army awards pocket-sized drones $20.6 million contract
13 votes -
Scott Alexander has deleted his Slate Star Codex blog due to the New York Times planning to reveal his real name in an article
48 votes -
Andrew Yang is pushing Big Tech to pay users for data
18 votes -
The coming chip wars
9 votes