The Children's Safety Trial That Could Remake Social Media
Internal emails called Instagram 'the leading marketplace for human trafficking.' A New Mexico jury will decide whether Meta knew the risks and sold safety anyway.
Internal emails called Instagram 'the leading marketplace for human trafficking.' A New Mexico jury will decide whether Meta knew the risks and sold safety anyway.
If your CI/CD pipeline ran Trivy last week, assume your credentials are in an attacker's hands. The cleanup job facing thousands of organizations is messy, manual, and urgent.
Elon Musk says existing chipmakers can only supply 2% of what his companies need. His solution: build the world's largest semiconductor fab from scratch, with no experience, in Austin.
Tencent's ClawBot puts OpenClaw inside WeChat — an app used by over a billion people for everything from messaging to mortgage payments. The race to embed AI agents into China's super-apps is now fully underway.
Blue Origin has asked the FCC for permission to launch 51,600 data center satellites into orbit. The company has flown its rocket twice and has zero satellites in space.
OpenAI is rolling ads out to all free and Go ChatGPT users in the U.S. Truist analysts project the company could hit $30 billion in ad revenue by 2030. The nonprofit-to-ad-network pipeline is complete.
A former uranium enrichment plant in rural Ohio is about to become the largest data center on Earth — powered by 9.2 gigawatts of brand-new natural gas. The price tag: $500 billion. The carbon bill: still uncalculated.
Intoxalock's servers went down on March 16. A week later, court-ordered breathalyzer users in 46 states still can't start their cars — even sober.
Supermicro co-founder Yih-Shyan Liaw was arrested on charges of diverting $2.5 billion in Nvidia GPU servers to China. The stock lost a third of its value in a single session.
Two sworn declarations filed Friday claim the Pentagon told Anthropic they were "very close" to a deal — one day after blacklisting the company as a national security threat. The hearing is Tuesday.
The Pentagon just made Palantir's AI targeting system an official program of record — while it's already selecting strike targets in Iran. The $1.3 billion platform has compressed kill chains from hours to minutes, and its user base has doubled since January.
The movable taskbar is back. Forced updates are gone. Copilot bloat is being trimmed. It only took Microsoft five years to listen.
Blue Origin wants to put more satellites in orbit than most companies have employees. The rocket to get them there has flown twice.
The Trump administration's new AI framework tells Congress to override state regulation — and threatens to pull broadband funding from states that don't comply. The framework itself is four pages long.
The Fire Phone sold fewer than 35,000 units and cost Amazon $170 million. Twelve years later, the company is building another one — this time with an AI assistant and a codename that writes its own punchlines.
A French officer's 7-kilometer deck run on a public Strava profile pinpointed the nuclear-powered Charles de Gaulle in the eastern Mediterranean — 100 kilometers from Turkey, during a live wartime deployment.
Three Tennessee teenagers say xAI's technology turned their yearbook photos into child sexual abuse material. The EU is about to make the company that built it — not just the users — legally responsible.
Federal agents arrested Supermicro's 71-year-old co-founder for allegedly running a $2.5 billion pipeline of banned Nvidia GPUs to China — through his own company's supply chain. Hair dryers, dummy servers, and bribed auditors were involved.
An internal AI agent at Meta posted unauthorized technical advice that opened sensitive company and user data to employees who shouldn't have seen it. Nobody caught it for nearly two hours.
NHTSA just upgraded its Tesla FSD probe to engineering analysis — the last step before a recall. The issue: the system can't tell when its own cameras are blind.