The Brutalist Report - register
system |
|
- Palantir CEO claims AI will mean western economies won't need immigration [116d]
- Everest ransomware gang said to be sitting on mountain of Under Armour data [116d]
- Concorde at 50: Twice the speed of sound, twice the economic trouble [116d]
- EU considers whether there's Huawei of axing Chinese kit from networks within 3 years [116d]
- FTC tries to un-Zuck Meta's grip on the market by dragging it back to court [116d]
- Ireland wants to give its cops spyware, ability to crack encrypted messages [116d]
- Microsoft admits Outlook might freeze when saving files to OneDrive [116d]
- Best of British: UK's infosec envoys include Cisco, Palo Alto, and Accenture [116d]
- Microsoft CEO: AI sovereignty isn't where it runs, it's who controls it [116d]
- MX Linux 25.1 brings back switchable init systems [116d]
- Child safety or age-gating for all? UK social media ban plan draws fire [116d]
- Kids learn computer theory with wood, cardboard, and hot glue [116d]
- ATM takes a kicking yet keeps on ticking [116d]
- Curl shutters bug bounty program to remove incentive for submitting AI slop [116d]
- Sony no longer home of the Bravia as it plans TV biz spin-out to China’s TCL [116d]
- OpenAI will try to guess your age before ChatGPT gets spicy [116d]
- Cloudflare whacks WAF bypass bug that opened side door for attackers [116d]
- Anthropic CEO: Selling H200s to China like to giving nukes to North Korea [116d]
- Amazon CEO Andy Jassy goes wobbly on AI bubble possibility [116d]
- AI researchers map models to banish 'demon' persona [117d]
- Mozilla starts offering RPMs of Firefox Nightly [117d]
- Remember VoidLink, the cloud-targeting Linux malware? An AI agent wrote it [117d]
- Dead batteries cough up lithium after a bath in CO₂ and water, boffins say [117d]
- Power scarcity drives datacenters to Texas, where the juice is [117d]
Previous Day