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+35 +5
Reddit reveals FTC inquiry into deals licensing its users' data for AI training
Reddit says the Federal Trade Commission has opened an inquiry into the social media platform's sale, licensing or sharing of user posts and other content to outside organizations for use in training artificial intelligence models.
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+33 +4
Shape-shifting ultrasound stickers detect post-surgical complications
First-of-its-kind device ‘tags’ an organ to monitor abnormal, life-threatening fluid leaks
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+27 +2
Inkjets Are for More Than Just Printing
Inkjet technology has found a host of applications beyond putting dots on paper. It can now be used to make DNA microarrays for genomics, create electrical traces for printed circuit boards, and build 3D-printed structures.
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+31 +2
Eyes in the sky: why drones are ‘beyond effective’ for animal rights campaigners around the world
Inexpensive and easy to use, drones are proving invaluable for activists monitoring illegal fishing, hunting and deforestation – as well as keeping tabs on zoos and aquariums
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+36 +2
Software vendors dump open source, go for the cash grab
First, they build programs with open source. Then they build their business with open source. Then they abandon it and cash out.
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+32 +8
Amazon’s Ring to shutter video-sharing program popular with police
Amazon’s Ring will no longer let police and other government agencies request doorbell camera footage from within the company’s Neighbors app, in what privacy advocates are hailing as a long-awaited victory for civil liberties.
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+41 +8
SpaceX's Starship to launch 'Starlab' private space station in late 2020s
The giant rocket will loft Starlab in a single launch.
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+26 +8
AI comes up with battery design that uses 70 per cent less lithium
Researchers used AI to design a new material that they used to build a working battery – it requires up to 70 percent less lithium than some competing designs.
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+34 +6
The uncomfortable truth about AI’s impact on the workforce is playing out inside the big AI companies themselves
Alphabet and Microsoft are investing big in AI. But that’s creating a murky future for many tech employees.
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+34 +6
Over 2 percent of the US’s electricity generation now goes to bitcoin
US government tracking the energy implications of booming bitcoin mining in US.
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+33 +8
AYANEO's New NES-Style Mini PC: Pretty, and Pretty Powerful -
Remember the AYANEO mini PC I wrote about last year? You know, the one that looked like a classic Macintosh, ran Windows 11, and was advertised as being
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+42 +6
End of an Era: Weaveworks Closes Shop Amid Cloud Native Turbulence
Alexis Richardson, CEO and co-founder of Weaveworks, took to LinkedIn to share the somber news of the company's closing.
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+29 +5
Apple Vision Pro review: Eyes on the future
It’s been a very long time since Apple released a product as speculative and impractical as the Vision Pro, its $3499 first-generation “spatial computing” headset. Led by Apple, t…
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+30 +5
Microsoft is bringing Linux’s sudo command to Windows 11
The latest addition to make Windows more developer-friendly.
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+32 +5
The Linux Foundation and its partners are working on cryptography for the post-quantum world
Quantum computing is very much a mixed blessing.
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+40 +5
Mozilla CEO quits, org pivots, but what about Firefox?
Could it have more to do with browser's ever-increasing irrelevance?
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+35 +5
LinuxONE 4 Express: How IBM's budget mainframe could be right for you
Moving your Linux workloads from a x86 server to this amazingly inexpensive mainframe can save 52% TCO over five years, IBM claims.
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+36 +8
This is the fastest and most expensive Wi-Fi router I've ever tested
The Netgear Orbi 970 is not for everyone, but if you already have ultra-high-speed Internet and a top-of-the-line network in your home or office, it may just be worth it.
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+30 +5
Linux gets into the CVE security business
The Linux kernel developers are now issuing their own, more accurate Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures security bulletins.
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+33 +4
Jim Zemlin and the Linux Foundation share not-so-secret open-source sauce
Collaborative innovation has been the group's driving force for a quarter of a century. Or, to paraphrase Lao Tzu, the journey of a thousand open-source programs starts with a single project.
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