Risk of a US Government Shutdown Is Fueled by Very Online Republicans

“Congress is in charge of money and everything for the government, and Congress should be in charge of funding special counsels. Those are my red lines,” Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican, told a group of congressional reporters. Greene’s other top demand is impeaching President Joe Biden. McCarthy has already launched an inquiry. With Trump… Continue reading Risk of a US Government Shutdown Is Fueled by Very Online Republicans

Getty Images Plunges Into the Generative AI Pool

Earlier this year, the stock-photo service provider Getty Images sued Stability AI over what Getty said was the misuse of more than 12 million Getty photos in training Stability’s AI photo-generation tool, Stable Diffusion. Now Getty Images is releasing its own AI photo-generation tool, which will be available to its commercial customers. And it’s bringing… Continue reading Getty Images Plunges Into the Generative AI Pool

The Booking.com Decision Shows the True Scope of the EU’s Big Tech Crackdown

When the European Union issued new rules for the internet earlier this year, officials in Brussels envisioned a system that would stop US Big Tech from growing out of control. But the bloc’s latest antitrust decision sent a message that it’s not only American tech giants that will be subject to increasing scrutiny, but European… Continue reading The Booking.com Decision Shows the True Scope of the EU’s Big Tech Crackdown

California’s Governor Gavin Newsom Vetoes State Ban on Driverless Trucks

California governor Gavin Newsom worked late last night, vetoing a law that would have banned self-driving trucks without a human aboard from state roads until the early 2030s. State lawmakers had voted through the law with wide margins, backed by unions that argued autonomous trucks are a safety risk and threaten jobs. The bill would… Continue reading California’s Governor Gavin Newsom Vetoes State Ban on Driverless Trucks

The iPhone 12 Isn’t the Only Phone to Fail France’s Radiation Test

Last week, Apple’s iPhone 12 was banned by a French regulatory body. The charge? The phone emits too much radiation. If you browse the German or UK versions of Amazon, you’ll find plenty of iPhone 12s. But on the French branch you’ll see a black hole surrounded by iPhone 11s and iPhone 13s, among other… Continue reading The iPhone 12 Isn’t the Only Phone to Fail France’s Radiation Test

The Shocking Data on Kia and Hyundai Thefts in the US

Mandiant researchers published findings this week about a newly revealed Chinese espionage operation that used Sogu malware to spy on the African operations of both European and US organizations. The campaign is significant for the scope of its victims, but also because attackers used a classic malware distribution method: thumb drives. The attacks are the… Continue reading The Shocking Data on Kia and Hyundai Thefts in the US

21 Best iPhone 14 Cases and Accessories (2023): MagSafe-Tested, Chargers, and More

We get a lot of cases sent our way. Some of them are perfectly fine but not remarkable in our eyes, but cases can be subjective. You might like them. Carved MagSafe Cases for $59: Epoxy resin is having a bit of a moment. (My YouTube is filled with ways to convert a coffee table… Continue reading 21 Best iPhone 14 Cases and Accessories (2023): MagSafe-Tested, Chargers, and More

Satellite Images Show the Devastating Cost of Sudan’s Aerial War

Yesterday, the head of the Sudanese Army, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, asking for increased aid from the international community for Sudan and condemning the paramilitary groups that he says “have killed, looted, raped, robbed, and seized citizens’ homes and properties, and destroyed infrastructure and government buildings.”… Continue reading Satellite Images Show the Devastating Cost of Sudan’s Aerial War

Inside the Race to Stop a Deadly Viral Outbreak in India

On the morning of September 11, critical care specialist Anoop Kumar was presented with an unusual situation. Four members of the same family had been admitted to his hospital—Aster MIMS in Kozhikode, Kerala—the previous day, all similarly sick. Would he take a look? He gathered his team of doctors to investigate. Soon they were at… Continue reading Inside the Race to Stop a Deadly Viral Outbreak in India

Google Mourns Veteran Engineer Luiz André Barroso Who Invented the Modern Data Center

Google’s first data center consisted of 40-foot, server-filled shipping containers, which enabled advanced cooling and fewer construction headaches. It opened its own data center campus in Oregon in 2006, resembling the conventional bland, boxy, and massive buildings that now dot the world. But Barroso’s ideas made the insides exceptional. He and his Google colleagues turned… Continue reading Google Mourns Veteran Engineer Luiz André Barroso Who Invented the Modern Data Center