A daily curated digest with the tech news that matter + community vibes, delivered daily, in tabloid style. Like you always wanted.
Today in tech, OpenAI shows off new ChatGPT Images 2.0, whispers about GPT‑5, and rolls out an OpenAI Foundation to reshape its public image... Apple faces fresh heat in Europe as a new FSFE report says its DMA interoperability answers land thin and confusing... Cloud nerves rise after a Vercel breach exposes how fragile environment variables and hidden secrets can be in modern platforms... GitHub Copilot clamps down on heavy users, swapping in smaller AI models while keeping prices steady... Anthropic tightens its ties to AWS as Amazon pours in billions, even as Claude Code vanishes from the cheaper Pro tier... Meta plans to log staff mouse moves and keystrokes for AI training, raising fresh alarms on workplace monitoring... And developers vent their fatigue with constant AI hype, calling for quieter, more reliable tools instead.
Apple Shrugs At Europe’s New Tech Rules Again
A new FSFE report says Apple responded to 56 Digital Markets Act interoperability requests with basically nothing useful, and sometimes answers that contradict its own docs. It reinforces the feeling that Apple only plays nice when forced hard by regulators.
Vercel Breach Exposes Hidden Risk In Cloud Secrets
A compromised third-party app got into Vercel’s internal systems using trusted logins, not stolen passwords. The scare centers on environment variables and how many modern platforms quietly stash keys and tokens there. Devs are rattled that “serverless” often means “mystery server, big blast radius.”
GitHub Copilot Clamps Down On Power Users
GitHub is pausing new Copilot sign-ups, tightening usage caps, and swapping in smaller models for some users. The move feels like a classic growth-then-gouge play, and developers are grumbling that their AI co-pilot just got downgraded mid-flight while the subscription price stayed put.
Windows Server 2025 Runs Faster On ARM Chips
A hands-on review found Windows Server 2025 snappier on ARM hardware than on a high-end Intel box, at lower power use. It feeds a growing sense that x86 is looking tired in the data center, and that Microsoft quietly sees an ARM-based server future coming faster than many expect.
Chinese EV Price War Makes Petrol Cars Look Dumb
In the UK, new EVs are now cheaper to buy than many petrol cars, largely thanks to aggressive Chinese competition. Car makers are spooked, consumers are delighted, and regulators are trying to decide if this is healthy market pressure or a Trojan horse for wiping out local manufacturers.
OpenAI Showcases New Tricks And Teases GPT Five
OpenAI’s slick livestream hyped a new ChatGPT Images 2.0, hinted at GPT-5, and trotted out an OpenAI Foundation to soften its image. Viewers were a mix of impressed and wary, sensing both real capability jumps and a constant push to weave OpenAI into every corner of daily work.
Amazon Buys Loyalty As Anthropic Bets On Its Cloud
Amazon is throwing another $5B at Anthropic, while Anthropic promises over $100B in future AWS spending. The deal screams lock‑in: great for Amazon’s cloud dominance, risky for anyone hoping AI power won’t be concentrated in a tiny club of hyperscale landlords and their favorite labs.
Meta Uses Employee Activity As AI Training Fodder
Meta is installing software to record US staff mouse moves and keystrokes for AI training. The plan feels dystopian even by Meta standards, and it’s fueling fears that the quest for more data has crossed from creepy user tracking into full-on workplace surveillance masquerading as innovation.
Claude Code Disappears From Budget Anthropic Plan
Anthropic quietly removed Claude Code from its $20 Pro tier for new customers, nudging them toward pricier plans. Devs who’d just rebuilt workflows around it feel burned, seeing a pattern where AI companies hook you on productivity and then shove key features behind an enterprise paywall.
Developers Admit They’re Just Tired Of AI Hype
A blunt post titled “I’m Sick of AI Everything” struck a nerve. The author vents about every product stapling on chatbots, constant VC cheerleading, and shallow AI features that add more failure modes than value. Judging by reactions, plenty of builders are craving boring, reliable tools again.
1960s Univac Runs Minecraft Server And NES Games
A hobbyist wired a UNIVAC 1219B from the 1960s into modern networks and actually hosted a Minecraft server and a NES emulator on it. It’s a gloriously nerdy stunt that shows just how far clever optimization and OCaml hacks can stretch hardware older than most of today’s programmers.
Open Hardware Laptop Lets You Peek Under The Hood
The MNT Reform is a chunky, fully open-hardware laptop built in Berlin, with visible components and community vibes instead of glued-shut minimalism. Hackers love that you can replace boards, tweak firmware, and actually understand the machine, not just rent a black box from a megacorp.
Clickable Fusion Reactor Simulator Explains Future Power
A browser-based Fusion Power Plant Simulator lets you tweak heating power, pulse rate, and gain to see how a reactor might behave. It turns intimidating fusion physics into sliders and charts, giving curious readers a feel for why this dream energy source is so hard and so tempting.
Solar Power Sees Biggest Growth Of Any Energy Source
New data shows global solar installations growing faster than any energy source in history, backed by plunging panel costs and rising battery storage. It’s the kind of quiet, compounding progress that makes oil executives nervous and convinces engineers the Age of Electricity is already here.
Curiosity Finds Organic Clues Preserved For Ages On Mars
NASA’s Curiosity rover detected new organic molecules preserved in Martian rocks for billions of years, as reported in Nature Communications. It’s not proof of life, but it strengthens the case that if microbes ever thrived on Mars, some chemical fingerprints might still be hiding in the dust.
Apple prepares for life after Tim Cook as hardware chief John Ternus steps toward the top job... Tesla faces fresh heat after a leak ties hidden Autopilot crashes to big court losses... GitHub stars look shaky as research tracks millions of fake ratings sold to impress VC money... Atlassian turns on default AI data collection in Jira and Confluence, pushing admins into quiet opt outs... Solar power races ahead as the IEA says it leads all new electricity... Alibaba Cloud and Kimi fire off new AI models while PrismML shrinks language brains to 1.58 bits... A bold KV cache study promises wild 900000x compression and splits researchers on what comes next... ChatGPT turns private chats into premium ad slots as marketing cash follows user prompts... Tonight we scan the cracks in big platforms, the rush for smarter models, and the rising fight over who controls the data.
Tim Cook exits, Apple bets on hardware boss
Apple finally admits the Tim Cook era is ending. Hardware chief John Ternus is sliding into the CEO chair, signalling an even harder push on devices. Investors see stability, fans fear boredom, and everyone wonders what this means for Apples weak AI story.
Leak claims Tesla buried deadly Autopilot accidents
A Tesla data leak, reported by Swiss show Temps Présent, allegedly lists thousands of Autopilot incidents, including fatal ones, that never saw daylight. A first court verdict has already hit Tesla with big damages. Faith in self‑driving tech just took a nasty hit.
GitHub stars for sale turn dev cred into scam
A peer‑reviewed study finds around six million fake GitHub stars bought at about six cents a click, with shady services pumping repos to game VC interest. If stars drive hiring and funding, the whole ecosystem suddenly looks like an influencer market for code.
Atlassian flips on default data grab for AI
Atlassian quietly enabled data collection from Jira and Confluence to train its AI tools, forcing customers to dig through admin panels to opt out. For teams already uneasy about cloud lock‑in, it feels like a bait‑and‑switch on their internal knowledge.
Solar power finally beats every rival worldwide
The IEA says global energy demand is still climbing, but solar has crossed a historic line, overtaking other sources for new electricity. Gas and coal are losing the growth race. For once, the spreadsheets say clean energy is not just moral, it is winning.
Alibaba pushes Qwen3.6 Max as smarter AI workhorse
Alibaba Cloud dropped Qwen3.6‑Max‑Preview, bragging about better reasoning and coding plus cheaper inference. It is another shot in the model‑of‑the‑week war, and a reminder that China’s AI push is not waiting around for Western labs to set the pace.
Kimi open sources coding model built for swarms
Chinese startup Kimi open‑sourced its K2.6 model, tuned for code, long tasks and so‑called agent swarms. Devs love the openness, but also know every new coder bot makes it harder to tell who actually understands software and who just prompts for a living.
Ternary Bonsai squeezes brains into 1.58 bits
PrismML unveiled Ternary Bonsai, ultra‑compressed language models that run at 1.58 bits per weight, targeting phones and tiny devices. If they perform as claimed, you will not need a data center to get useful AI, just a halfway modern gadget and good kernels.
Wild paper claims 900000x compression for AI memory
A provocative KV cache paper brags about 900000x compression beyond TurboQuant, supposedly beating even theoretical limits per vector. Researchers are intrigued but skeptical; the work reads like either a glimpse of the future of inference or an overhyped stunt.
ChatGPT conversations become target zones for high priced ads
Ad platform StackAdapt is selling ChatGPT ad slots based on prompt relevance, with CPMs up to 60 dollars and a chunky buy‑in. It confirms what users feared: the chatbot you vent to about your life and work is now prime real estate for marketers.
Defense unicorns turn war into a Silicon Valley product
A long read on Anduril, Palantir and SpaceX shows how cheap drones, data platforms and private rockets are outclassing traditional weapons. Governments get more firepower for less cash, but also hand terrifying leverage to a small club of tech founders.
Deezer says nearly half new tracks are AI junk
Music service Deezer claims 44% of daily uploads are AI‑generated, tens of thousands of tracks a day. The catalog is turning into a sludge of bots, spam and quick‑cash schemes, and human artists are getting buried under algorithmic elevator music.
Online revolt grows against boring flood of AI slop
A fiery essay argues AI resistance is quietly rising as people block bots, boycott AI art and build tools like Poison Fountain to poison training data. The vibe is clear: users feel Silicon Valley shipped a spam machine and called it the future.
EU age check app gets hacked in two minutes
Brussels touted a shiny new age verification app as technically ready. Hackers poked at the GitHub code and tore through protections almost instantly, even tricking Touch ID. It is another case of regulators loving apps they clearly never tried to secure.
Researchers warn chatbot crutches might be dumbing us down
Scientists worry that outsourcing hard thinking to AI chatbots could erode memory, focus and basic problem‑solving. Students already lean on ChatGPT for everything, and early studies suggest that when the model does the work, our own mental muscles quietly atrophy.
Today cloud confidence takes a hit as Vercel confirms a breach and dev teams look hard at their own security hygiene... In hardware, a squeeze on boring DRAM and a fragile bromine supply chain raise fresh alarms over long-term memory costs... Governments edge away from Microsoft 365 as Switzerland pilots a quieter path toward open-source tools... On the language front, C++26 promises reflection, contracts, and stronger safety as it races to meet modern standards... In the AI world, Anthropic draws scrutiny as Claude prompt changes, quiet bans, and a stealthy desktop bridge fuel new questions about policy and trust... Uber admits its massive AI bill is biting, showing that scaling models is easier than paying for them... And deep in the stack, new Rust infrastructure for faster RPC hints at how we keep pushing large models while fighting cost and latency.
Vercel breach exposes cracks in cloud convenience
Cloud darling Vercel confirmed hackers slipped into internal systems, with a "limited subset" of customers hit and a crew called ShinyHunters bragging online. For teams that trusted the platform with production everything, it’s a harsh reminder that "managed" doesn’t mean "magic" and you still need real security hygiene of your own.
RAM shortage threatens to outlast your laptop
Chipmakers like Samsung and SK Hynix are chasing high-margin HBM for AI, leaving boring old DRAM capacity behind. That imbalance, plus huge demand, could keep memory prices painful for years. Devs are swapping upgrade plans for ZRAM tweaks and suddenly those "just throw more RAM at it" architectures look pretty reckless.
Bromine bottleneck haunts world memory chip supply
A deep dive into the bromine supply chain shows a wild chokepoint: a single Israeli company dominates chemicals used in DRAM and NAND production. With regional conflict flaring, the whole memory industry looks one geopolitical wobble away from disaster. Everyone obsesses over fabs, but the real fragility might be in the chemistry.
Switzerland starts slow breakup with Microsoft stack
The Swiss federal government openly says it wants less dependence on Microsoft products and Microsoft 365, floating more open-source and local options. It’s not a loud ban, more a careful nudge toward digital sovereignty. But for other governments quietly grumbling about cloud lock-in, this reads like a starter kit for escaping Redmond.
C++26 aims to tame its own sharp edges
C++26 is feature-complete and finally brings standard reflection, stronger memory safety tools, contracts, and a modern async model. For a language famous for foot-guns, the committee is clearly trying to meet Rust-era expectations without losing raw speed. Old-school C++ devs are excited and a little terrified of all the new machinery.
Claude prompt changes show AI labs under microscope
Anthropic is still one of the few labs publishing its system prompts, and a close read of Claude Opus 4.6 vs 4.7 shows shifting policies and tone. The community pores over every word like patch notes for a god-mode NPC, because this is how we learn what these systems are really optimized to do – and what they quietly stop doing.
Banned by Anthropic highlights AI account power imbalance
The “Banned by Anthropic” site compiles stories from users who say their Claude access vanished with vague policy references and no meaningful appeal. For freelancers and startups leaning on AI tools, it’s a chilling reminder that a single opaque decision upstream can nuke your workflow, with less recourse than getting banned from a forum.
Claude desktop bridge triggers spyware level suspicion
A developer discovered Claude Desktop quietly installing a background "bridge" service that listens locally, likely to power editor integrations. Technically mundane, but the rollout felt sneaky enough that people started throwing around words like "trojan" and "spyware". Trust is brittle; AI vendors are learning that the hard way.
Uber’s massive AI bill collides with harsh reality
Uber’s CTO admitted the company has already burned through a $3.4B R&D budget and still needs to slow its AI push because of raw cost. They’ve leaned heavily on tools like Claude Code and Cursor, but the finance side is clearly blinking. It’s a rare public confirmation that “just add more AI” is not a business model.
Anthropic open sources faster Rust plumbing for AI RPCs
An Anthropic engineer released zero-copy Protobuf and ConnectRPC crates for Rust, trimming CPU and memory overhead for chatty AI backends. It’s not flashy like a new model, but this is the boring infrastructure that makes running big LLMs less painful. Rustaceans are delighted to get serious performance toys from a frontier lab.
EU digital ID wallet called out on privacy claims
A security expert argues the EU digital ID wallet spec simply can’t match its own promises on privacy, especially around how attestations and providers are trusted. The critique isn’t anti-ID, it’s anti-hand-wavy-crypto. If governments want citizens to adopt a single app for everything, "just trust us" is not going to cut it.
DID skeptic says identity already had better tools
A long-time identity nerd praises Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) as clever but ultimately unnecessary, arguing we could’ve built most benefits on existing public key and web infrastructure. With projects like Bluesky in the mix, the piece feels like a reality check for anyone hoping DIDs magically fix trust, spam, or moderation.
Discord bug secretly reveals when you read messages
A clever exploit in Discord’s OpenGraph image proxy gives senders de facto read receipts, including timestamps and view counts, even though the app explicitly avoids that feature. It’s a classic "the spec said no, the implementation said yes" moment, and a reminder that every "just a preview" request leaks more than users expect.
Researchers turn your headphones into hidden microphones
The SPEAKE(a)R paper from Ben-Gurion University shows how malware can retask audio jacks on certain Realtek chips, turning passive speakers or earbuds into improvised mics. It’s not a Hollywood-perfect spy tool, but it’s unsettling proof that "unplugged" isn’t always safe when the hardware can be reprogrammed underneath you.
Old Kindle owners learn sunset means bricked libraries
A report warns that some aging Kindles are losing basic functionality as backend services and formats quietly change. For people who thought of the device as a long-term reading appliance, it feels like planned obsolescence by slow drift. Once again the lesson is clear: a "purchased" ebook isn’t nearly as permanent as a beat-up paperback.
Big Tech tightens its grip as lock-in grows… Amazon shutters Kindle for PC, while new Fire TV sticks push store-only apps and turn DRM into a fresh headache… Europe rolls out the battery passport, tagging every cell’s carbon trail and recycling fate… In labs, NIST stacks exotic materials on silicon to make chip-scale lasers at almost any wavelength, hinting at faster links and real optical computing… On Capitol Hill, the MATCH Act targets advanced chipmaking gear bound for China… The AI Index charts show Nvidia cashing in, trust sliding, and a few giants steering the field… New FP4 number formats and pricier Opus tokens squeeze AI inference costs… An essay says apps must go headless so AI agents can drive everything… And OpenAI and Nvidia race for the reasoning crown, one with models, the other with machines.
EU Slaps Digital Passports On Every Battery
The EU’s new battery passport rules will tag every lithium-ion battery with a digital record of where it came from, its carbon footprint, and how it’s recycled. It sounds boring, but this could shake up phones, EVs, and the entire mining supply chain in a very real way.
Amazon Kills Kindle For PC And Shrugs
Amazon will shut down Kindle for PC on June 30, turning a once-handy desktop reader into dead weight overnight. People who liked backing up or managing ebooks on a real computer see this as pure lock-in, and yet another reminder that DRM is a ticking time bomb for your library.
New Fire Sticks Block Sideloaded Apps
The newest Fire TV Stick models quietly block apps from outside Amazon’s own store, making life harder for power users, archivists and anyone who hates being force-fed a walled garden. It’s one more streaming box morphing into an ad machine first and a computer second.
NIST Builds Any Wavelength Lasers On Silicon
By stacking exotic materials onto ordinary silicon, NIST scientists say they can crank out chip-scale lasers at practically any wavelength. That could supercharge integrated photonics, ultra-fast data links and sensors, nudging us a bit closer to real optical computing instead of just talking about it.
New US Bill Targets Chipmaking Gear For China
The bipartisan MATCH Act goes after semiconductor manufacturing equipment, aiming to keep advanced tools out of Chinese firms like Huawei. Lawmakers finally seem to realize that controlling the machines that print AI chips might matter more than lecturing about "AI safety" on conference stages.
New Charts Show Who Owns AI In 2026
Stanford’s AI Index drops a pile of graphs showing models ballooning in size, Nvidia minting money on H100e chips, and public trust sliding. The report makes it painfully clear that a handful of frontier labs and cloud giants now steer research, policy fights and the power bills.
Apps Go Headless So Your AI Can Drive
This essay argues that modern apps must expose clean, headless APIs so your personal AI agents can click the buttons for you. The idea is simple: the real customer isn’t you anymore, it’s your LLM, and services that don’t play nice with agents risk getting cut out of the loop.
Anthropic Opus Prices Jump Around Forty Five Percent
A community token cost tracker suggests moving from Opus 4.6 to 4.7 effectively jacks prices by roughly 45%, depending on usage. Fans love the smarter model but feel the squeeze, and teams are already talking about trimming context windows and prompt bloat to survive the bill.
Four Bit Floating Point Becomes AI’s New Toy
A deep dive into FP4 formats shows how Nvidia and friends are slicing numbers down to 4 bits to cram more parameters onto GPUs. It’s ugly math, but the promise of cheaper, faster AI inference has people willing to trade some elegance for raw throughput and lower cloud bills.
OpenAI And Nvidia Battle Over AI Reasoning Crown
An analysis frames OpenAI and Nvidia as two twenty-billion-dollar giants racing to own "reasoning"—one via massive LLMs, the other with silicon and toolchains. The piece captures the mood that we’re watching an ecosystem tilt toward whoever can ship better brains and better GPUs, not just more hype.
Hackers Rewrite Every Linux Syscall At Load Time
A wild experiment hooks into Linux program loading and rewrites every system call on the fly, aiming for safer and more controlled containers. It’s deliciously over-engineered, but taps into a real hunger for stronger sandboxing when nobody trusts random binaries—or cloud hosts—anymore.
Flock Calls Critics Terrorists After False Alerts
Surveillance firm Flock Safety apologizes for bogus child predator alerts, then turns around and brands some critics as "terrorists" in internal chatter. It’s a grim reminder that license plate readers and crime tech aren’t just buggy—they’re run by companies that struggle with basic restraint.
Inside The B 52’s Analog Star Tracking Computer
A teardown of the B-52 bomber’s electromechanical angle computer shows how pilots once used stars and spinning machinery to navigate long before GPS. The precision gears, motors and optics feel almost sci-fi, and make today’s cheaply-built electronics look weirdly disposable by comparison.
Voyager 1 Shuts Down Instrument To Stay Alive
Engineers at NASA JPL have turned off Voyager 1’s Low-energy Charged Particles detector to conserve power so the 46-year-old craft can keep talking to Earth. It’s like unplugging a beloved sensor to keep the life support running, and space nerds are both impressed and a little heartbroken.
Skiplists Finally Get The Respect They Deserve
A thoughtful piece explains why skiplists—those quirky layered linked lists—actually shine in concurrent systems like BigQuery and testing platforms. For years they were treated as textbook curiosities; now they’re the quiet workhorses behind serious performance and correctness in real databases.
The NIST bug database slows to a crawl as key NVD entries stop getting full treatment... At the same time, cheap adtech geolocation feeds power a quiet global tracking dragnet, and experts call for a ban on selling precise location data as a national security risk... In Europe, major cloud players face heat over hidden data center energy and water footprints, even as the rules keep much of their impact out of sight... A crafty terminal escape bug turns a simple readme.txt into a takeover tool, reminding developers how fragile daily tools remain... AI labs like Anthropic spar with researchers over jailbreak work while rolling out Claude Design and a new model that hits wallets with extra tokens... One engineer steps back from AI to relearn slow coding by hand, and a tool called Slop Cop shows how much of our writing already sounds like a bored chatbot, as we watch the line between human and machine blur.
US bug database quietly walks off the job
The US standards agency NIST is giving up on fully enriching most entries in the National Vulnerability Database, which security teams worldwide use to triage software flaws. People are stunned a cornerstone of cyber defense is being allowed to wither in slow motion.
Ad data turned into global tracking dragnet
A deep dive into Webloc and Cobwebs shows how cheap adtech geolocation data was welded into a massive surveillance system tracking hundreds of millions of devices. Nobody is shocked this was possible, but seeing the plumbing laid out is still deeply chilling.
Experts demand ban on selling precise location data
After the Webloc exposé, privacy advocates are done being polite and call to outlaw the commercial sale of precise geolocation. The argument is simple: if cops, stalkers, and foreign intel can all buy your movements in bulk, the market itself has become a national security risk.
Big Tech hides dirty data center secrets
An investigation alleges Microsoft and industry allies pushed EU rules that keep data center environmental footprints secret. As Europe lectures the world on climate, it’s quietly letting its cloud giants bury the receipts for their massive energy and water use.
Terminal bug makes 'cat readme.txt' dangerous
A security researcher shows how a malicious readme.txt can hijack iTerm2 when you just view it, thanks to weird escape‑sequence trickery. The kicker: AI tools helped uncover the bug, leaving developers uneasy about how fragile their everyday command‑line rituals really are.
Anthropic jailbreak drama gets a public remix
Mozilla‑linked researchers say they replicated Anthropic’s Mythos jailbreak experiments using patched, public models, challenging claims that only tightly gated frontier AIs can be used for this kind of safety work. It fuels suspicion that “too dangerous for open access” often sounds like PR cover.
Claude Design promises instant decks and mockups
Claude Design lets users chat their way to slide decks, product one‑pagers, and UI prototypes, all glued together by Anthropic’s latest model. Busy teams love the idea of banishing blank pages, but designers fear a flood of cookie‑cutter corporate visuals churned out at superhuman speed.
New Claude model hits wallets with token bloat
Power users discovered Claude Opus 4.7 uses way more tokens than 4.6 for the same text, making sessions about 20–30% pricier. Anthropic talks up improvements, but many feel like they got upsold without notice, and are scrambling to recalc their already painful AI bills.
Dev goes cold turkey from AI for three months
One engineer vowed to code by hand for three months after realizing every task started with opening an AI assistant. His reflection on slower, more deliberate work hit a nerve, as many quietly worry their skills are atrophying under a steady drip of autocomplete for the brain.
Slop Cop sniffs out generic AI‑style writing
Slop Cop is a playful editor that flags phrases and structures common in bland LLM prose. People are gleefully testing their own blogs, emails, and PR copy, and discovering just how much of their writing already sounds like it was ghost‑written by a mildly bored chatbot.
Bike bell claims to cut through earbuds' silence
Car maker Škoda is hyping a bike bell tuned to pierce noise‑cancelling headphones, aiming to save riders from pedestrians sealed in their own sound bubbles. It’s part clever safety hack, part marketing stunt, and cyclists are split on whether this is genius or just an ad with a ringtone.
Tiny virtual machines promise instant, portable sandboxes
Smol machines are ultra‑light Linux VMs that cold‑start in under a second and ship as single files. Devs love the idea of disposable, isolated environments that feel like containers without the Docker baggage, and are already dreaming up crazy one‑file app bundles.
Optical computing dream gets another serious revival
A long, optimistic essay argues Mach‑Zehnder interferometer chips might finally make photonic computing practical, after decades of false dawns. It’s speculative but grounded, and hardware nerds are cautiously excited that "this time is different" might not just be another lab fairy tale.
Robot vacuum maker wants to weaponize your mop water
A snarky column skewers Ecovacs for pitching a mop that analyzes your dirty mop water to sell you more cleaning products. It’s peak Internet‑of‑Things absurdity: yet another smart gadget that seems way more interested in squeezing data and dollars than actually cleaning your floor.
Norway gets a jokey new language called Brunost
A hacker built Brunost, a playful programming language styled around Norway’s Nynorsk and powered by Zig under the hood. It’s half satire, half love letter to obscure languages, and the community is delighted that someone cared enough to ship such a gloriously niche toy.
AI steps out of the lab and into the clinic as GPT-Rosalind pushes OpenAI deep into drug discovery with big pharma at its side... Claude Opus 4.7 aims at the hardest programming problems, while Qwen brings an open Mixture-of-Experts coding model to everyday hardware... The backbone of the net quietly levels up as IPv6 finally carries half of global traffic, even as developers turn on Ollama and demand lean, transparent local AI tools... A brutal GPU shortage slams the AI gold rush, with top Nvidia Blackwell capacity already booked and prices soaring... Cloudflare turns storage into one giant Git-like repo with Artifacts and rolls out an AI platform for swarms of edge agents... Atlassian Codex stretches across the whole dev lifecycle, while a hacker runs PCIe over cheap SFP fiber and we watch hardware get wonderfully weird.
Developers sour on Ollama as local AI hub
A long critique of Ollama argues the popular local AI launcher is bloated, clumsy, and hides too much from users. The piece pushes for slimmer tools built directly on llama.cpp and similar tech, instead of trusting yet another black-box app to own local AI.
IPv6 finally serves half of global internet traffic
Google’s IPv6 numbers quietly ticked past 50%, meaning the new address system now carries half of user traffic. After years of jokes about IPv6 being "the future," it’s finally here, cutting through NAT hell and giving the network room to grow again.
AI gold rush slams into brutal GPU shortage wall
An analysis of AI compute prices shows rents for Nvidia Blackwell chips jumping nearly 50%, with capacity booked out and costs soaring. The easy-money phase of AI is fading, and smaller players may find the door to cutting-edge hardware quietly closing.
Cloudflare Artifacts turns storage into one big Git repo
Cloudflare’s Artifacts service promises versioned storage that "speaks Git," sized for humans and AI agents pumping out oceans of code. The idea is simple but bold: make the entire blob store feel like one giant repo, and let bots commit right alongside developers.
Hacker runs PCI Express over cheap fiber modules
A hardware tinkerer shows PCIe signals riding over off-the-shelf SFP fiber modules, turning a lab experiment into a working, high-speed link. It’s delightfully janky engineering that hints at cheaper, longer-range ways to hook GPUs and cards together.
Claude Opus 4.7 targets the hardest programming problems
Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.7 focuses on advanced software engineering and complex reasoning, promising fewer hallucinations and better tooling use. It’s very clear they’re gunning for the "AI senior engineer" slot, not just a friendly chatbot that writes boilerplate.
GPT‑Rosalind pushes OpenAI deep into drug discovery
OpenAI’s GPT‑Rosalind is tuned for life sciences, aimed at biologists, pharma teams, and wet labs rather than coders. With partners like Amgen on board, AI is moving from blog posts to actual molecules, and the ethical and safety stakes just went way up.
Alibaba open-sources powerful MoE coding model Qwen
Qwen3.6‑35B‑A3B lands as a sparse, open Mixture‑of‑Experts model tuned for coding agents, using only 3B active parameters per token. People like that it runs surprisingly well on decent consumer hardware yet competes with much larger closed models.
Cloudflare launches AI platform built for busy agents
Cloudflare’s new AI platform plugs models, tools, queues, and state into its Workers edge. The pitch is simple: let thousands of small agents live close to users, call models cheaply, send email, and store state without spinning up an entire cloud stack.
Atlassian’s Codex turns into full software lifecycle copilot
Atlassian upgrades Codex from a sidekick into a sprawling assistant that plugs into Jira, Bitbucket, and more to help across the whole dev lifecycle. It’s the classic enterprise play: take the tools teams already hate-love, then glue a chatty AI brain on top.
Discourse vows to stay open as rivals lock up
After Cal.com ditched open source, Discourse publicly doubled down on staying GPL. They argue AI scraping isn’t a good excuse to abandon users, and that thriving businesses can still be built on permissive code instead of slamming the door shut.
Proposed US law demands on-device age checks for apps
A new US bill pushes on-device age verification, forcing OS makers like Apple and Google to build in age checks. Critics see a privacy minefield and a path to broader digital IDs, with kids’ safety used as the political battering ram yet again.
EU officials told to ditch WhatsApp and Signal
European governments are nudging civil servants off WhatsApp and Signal and onto services they can control, like Wire. The move screams distrust of US platforms and has people worried that "secure messaging" might become whatever each country approves.
AI gets its own physical shop and tries to profit
A team gave an AI agent a three-year retail lease and real tools, letting it run a store called Andon Market. It actually stocked products, did marketing, and chased profit, turning the usual "agent in a browser" demo into something you can walk into.
Developer builds one absurd website every single month
The creator of absurd.website has shipped 48 ridiculous projects in 48 months, from prank ad systems to interactive oddities. It’s a refreshing reminder that the web can still be weird, joyful, and useless on purpose, not just another landing page funnel.
Big platforms tighten their grip as Google moves to centrally register all Android developers and critics warn of a new gatekeeper era... Amazon reaches further into space with Globalstar, tying more of our phones to its LEO network... A fake Ledger app on Apple’s App Store drains millions in crypto and shakes trust in the walled garden... A farmer is arrested after resisting a giant datacenter, while Cal.com walks away from open source and blames rising AI-driven attacks... Tiny Gemma models beat GPT‑3.5 on a laptop CPU and tools like Darkbloom turn sleeping Macs into private AI nodes... Security researchers describe an AI defense race that burns money to stay ahead of the next exploit... ChatGPT for Excel turns everyday spreadsheets into live AI helpers, even as Claude starts asking some users for real ID checks... In this mix of tighter control, new power, and quiet pushback, we see the next phase of the digital fight for control unfold.
Google Plans Tight Registration For All Android Devs
Google wants every Android developer to register centrally before they can build apps starting 2026, even for non-Play Store projects. Devs see it as a slow march to full gatekeeping and a direct threat to F-Droid, custom ROMs, and indie experiments.
Amazon Buys Globalstar To Beef Up Space Network
Amazon’s grab for Globalstar gives it real satellites, juicy radio spectrum, and hard-won space know-how. The plan: boost the Amazon Leo constellation and offer direct-to-device links, putting even more of your phone’s life under Amazon’s sky-high control.
Cal.com Ditches Open Source And Blames AI Hackers
Scheduling startup Cal.com is going closed source, claiming AI-automated security attacks make their old model too risky. The move reeks of classic "embrace, extend, enshittify" to many devs, who note that plenty of open tools manage security without locking the code away.
Fake Ledger App On App Store Steals Millions
A bogus Ledger crypto wallet app slipped through Apple’s "walled garden" and robbed users of about $9.5M. The whole situation makes Apple’s trust us, we review everything story sound pretty hollow, especially to people who lost coins they thought were safe.
Farmer Arrested After Speaking Against Datacenter Plan
In Oklahoma, a farmer was arrested after going a few seconds over his time while opposing a massive datacenter project. The optics are awful: big infrastructure money on one side, locals literally dragged out by cops on the other, all over who gets to use the land and water.
Tiny Gemma Model Beats GPT 3.5 On CPU
Google’s Gemma 2B model, running on a plain laptop CPU, slightly edged out GPT-3.5 Turbo on the popular MT-Bench test. People are stunned that something this small and cheap can hang with cloud giants, and it fuels the dream of real local-first AI for normal users.
Darkbloom Turns Sleeping Macs Into Private AI Nodes
Darkbloom wants to use idle Apple Silicon Macs as a decentralized inference network, running models privately on your hardware while others pay for the compute. It sounds clever and a bit sketchy at once, with folks asking who profits and who takes the security risk.
AI Security Becomes Proof Of Work Arms Race
A long read on Anthropic Mythos argues cyber defense has turned into a brutal cost war. Rich orgs buy smarter AI to stop attacks; attackers get smarter AI to break in. It feels less like making things safe and more like burning money to stay one inch ahead of the next exploit.
ChatGPT Officially Moves Into Your Excel Spreadsheets
ChatGPT for Excel promises to write formulas, summarize sheets, and tweak data in real time for business users. Office workers are excited and terrified: yes, it can kill boring work, but it also turns your humble spreadsheet into another AI black box that can quietly mess up numbers.
Claude Starts Asking Users For Real ID Checks
Anthropic says some Claude users will need identity verification to keep using powerful AI tools, citing abuse and legal rules. The idea of scanning IDs to talk to a chatbot has people split: some want safer models, others see yet another surveillance creep from big AI.
RedSun Exploit Makes Windows Defender Your Worst Enemy
The RedSun post shows how a goofy interaction with Microsoft Defender in the April update lets attackers escalate to full SYSTEM on Windows 10, 11, and Server. It is equal parts comedy and horror, and admins are treating Defender more like a liability than a shield right now.
Dev Calls Out Cal.com Over Open Source Exit
A widely shared blog says Cal.com blaming AI-driven attackers for going closed source is just a cover for a business pivot. The author argues open source is not dead, and that proper security, not secrecy, is what actually protects users. The dev crowd seems to agree loudly.
Google Data Handed To ICE After Broken Privacy Promise
A researcher says Google promised his protest-related data would be deleted, then it allegedly surfaced in an ICE immigration case. It is a chilling reminder that cloud logs, location trails, and account history can live on long after PR statements say they are gone.
Hidden Files In Satellite TV Beat Iran Blackout
Activists used satellite TV broadcasts to sneak encrypted files into Iran during a near-total internet shutdown. The scheme shows how old-school satellites can outplay modern censorship, and it leaves authoritarian regimes looking pretty clueless about their own tech controls.
US Pushes OS Level Age Checks For The Internet
A proposed US law would push age verification down into operating systems like Windows, letting platforms offload the job. Critics see a surveillance nightmare and a gift to big vendors like Meta and Microsoft, who would suddenly sit between kids and the entire web.