Friday, June 19, 2026

10,000 GitHub Repos Spread Trojans!

10,000 GitHub Repos Spread Trojans!

GitHub Wobbles and Hardware Bites

  • Forge Fans Plot Life After GitHub

    The mood around GitHub turned sour as outages, AI traffic and centralization worries pushed people to dream about a healthier home for code. The pitch for Forgejo and other alternatives landed because too many developers are tired of one shaky gatekeeper.

  • iPhone Prices Feel The Chip Squeeze

    Apple is preparing shoppers for pricier devices as memory chips get more expensive, and nobody is pretending this stops at one product line. If the iPhone 18 costs more, it will feel less like premium magic and more like silicon inflation with a logo.

  • AMD Drops Security Without Much Noise

    AMD quietly dropping memory encryption from some consumer Ryzen chips went down badly because it looks like a security downgrade hidden in the fine print. People can live with trade-offs, but not with surprise trade-offs dressed up as progress.

  • GitHub Becomes Trojan Horse Bazaar

    A report claiming 10,000 GitHub repos were spreading Trojan malware hit a nerve because open code is supposed to build trust, not booby traps. The story fed a bigger fear that software supply chains are now crawling with polished fakes and poisoned downloads.

  • Let's Encrypt Trips The Web

    When Let's Encrypt spent much of the day wobbling, it was a reminder that the web still rests on a few quiet pillars. Even reduced redundancy makes site owners sweat, because certificate trouble can turn ordinary maintenance into a full-on internet migraine.

AI Race Speeds Up and Sours

  • GLM-5.2 Wins With A Giant Catch

    Chinese lab Z.ai grabbed the open-model crown with GLM-5.2, but the celebration came with a bill big enough to make hobbyists choke. The model looks powerful on benchmarks, yet actually running it sounds like buying a race car and learning petrol now costs your rent.

  • OpenAI Snags Another AI Star

    AI talent musical chairs got louder with Noam Shazeer heading to OpenAI, another sign the biggest labs are hoovering up star researchers as fast as money allows. It reads like a transfer-window headline, except the trophies are models and data centers.

  • AI Fatigue Turns Into Open Revolt

    This essay traced the path from mild curiosity to full AI backlash, capturing a feeling that the sales pitch has outrun the reality. People are not just annoyed by the tools; they are worn down by the constant insistence that every glitch is the future.

  • Bosses Buy AI Even When It Flops

    Companies keep buying LLMs because the story sells, even when the results are shaky and the labor math looks grim. That is the uncomfortable heart of this piece: AI can be flawed, expensive and messy, and still win because bosses love a convincing demo.

  • Tiny Bits Make Big Models Fit

    A deep dive into quantization showed why squeezing giant models into fewer bits matters so much. This is the unglamorous magic behind cheaper, faster AI, and it explains why suddenly enormous models fit on hardware that looked hopeless not long ago.

Builders Rip Open Black Boxes

  • Parts Wiki Turns Gadgets Inside Out

    The wildly popular BOMwiki turns ordinary products into giant exploded diagrams of parts, screws and materials, and people loved it because it makes manufacturing feel visible again. In an era of sealed boxes, a public bill of materials feels almost rebellious.

  • DuckDB Gets Its Speed Story Told

    A fresh look at why DuckDB is so fast gave the database world catnip: clear explanations, real benchmarks and fewer hand-wavy claims. The appeal is simple enough for anyone to feel it — small tools can still punch far above their weight when the design is sharp.

  • Git Hosting Prepares For The Agent Age

    The push for gitlawb shows how much energy is building around a post-GitHub future, especially one designed for software agents as well as humans. It feels early and a bit wild, but the idea of code hosting that is more open, shared and resilient is landing.

  • Robot Research Moves Next To The Desk

    A home-sized robotics setup living beside a desk captured the new mood in research: real hardware is no longer just for giant labs. Thanks to cheaper parts and open tools like LeRobot, serious experiments now look a lot more like a garage and a lot less like a moon base.

  • MIT Peels Back The Chip Mystery

    MIT researchers built Fractal, a stripped-down operating system made to watch chips more closely, and it already exposed surprises on the Apple M1. It is the kind of nerdy infrastructure work that quietly matters, because better visibility means fewer black boxes and fewer excuses.

Top Stories

Open model king arrives with a giant bill

Artificial Intelligence

A new open model topped the charts, but the eye-watering cost to run it became the real headline.

GitHub grip sparks breakaway fever

Open Source

Frustration with GitHub outages and centralization is starting to look less like grumbling and more like an escape plan.

Thousands of GitHub repos caught serving trojans

Cybersecurity

A massive batch of malware-tainted repositories reignited fears that the software supply chain is now full of traps.

Apple warns chip costs will raise prices

Consumer Tech

Rising memory costs are heading straight for Apple shoppers, with future devices expected to get pricier.

AMD quietly cuts a Ryzen security feature

Hardware Security

A silent security downgrade on consumer chips left buyers wondering what else can disappear without much notice.

OpenAI lands Noam Shazeer

AI Industry

OpenAI scored another talent-war win by bringing in one of the field's most recognizable researchers.

Let's Encrypt stumbles and web admins sweat

Internet Infrastructure

Trouble at a core certificate provider reminded everyone just how much of the web depends on a few quiet services.

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