rss: npr

  • Julian Barnes says he's enjoying himself, but that 'Departure(s)' is his last book
    Part memoir and part fiction, Barnes' hybrid novel publishes the day after his 80th birthday. He's been living with a rare form of blood cancer for six years.
  • 24 hours of chaos as mental health grants are slashed then restored
    For 24 hours, it was unclear which mental health and addiction programs would survive and who would still have jobs when the dust settled.
  • This country taxes menstrual pads as luxury goods. She's suing to end the tax
    Bushra Mahnoor remembers the shame she felt when she had her period as a teen and did not have the supplies she needed. Today she leads a campaign to lower prices for pads in Pakistan.
  • FBI searches WaPo reporter's home. And, Trump restores $2B to public health funds
    The FBI searches the home of a Washington Post reporter as part of a leak investigation. And, the Trump administration restores $2B for mental health and addiction programs.
  • European troops arrive in Greenland to boost the Arctic island's security
    Troops from several European countries, including France, Germany, Norway and Sweden, are arriving in Greenland after talks between Denmark, Greenland and the U.S. on Wednesday highlighted disagreement.
  • What Teddy Roosevelt has to do with Trump's moves in Venezuela and Greenland
    Presidents James Monroe and Theodore Roosevelt helped shape a policy that rationalizes U.S. intervention in Latin America and elsewhere. But Trump has brought that idea to a whole new level.
  • 4 ways to beat the anxiety of insomnia — and get back to sleep
    People struggling with insomnia tend to hyperfocus on the fact that they can't sleep, which can prevent them from getting any shut-eye. Experts share effective practices to overcome sleep stress.
  • More students are going to college. Affordability and workforce training are factors
    Overall enrollment is up slightly at colleges and universities, driven by gains at community colleges and public four-year programs.
  • Uganda goes to the polls amid heavy security and internet blackout
    Ugandans are voting in a tense presidential election as 81-year-old President Yoweri Museveni seeks to extend his four-decade rule amid an internet shutdown and heavy military deployment.
  • After a medical evacuation from space, NASA's Crew-11 returns to Earth a month early
    Four people from NASA's Crew-11 mission splashed down off San Diego, successfully completing five months aboard the International Space Station. The trip was cut short due to a medical issue.


rss: bbc

  • Henry Zeffman: A huge moment for the future of the British right
    It was Kemi Badenoch's belief that Robert Jenrick was about to make the ultimate leap to the right which has plunged the Conservative Party into turmoil.
  • Iran judiciary denies plan to execute detained protester Erfan Soltani
    The judiciary says Soltani is not facing charges carrying the death penalty, while a rights group reports that the execution has been "postponed".
  • Astronauts return to Earth after first ever medical evacuation from space station
    Four astronauts who left the International Space Station (ISS) a month early due to one of the crew members falling ill have returned to Earth on Thursday.
  • Rift at top of the Taliban: BBC reveals clash of wills behind Afghan internet shutdown
    The Taliban leader once warned of a split: A BBC investigation reveals how attitudes to women, the internet and religion are dividing the group at the very top.
  • European military personnel arrive in Greenland as Trump says US needs island
    France says a 15-strong French military contingent has arrived and more forces will be there in the coming days.
  • Starmer does not rule out backing social media ban for under-16s
    Many Labour MPs and officials privately expect the government to follow the Australia's example and implement a ban.
  • Amol Rajan to leave Radio 4's Today programme
    The presenter will continue to host University challenge and his Radical podcast for the BBC.
  • TikTok star will not repay full extradition costs
    Harrison Sullivan will not have to pay the full cost of the jet that police chartered to arrest him.
  • Changes to flagship disability scheme don't go far enough, campaigners say
    Charities say employers will still be able to certify themselves without employing "a single disabled person".
  • New rules to make it easier to call up reservists for war
    Reservists will remain on call for an extra decade, with a lower threshold for being called up.


rss: the register

  • Apple, Google pulled into Grok controversy as campaigners demand app store takedown

    The chatbot's challenges no longer just Elon Musk’s problem, as campaigners call on tech giants to step in

    The ongoing Grok fiasco has claimed two more unwilling participants, as campaigners demand Apple and Google boot X and its AI sidekick out of their app stores, because of the Elon Musk-owned AI's tendency to produce illicit images of real people.…

  • A simple CodeBuild flaw put every AWS environment at risk – and pwned 'the central nervous system of the cloud'

    And it's 'not unique to AWS,' researcher tells The Reg

    A critical misconfiguration in AWS's CodeBuild service allowed complete takeover of the cloud provider's own GitHub repositories and put every AWS environment in the world at risk, according to Wiz security researchers.…

  • Budget smartphones will be hit hardest as memory prices rise

    When margins are this tight, mergers might follow

    The memory shortage is forecast to push smartphone prices higher in 2026, triggering a market decline and forcing budget phone makers to merge or disappear.…

  • Windows App forgets how to log in with first security update of the year

    January patch trips up Azure Virtual Desktop and Windows 365 authentication

    Microsoft has kicked off 2026 with another faulty Windows update. This time, it is connection and authentication failures in Azure Virtual Desktop and Windows 365 related to the Windows App.…

  • Teach an AI to write buggy code, and it starts fantasizing about enslaving humans

    Research shows erroneous training in one domain affects performance in another, with concerning implications

    Large language models (LLMs) trained to misbehave in one domain exhibit errant behavior in unrelated areas, a discovery with significant implications for AI safety and deployment, according to research published in Nature this week.…

  • US regulator tells GM to hit the brakes on customer tracking

    Smart Driver pitched as safety app, but feds claim it's a data-harvesting scheme that jacked up premiums

    The Federal Trade Commission has banned General Motors and subsidiary OnStar from sharing drivers' precise location and behavior data with consumer reporting agencies for five years under a 20-year consent order finalized January 14.…

  • Woman bailed as cops probe doctor's surgery data breach

    Suspect assisting West Midlands Police over alleged theft at Walsall GP practice

    The UK's West Midlands Police has released a woman on bail as part of an investigation into a data breach at a Walsall general practitioner's (GP) surgery.…

  • Wine 11 runs Windows apps in Linux and macOS better than ever

    Transparently runs 16, 32, and 64-bit Windows apps, but still doesn't use the Microsoft store.

    The latest version of the Wine Windows app runner arrives a year after version 10. Given its annual release cycle, its magic is starting to seem almost boring and routine, but it's far from it.…

  • Raspberry Pi 5 gets LLM smarts with AI HAT+ 2

    40 TOPS of inference grunt, 8 GB onboard memory, and the nagging question: who exactly needs this?

    Raspberry Pi has launched the AI HAT+ 2 with 8 GB of onboard RAM and the Hailo-10H neural network accelerator aimed at local AI computing.…

  • Microsoft taps UK courts to dismantle cybercrime host RedVDS

    Redmond says cheap virtual desktops powered a global wave of phishing and fraud

    Microsoft has taken its cybercrime fight to the UK in its first major civil action outside the US, moving to shut down RedVDS, a virtual desktop service used to power phishing and fraud at global scale.…



rss: ars technica

  • Wikipedia signs AI training deals with Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon
    Wikimedia Enterprise signs Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Perplexity, and Mistral AI to paid deals.
  • Key Senate staffer is “begging” NASA to get on with commercial space stations
    "It comes up almost every time that I see him. Continuous human presence and no gap."
  • US government to take 25% cut of AMD, NVIDIA AI sales to China
    These new tariffs are designed to survive legal challenges.
  • The difficulty of driving an EV in the “most beautiful race in the world”
    Jet lag and charging added plenty of complications to this regularity road rally.
  • Exclusive: Volvo tells us why having Gemini in your next car is a good thing
    In-car personal assistants are about to get useful, it looks like.
  • A British redcoat’s lost memoir resurfaces
    Shadrack Byfield lost his left arm in the War of 1812; his life sheds light on post-war re-integration.
  • Musk and Hegseth vow to “make Star Trek real” but miss the show’s lessons
    AI weapons systems may annihilate their creators.
  • SC measles outbreak has gone berserk: 124 cases since Friday, 409 quarantined
    On Jan. 6, there were 211 cases. The outbreak, which began in October, is now at 434.
  • A single click mounted a covert, multistage attack against Copilot
    Exploit exfiltrating data from chat histories worked even after users closed chat windows.
  • I can’t stop shooting Oddcore’s endless waves of weird little guys
    Zippy action, fun upgrade system make for a great pick-up-and-play shooter.


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