rss: npr

  • It's the last news quiz of the year! Will you go out on top?
    This week, we've got annoying holiday movies, chatty White House insiders, and cheese.
  • What to watch for in this weekend's College Football Playoff first round
    An unpredictable and exciting college football season is coming to a close. This weekend's first-round slate is set up for two tight games and two blowouts — but in the playoffs, anything goes.
  • Friday is the deadline to release the Epstein files. Here's what to expect
    Friday is the deadline for the government to release files related to the life and death of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and there are still questions about what will be published and when.
  • Trump will revisit a North Carolina town, now the focus of a newly redrawn congressional district
    While he is directly appealing to Americans that the economy is improving, President Trump will visit a congressional district Republicans are eyeing in their attempts to keep control the U.S. House.
  • COMIC: 6 tips to help you overcome social anxiety this season
    If you're tempted to bail on potentially fun events becuase you feel awkward, read this. Level up your small talk game and practice social courage with six tips from psychologists.
  • In the shadow of U.S. export controls, China rallies its own chip industry
    The chip industry in China is hustling to overcome a Western tech choke hold, even as President Trump appears poised to loosen U.S. chip restrictions.
  • Meet the new WaPo food critic who won't dine in anonymity
    NPR's Leila Fadel tags along for lunch with Elazar Sontag, the Washington Post's new food critic.
  • Trump suspends U.S. green card lottery after Brown University and MIT shootings
    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a post on the social platform X that, at Trump's direction, she is ordering the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services to pause the program.
  • EU leaders agree on $105bn Ukraine loan, but without relying on frozen Russian assets
    European Union leaders have agreed to provide a massive interest-free loan to Ukraine to meet its military and economic needs for the next two years. The loan will not rely on frozen Russian assets.
  • A federal jury finds Milwaukee judge guilty of obstructing immigration agents
    A jury returns a guilty verdict in the case of Hannah Dugan.  The Milwaukee judge was accused of allowing an undocumented immigrant defender to evade immigration agents


rss: bbc

  • Fraught EU summit backs Ukraine but divisions are clear
    EU leaders agreed to loan Ukraine €90bn to stay financially afloat for the next two years.
  • Government data stolen in hack, minister confirms
    The trade minister says information was accessed and an investigation has been launched.
  • £100 contactless card limit to be lifted
    Card providers can decide whether to offer unlimited payments on contactless cards.
  • Watch: Bondi hero Ahmed Al Ahmed given donations totalling £1.24m
    Australia's prime minister visited Ahmed in hospital as he's treated for shooting injuries.
  • Millions head home for Christmas on busiest day of festive getaway
    Road, rail and air travellers are being advised to allow extra time for travel and check their routes.
  • What Paul and Joshua have to gain - and lose - from their fight this weekend
    BBC Sport breaks down one of the most controversial fights of the decade, as Britain's Anthony Joshua says he will not carry Jake Paul for one second longer than he has to.
  • Brown University shooting suspect found dead, police say
    Suspect Claudio Neves Valente has also been linked by police to the murder of an MIT professor on Monday.
  • TikTok owner signs deal to avoid US ban
    The deals would end years of efforts by Washington to force ByteDance to sell its US operations.
  • Retail sales fall as Black Friday deals fail to lure shoppers
    Supermarket sales fell for the fourth month in a row, while discounts did not lift Black Friday spending in November, figures suggest.
  • Drones detect deadly virus in Arctic whales' breath
    Whale breath collected by drones is giving clues to the health of wild humpbacks and other whales.


rss: the register

  • Faith in the internet is fading among young Brits

    Ofcom survey finds 18-34s increasingly see life online as bad for society and their mental health

    Young Brits are souring on the internet, with increasing numbers seeing it as damaging to society and their mental health, according to latest research published by Ofcom.…

  • GOV.UK to unleash AI chatbot on confused citizens

    Coming with added 'filters and rules' after prototype spat out inaccurate or outright wrong responses

    The UK's Government Digital Service (GDS) will add an AI chatbot to its GOV.UK app in early 2026, before rolling it out across the GOV.UK website used by most government departments and services.…

  • Cornish recycling drive sows confusion among Reg Standards Bureau

    Are pasties a proxy for weight? Or a cypher for circumference?

    The Reg Standards Bureau was plunged into uproar this week when a reader suggested a new unit for weight, inspired by Cornwall's revamped food recycling service.…

  • User found two reasons – both of them wrong – to dispute tech support's diagnosis

    Hey, teacher, leave that cabling alone

    On Call Welcome once more to On Call, The Register's reader-contributed Friday column in which we share your stories of tech support jobs so wrong, they're right.…

  • Ten mistakes marred firewall upgrade at Australian telco, contributing to two deaths

    Optus gave bad instructions, staff didn’t escalate their concerns

    Technicians working on a firewall upgrade made at least ten mistakes, contributing to two deaths, according to a report on a September incident that saw Australian telco Optus unable to route calls to emergency services.…

  • China turns on a vast experimental network it says is an heir to ARPANET

    Beijing wants to 'seize the initiative in the international competition in cyberspace'

    Chinese authorities on Thursday certified the China Environment for Network Innovation (CENI), a vast research network that Beijing hopes will propel the country to the forefront of networking research.…

  • Amazon blocked 1,800 suspected North Korean scammers seeking jobs

    Plus: Lazarus Group has a brand new BeaverTail

    Even Amazon isn't immune to North Korean scammers who try to score remote jobs at tech companies so they can funnel their wages to Kim Jong Un's coffers.…

  • Waterfox browser goes AI-free, targets the Firefox faithful

    Even if Mozilla is going to add an AI kill switch, that may not be enough to reassure many.

    Waterfox, a popular fork of Firefox, is saying nay to AI. Considering how unpopular Mozilla's plan to botify its browser has become, this could win the alternative some converts.…

  • Snowflake update caused a blizzard of failures worldwide

    Customers in 10 of the company’s 23 regions had “operations fail or take an extended amount of time to complete.”

    Snowflake pushed an update this week that caused a “major outage” worldwide, leaving many users unable to query data, experiencing failures when ingesting files, and receiving error messages for 13 hours, the company wrote in an impact statement.…

  • Your car’s web browser may be on the road to cyber ruin

    Study finds built-in browsers across gadgets often ship years out of date

    Web browsers for desktop and mobile devices tend to receive regular security updates, but that often isn't the case for those that reside within game consoles, televisions, e-readers, cars, and other devices. These outdated, embedded browsers can leave you open to phishing and other security vulnerabilities.…



rss: ars technica

  • These are the flying discs the government wants you to know about
    DiskSat's design offers "a power-to-weight ratio unmatched by traditional aluminum satellites."
  • Parasites plagued Roman soldiers at Hadrian’s Wall
    They were infected by roundworm, whipworm, and microscopic protozoans called Giardia duodenalis.
  • Trump commits to Moon landing by 2028, followed by a lunar outpost two years later
    Also, the Trump administration wants to put some nuclear power reactors there, too.
  • YouTube bans two popular channels that created fake AI movie trailers
    Google loves AI content, except when it doesn't.
  • Peacock showing ads upon launch opens the door for more disruptive streaming ads
    Subscribers will start seeing ads when selecting a user next year.
  • Reminder: Donate to win swag in our annual Charity Drive sweepstakes
    Help increase our charity haul of nearly $18,000 in just over a week.
  • RAM and SSD prices are still climbing—here’s our best advice for PC builders
    I would avoid building a PC right now, but if you can't, here's our best advice.
  • School security AI flagged clarinet as a gun. Exec says it wasn’t an error.
    Human review didn't stop AI from triggering lockdown at panicked middle school.
  • LLMs’ impact on science: Booming publications, stagnating quality
    Once researchers turn to LLMs, paper counts go up, quality does not.
  • Neural DSP models John Mayer’s entire amp and effects rig—and it sounds great
    Mayer gets the "Archetype" treatment.


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