rss: npr

  • The rise and fall of Nicolás Maduro
    The rise of Venezuela's deposed president, Nicolás Maduro, was slow, beginning in youth politics and shaped by the mentorship of Hugo Chávez . His fall, too, unfolded over years.
  • Trial begins for officer accused of failing to protect children during Uvalde shooting
    One of the first police officers to respond to the 2022 school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, goes on trial Monday on charges that he failed to protect children during the attack.
  • Miami mayor calls for Trump to 'immediately' reinstate TPS for Venezuelans
    Higgins said the Trump administration ending TPS for Venezuelans in early 2025 was "reckless, dangerous, and wrong."
  • Nicolás Maduro will appear in U.S. federal court on Monday
    The Venezuelan president, who was captured by U.S. forces early Saturday, is awaiting trial in New York City on federal criminal charges.
  • Rubio says there's 'not a war against Venezuela' despite U.S. capture of Maduro
    Top Democrat calls operation 'a violation of the law' and promises Senate vote on President Trump's war powers.
  • Denmark's prime minister says 'stop the threats' of U.S. annexing Greenland
    The wife of Trump's deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller posted a photo implying a U.S. takeover of Greenland, hours after the U.S. attacks on Venezuela.
  • Here's a partial list of U.S. elected officials opposing Trump's invasion of Venezuela
    Trump's decision to depose Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has drawn praise inside the U.S., especially from Republican leaders. But the invasion also faces significant opposition from elected officials across the political spectrum.
  • Venezuela is the latest in the U.S.'s long history of interventions in Latin America
    NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks to Eduardo Gamarra, professor of politics and international relations at Florida International University, about the history of U.S. intervention in Latin America.
  • Wellness trends worth taking into the new year (and some that aren't)
    We reported on all sorts of products and practices promising to make you healthy last year. Here are the ones that stood up to science, and those that were mostly hype.
  • Trump tried to bury evidence of the Jan. 6 riot. NPR's archive preserves the facts
    NPR's Jan. 6 archive brings together reporting, video, documents and testimony to show what really happened during the Capitol riot. Explore the timeline, cases and evidence behind the attack.


rss: bbc

  • Danish PM tells Trump to stop 'threats' against Greenland
    Mette Frederiksen said the "US has no right to annex any of the three nations in the Danish kingdom".
  • Teen girl educated in UK confirmed to have died in Swiss bar fire
    The family of Charlotte Niddam announced her death "with great sadness" as Swiss authorities confirmed all victims had been identified.
  • New powers to seize phones from migrants come into force
    The government says it will help gather intelligence on smuggling gangs.
  • The myth of willpower - and why some people struggle to lose weight more than others
    Thousands of genes that have an influence on weight, say experts - which means weight loss isn't a level playing field
  • Timothée's shoutout for Kylie and other moments from Critics' Choice Awards
    Jessie Buckley won best actress and Adolescence also scooped four awards on the night in California.
  • How England's bowling unravelled in Sydney
    Why England's bowling performance on day two of the fifth Test is an alarming hint to the future.
  • Mother and daughter named as sea tragedy victims alongside man who tried to save them
    Mark Ratcliffe and Sarah Keeling died on Friday and the police search for Grace Keeling continues.
  • Junk food TV and online ad ban to tackle childhood obesity begins
    Soft drinks, chocolate, pizzas and ice creams will be targeted in the UK government's plan.
  • Faisal Islam: What's behind PM's notable shift on closer ties to Europe?
    Sir Keir Starmer has given details of his plans for a "Brexit reset". What could it mean for the UK?
  • We lived in fear of meeting killers, say victims' families
    Two women say they are relived at plans to impose tougher restrictions on where offenders can live.


rss: the register

  • Your smart TV is watching you and nobody's stopping it

    From buried settings to geopolitical risk, the business model is surveillance

    Opinion At the end of last year, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued five of the largest TV companies, accusing them of excessive and deceptive surveillance of their customers.…

  • Techie turned the tables on office bullies with remote access rumble

    Meet the ‘Mean Avenger’, the office anti-hero who steps in when managers don’t defend their team

    Who, Me? How on earth is it 2026 already? The Register will ponder that existential matter after first presenting a new instalment of “Who, Me?” – the reader-contributed column in which we share your stories of things you shouldn’t do at work, and how you escape them unscathed.…

  • Trump admin sends heart emoji to commercial spyware makers with lifted Predator sanctions

    Also, Korean Air hacked, EmEditor installer hijacked, a perfect 10 router RCE vuln, and more

    infosec in brief The Trump administration has cleared a trio of individuals sanctioned by the Biden administration for involvement with the Intellexa spyware consortium behind the Predator surveillance tool, removing restrictions that had barred them from doing business with the US.…

  • Palo Alto Networks security-intel boss calls AI agents 2026's biggest insider threat

    Lock 'em down

    interview AI agents represent the new insider threat to companies in 2026, according to Palo Alto Networks Chief Security Intel Officer Wendi Whitmore, and this poses several challenges to executives tasked with securing the expected surge in autonomous agents.…

  • Claude is his copilot: Rust veteran designs new Rue programming language with help from AI bot

    Rust veteran Steve Klabnik is using an LLM to explore memory safety without garbage collection

    Naming a new programming language "Rue" sounds like an acknowledgment of doubt about the project's prospects, if you take "Rue" to mean "regret."…

  • Users prompt Elon Musk's Grok AI chatbot to remove clothes in photos then 'apologize' for it

    Repeat after me: Chatbots are not sentient and have no agency

    Grok, the AI chatbot owned and operated by Elon Musk's xAI, is facing a firestorm of outrage after users prompted it to create images of naked and scantily clad people from real photographs, some of whom are underage.…

  • Headset hype meets harsh reality as Apple and Meta VR shipments fizzle in 2025

    But how about some smart glasses instead?

    Apple’s pricey Vision Pro VR headset had a tough 2025.…

  • Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella becomes AI influencer, asks us all to move beyond slop

    Exec argues we need a new metaphor focused on AI as a lever rather than a job killer

    Microsoft CEO and head AI peddler Satya Nadella wants you to know that it's time for the next phase of AI acceptance, where we focus on how humans are empowered by tools and agents and how we deploy resources to support this growth.…

  • Bitfinex crypto thief who was serving five years thanks Trump for early release

    Netflix documentary part 2 in the works?

    Ilya Lichtenstein, who pleaded guilty to money-laundering charges tied to the 2016 theft of about 120,000 bitcoins from the Bitfinex exchange and was sentenced to five years in prison, has been released after roughly 14 months in the slammer.…

  • Cybercrook claims to be selling infrastructure info about three major US utilities

    For the bargain price of 6.5 bitcoin

    A cybercrook claims to have breached Pickett and Associates, a Florida-based engineering firm whose clients include major US utilities, and is selling what they claim to be about 139 GB of engineering data about Tampa Electric Company, Duke Energy Florida, and American Electric Power. The price is 6.5 bitcoin, which amounts to about $585,000.…



rss: ars technica

  • No, Grok can’t really “apologize” for posting non-consensual sexual images
    Letting the unreliable Grok be its own "spokesperson" lets xAI off the hook.
  • Healthy 18-year-old welder nearly died of anthrax—the 9th such puzzling case
    "Welder's Anthrax" was first coined in 2022, when seven cases had been identified.
  • OpenAI reorganizes some teams to build audio-based AI hardware products
    Voice has lagged in adoption behind screens. OpenAI wants to change that.
  • Researchers spot Saturn-sized planet in the “Einstein desert”
    Rogue, free-floating planets appear to have two distinct origins.
  • SpaceX begins “significant reconfiguration” of Starlink satellite constellation
    "Biggest advantage of lower altitude is that beam diameter is smaller for a given antenna size."
  • Final reminder: Donate to win swag in our annual Charity Drive sweepstakes
    Today is your last chance to add to this year's charity haul of nearly $38,000.
  • xAI silent after Grok sexualized images of kids; dril mocks Grok’s “apology”
    xAI may be liable for Grok generating AI CSAM.
  • Tesla sales fell by 9 percent in 2025, its second yearly decline
    Deadly doors, a busted battery bet, and a toxic owner: What's not to like?
  • After half a decade, the Russian space station segment stopped leaking
    "NASA and Roscosmos continue to monitor and investigate the previously observed cracks."
  • Marvel rings in new year with Wonder Man trailer
    "Acting is the sum of everything you've experienced. The joy. Sadness. Loss, Heartbreak."


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