rss: npr

  • In court, Elon Musk accuses OpenAI of trying to 'have your cake and eat it, too'
    In his second day on the stand in the trial he launched against OpenAI, Elon Musk said the AI start-up he'd helped found had strayed from its charitable mission.
  • How Trump's EPA head has transformed the agency — and sided with polluters
    New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert says EPA chief Lee Zeldin has rescinded regulations, cut or eliminated departments and terminated the jobs of many scientists. Trump calls Zeldin "our secret weapon."
  • '8647' got James Comey indicted. What exactly does it mean?
    A grand jury charged Comey with threatening Trump's life through his since-deleted 2025 post of seashells forming "8647." Trump is the 47th president, and the term "86" has a few possible meanings.
  • United Arab Emirates announces it's leaving OPEC
    The UAE says it will leave OPEC, amid tensions with Saudi Arabia and the chaos of the Iran war.
  • Supreme Court calls Louisiana's House map an 'unconstitutional racial gerrymander'
    The court kept Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act intact, but the decision all but guts a landmark law that came out of the Civil Rights Movement and protected the collective voting power of racial minorities when political maps are redrawn.
  • As Supreme Court weighs Trump's immigration policy, senior citizens join the fight
    As the Supreme Court weighs the Trump administration's termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and Syrians, seniors are advocating for protections for their immigrant caregivers.
  • Greetings from Syria, where a postwar olive harvest offers a long-lost taste of home
    In the warm sun, gathering handfuls of hard olives promised a taste of home that residents of a village in the Homs countryside had been missing for nearly 14 years of civil war.
  • The Trump team is quietly eliminating U.S. support for birth control abroad
    Congress has allocated more than $500 million for family planning work internationally. The Trump administration hasn't spent it — and the consequences are already being felt.
  • Welcome to 'Anxietyland' theme park, where the rides are no fun
    From the Emotional Roller Coaster to the Worry-go-round, cartoonist Gemma Correll walks us through her brain's not-so-amusing amusement park in a darkly funny memoir.
  • Families sue OpenAI over Canadian mass shooter's use of ChatGPT
    The lawsuits claim OpenAI was negligent for failing to report the shooter to authorities after her account was flagged for "gun violence activity and planning."


rss: bbc

  • Watch: How the Golders Green attack unfolded
    Two Jewish men were been stabbed in Golders Green, north London, as the Metropolitan Police formally declared it a terrorist incident.
  • The subtle messages hidden in the King's speeches
    How King Charles III navigated a diplomatic tightrope in his speech to the US Congress.
  • Nine arrested after allegations of modern slavery and forced marriage in religious group
    Up to 500 officers are involved in three raids at Crewe's Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light group.
  • How UAE's exit could affect Opec's influence over the oil price
    The BBC takes a look in charts at what the UAE's departure could mean for the oil cartel and more widely.
  • Stephen Fry sues tech conference for up to £100,000 after falling off stage
    The star said he broke his leg, hip, pelvis and a "bunch of ribs" at the CogX convention in 2023.
  • William and Catherine share new photo to mark 15th wedding anniversary
    The photo shows William and Catherine lying in grass with their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.
  • We can't abolish leasehold outright, housing minister says
    Matthew Pennycook rejects criticism the government is dragging its feet on leasehold reform.
  • Ex-FBI director James Comey surrenders over charge of threatening Trump's life in Instagram post
    Prosecutors say a 2025 seashell photo posted by the former FBI director was a call for violence against Trump.
  • Man offered Ukrainians money to carry out Starmer arson attacks, court hears
    The three men are accused of targeting north London properties linked to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
  • Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge
    The final operation to save the whale is being closely followed, after the failure of earlier attempts.


rss: the register

  • Databricks can't seem to shake authors' copyright claim that could result in 'extraordinary' damages

    Authors say it acquired an LLM that was trained on their copyrighted data, and judge keeps asking for more info

    Databricks cannot shake a class action lawsuit targeting its LLM, which several book authors contend was created with a database that contained pirated versions of some of their copyrighted books – and about 196,000 titles in all.…

  • Fedora 44 is out – countless versions of it

    New sealed bootable container images and Stratis storage, too

    Fedora Linux 44 has arrived – in multiple formats and for several CPU families, including some new container formats and storage options.…

  • Cloudflare says autocrats, wars and elections caged the internet in Q1

    Iran went dark twice, AWS got droned, oh and TalkTalk broke something it refuses to talk about

    The first quarter of 2026 saw a surge in severe and prolonged internet disruptions, from government shutdowns to power outages to the occasional mystery incident.…

  • Yet another experiment proves it's too damn simple to poison large language models

    There is no 6 Nimmt! champion, but a $12 domain registration and one Wikipedia edit convinced several bots there was

    Unlike search engines that let you judge competing sources, search-backed AI chatbots can turn shaky web material into confident answers. Case in point: A security engineer convinced several bots that he was the reigning world champion of a popular German card game, even though no such championship exists.…

  • NASA boss: Make Pluto A Planet Again

    Despite looming science cuts, Isaacman finds resources to poke the planetary hornet nest

    NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman delivered some potentially good news at a Senate hearing this week, as well as some slightly odd news: in an environment of constrained budgets, the space agency was somehow finding resources to contest the decision to relegate Pluto from planet status.…

  • CISA flags data-theft bug in NSA-built OT networking tool

    GrassMarlin leaks sensitive information, provided your targeting phishing skills are sharp enough

    The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is warning anyone who uses GrassMarlin, a tool developed by the National Security Agency (NSA), about a new vulnerability that attackers can use to snoop on sensitive information.…

  • AWS plants more tombstones in the application graveyard

    Eleven up, ten down

    On Tuesday in San Francisco at an event called "What's Next with AWS," CEO Matt Garman took the stage to announce that AWS is (for what, depending on how you count, is the seventh, eighth, or ninth time) moving up the stack and entering the applications business.…

  • GitHub: Woah, a genuinely helpful AI-assisted bug report that isn't total slop. Here, Wiz, take this wad of cash

    Claude ploughs through months of work in rapid time, helps Wiz researchers nab lucrative award

    Wiz researchers are set for a tidy payday thanks to their discovery of a high-severity flaw in GitHub's git infrastructure that handed remote attackers full read/write access to private GitHub repositories using a single command.…

  • AWS keynote hypes AI as magic. Its own engineers tell a different story

    No shortcuts, human-review everything, says internal team - and keep hiring junior developers

    Interview Steve Tarcza, director of Amazon Stores, says his team — StoreGen — exists to help the retail giant's developers move faster and cut friction. But despite the AI mandate, one principle is non-negotiable: nothing ships without a human checking it first.…

  • Microsoft opens door to the past by releasing 86-DOS and PC-DOS 1.00

    Back to a time when source repositories were printouts and commits were hand-written notes

    Antiques code show Microsoft has released the source for another of its relics. This time, it's 86-DOS 1.00 getting the open source treatment, and a whole lot more for retro enthusiasts.…



rss: ars technica

  • Nvidia fixes the 8GB RAM problem with one of its GPUs—if you can pay for it
    Framework charges nearly double for the 12GB version of the mobile RTX 5070.
  • Professional school grads from diverse classes get higher salaries
    Study authors say courts should reconsider rulings in light of this new evidence.
  • Attempt to repeal Colorado's right-to-repair law fails
    Manufacturers backed effort to repeal the law but ultimately failed.
  • A Falcon 9 rocket will hit the Moon this summer at seven times the speed of sound
    The object will be traveling at 2.43 km a second, or 5,400 mph, upon impact.
  • Sam Altman is “the face of evil” for not reporting school shooter, says lawyer
    Lawsuits: OpenAI didn't report ChatGPT user to cops to protect Altman, IPO.
  • Check your gravity with NASA's Artemis II zero-g indicator
    On sale through the NASA exchange.
  • Why a recent supply-chain attack singled out security firms Checkmarx and Bitwarden
    Security firms find themselves especially exposed.
  • Anti-Trump Instagram pic of seashells now enough to indict ex-FBI directors
    The clown car is all gassed up.
  • Flesh-eating bacteria devour man's arm and leg in just three days
    When doctors saw him, his limbs were discolored and crackling.
  • FCC orders review of ABC licenses after Kimmel joke offends Trump and first lady
    Kimmel joke calling Melania an "expectant widow" followed quickly by FCC order.


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