rss: npr

  • Supreme Court appears to lean toward ending TPS for some migrants
    The U.S. Supreme Court appeared sympathetic to the Trump administration's move to end temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians in the country.



  • The Austrian nuns who fled their care home are now in Rome and visited the Vatican
    The three octogenarian nuns, who made headlines last year after they broke back into their convent, joined others at St. Peter's Square for a general audience with Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday morning.
  • House extends a controversial spy tool, but Senate path is unclear ahead of deadline
    The House has approved a three year extension of the surveillance program known as FISA Section 702. The bill now heads to the Senate, where it faces a difficult path to final passage.
  • Long a dream, it's now real: a fast and accurate TB test that doesn't need phlegm
    TB tests use phlegm — not the easiest thing to get or work with. It takes time for results. And there can be false negatives and positives. A new test is more accurate and takes less than half an hour.
  • DOD officials say Iran war has cost $25 billion so far during Congressional grilling
    The Pentagon says that the cost of the war with Iran is estimated to be some $25 billion. Defense officials were appearing on the Hill for budget discussions.
  • The Iran war now has a price tag ($25 billion), but still no end date
    The Pentagon estimates the war has cost $25 billion over the past two months. In congressional testimony, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth did not say when the war might end.
  • Florida lawmakers pass a voting map that could help Republicans flip 4 House seats
    The map drawn by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis boosts President Trump's effort to reshape voting before the midterm elections. The GOP likely holds a slight edge over Democrats in redistricting now.
  • Elon Musk accuses OpenAI's leaders of 'looting the nonprofit' in court testimony
    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    New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert says EPA chief Lee Zeldin has rescinded regulations, cut or eliminated departments and terminated the jobs of many scientists.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.


rss: bbc

  • Police declare terrorist incident after two Jewish men stabbed in London
    A 45-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, the Met Police says.
  • Watch: Met Police body-worn footage of Golders Green arrest
    Footage shows the moment a man was arrested after two Jewish men were stabbed in north London.
  • King and Queen lay flowers at 9/11 Memorial in New York
    King Charles and Queen Camilla on their state visit to the US visit the memorial in New York.
  • The city caught in the middle of the big energy shift debate
    Is the UK fumbling the shift away from oil and gas jobs?
  • Interest rates expected to be held as uncertainty over Iran war continues
    Future base rate changes are hard to predict as analysts judge the economic impact of the Iran war.
  • Women can wait years for an endometriosis diagnosis. New tech could change that
    A new scan technique could spot areas of endometriosis missed by conventional scans, scientists say.
  • Hereditary peers' last hurrah as 700-year-old system abolished
    It comes after legislation to remove their right to sit in the upper chamber passed last month.
  • 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.
  • New images show suspect taking selfies before Washington press dinner shooting
    Prosecutors argue Cole Tomas Allen should remain in custody until trial on a charge of attempted assassination of President Donald Trump.
  • Big US tech stocks swing as investors probe AI spending
    Meta, Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft all reported earnings at the same time on Wednesday.


rss: the register

  • Linux cryptographic code flaw offers fast route to root

    Patches land for authencesn flaw enabling local privilege escalation

    Developers of major Linux distributions have begun shipping patches to address a local privilege escalation (LPE) vulnerability arising from a logic flaw.…

  • Amazon chips no longer just a side dish, they're a $20B biz

    The Trainium train keeps a-rollin'

    Amazon is now among the top three datacenter chip businesses in the world, as its semiconductor business surpassed a $20 billion annual run rate ... and it would be closer to $50 billion if it included itself among the customers, CEO Andy Jassy said during the company’s first quarter earnings call on Wednesday.…

  • Researchers move in the right direction, develop powerful GPS interference alarm

    ORNL says portable detector kit can separate real GPS signals from fake ones even at equal strength

    GPS spoofing, which sends fake satellite-like signals, and GPS jamming, which drowns receivers in noise, are increasingly serious problems. Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee have created what they say is the most effective system yet for detecting GPS interference, which could help blunt such attacks.…

  • Microsoft's patch for a 0-day exploited by Russian spies fell short. Another Windows flaw is under attack

    Second try's a charm?

    Microsoft and the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned that attackers are exploiting a zero-click Windows flaw that can expose sensitive information on vulnerable systems.…

  • Legacy TLS tour continues with Exchange Online blocking old versions from July 2026

    Microsoft readies the axe once again for yesterday's security

    Microsoft has warned users still clinging to legacy TLS versions that the end is nigh for TLS 1.0 and 1.1 on POP3 and IMAP4 connections to Exchange Online.…

  • 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.…



rss: ars technica

  • ABC can beat Trump FCC's license threat if owner Disney is willing to fight
    Broadcast license renewals are "all but automatic" due to 1996 change in US law.
  • OpenAI Codex system prompt includes explicit directive to "never talk about goblins"
    Directions also include system instructions to act like "you have a vivid inner life."
  • Howdy's dated $3/month ad-free streaming service said to have 1M subscribers
    Most are keeping their subscriptions after signing up, too, research firm says.
  • New Sam Bankman-Fried trial would be huge waste of court’s time, judge says
    FTX fraudster came out as Republican, then tried to claim Biden's DOJ targeted him.
  • Drone strikes on data centers spook Big Tech, halting Middle East projects
    Uninsurable war damage is forcing tech companies to rethink Middle East plans.
  • Motorola reveals 2026 Razr lineup with modest upgrades and higher prices
    Motorola's foldable lineup is bigger and more spendy than ever.
  • 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.


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