{
  "generatedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:52.192Z",
  "news": [
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly90ZWNoY3J1bmNoLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1LzI5L3NwYWNleC1hd2FyZGVkLTYtNDViLWluLXNwYWNlLWZvcmNlLWNvbnRyYWN0cy1haGVhZC1vZi1pcG8v",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "title": "SpaceX awarded $6.45B in Space Force contracts ahead of IPO",
      "dek": "SpaceX already generated one-fifth of its 2025 revenue from government contracts, the company revealed in its IPO filing.",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/spacex-awarded-6-45b-in-space-force-contracts-ahead-of-ipo/",
      "author": "Sean O'Kane",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 22:21:38 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vaGVhbHRoLzIwMjYvMDUva2VueWFuLWNvdXJ0LWJsb2Nrcy10cnVtcC1hZG1pbi1mcm9tLWR1bXBpbmctZWJvbGEtZXhwb3NlZC1hbWVyaWNhbnMtdGhlcmUv",
      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "title": "Kenyan court blocks Trump admin from dumping Ebola-exposed Americans there",
      "dek": "The US has previously built specialized facilities just for this purpose.",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/05/kenyan-court-blocks-trump-admin-from-dumping-ebola-exposed-americans-there/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-2278036477-1024x648.jpg",
      "author": "Beth Mole",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 21:17:09 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nYWRnZXQuY29tLzIxODM5NjMvZmFibGUtZG9kZ2VzLWd0YS12aS13aXRoLWFub3RoZXItZGVsYXkv",
      "source": "Engadget",
      "title": "Fable dodges GTA VI with another delay",
      "dek": "Fable is delayed again, putting it outside the GTA blast radius.",
      "url": "https://www.engadget.com/2183963/fable-dodges-gta-vi-with-another-delay/",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.engadget.com/img/gallery/fable-dodges-gta-vi-with-another-delay/l-intro-1780084008.jpg",
      "author": "staff@engadget.com (Ian Carlos Campbell)",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 19:48:00 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaG5vbG9neXJldmlldy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS8xMTM4MTEwL3RoZS1kb3dubG9hZC1saXRoaXVtLWV4dHJhY3Rpb24tZWJvbGEtYWktcG9wZS8",
      "source": "MIT Tech Review",
      "title": "The Download: unlocking lithium and controlling Ebola",
      "dek": "This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. How a new extraction process could unlock the world’s lithium A new method for extracting lithium coul",
      "url": "https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/29/1138110/the-download-lithium-extraction-ebola-ai-pope/",
      "author": "Thomas Macaulay",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 12:10:00 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly92ZW50dXJlYmVhdC5jb20vb3JjaGVzdHJhdGlvbi90aGUtYWktYWdlbnQtYm90dGxlbmVjay1pc250LW1vZGVsLXBlcmZvcm1hbmNlLWl0cy1wZXJtaXNzaW9ucw",
      "source": "VentureBeat",
      "title": "The AI agent bottleneck isn't model performance — it's permissions",
      "dek": "Enterprise AI agents are stalling — not because of model performance, but because of permissioning. Every agentic workflow eventually hits the same wall: what is this agent allowed to touch, on whose behalf, and how does the system know? Wo",
      "url": "https://venturebeat.com/orchestration/the-ai-agent-bottleneck-isnt-model-performance-its-permissions",
      "imageUrl": "https://images.ctfassets.net/jdtwqhzvc2n1/3GJ8TdHpeKmb0m17vGERe4/9a0fe35f71e28ad43037babeb1b0e333/crimedy7_illustration_of_a_robot_bouncer_or_security_guard_in_8d52b895-08ce-40f4-9580-8d6048a64abb_1.png?w=300&amp;q=30",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 22:27:49 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaHJhZGFyLmNvbS9wcm8vY291bGQtbWljcm9zb2Z0LWtpbGwtdGhlLXdlYi1icm93c2VyLWF0LWJ1aWxkLWV2ZXJ5dGhpbmctZGV2ZWxvcGVycy1uZWVkLXRvLWtub3ctYWJvdXQtdGhlLW5sd2ViLXByb3RvY29s",
      "source": "TechRadar",
      "title": "Could Microsoft kill the web browser at Build? Everything developers need to know about the NLWeb Protocol",
      "dek": "NLWeb is Microsoft's open protocol for turning any website into a conversational AI app. Here's what developers need to know before Build 2026",
      "url": "https://www.techradar.com/pro/could-microsoft-kill-the-web-browser-at-build-everything-developers-need-to-know-about-the-nlweb-protocol",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/tVyTVz5oGCDes5nsdQqpCo-1280-80.png",
      "author": "Ritoban Mukherjee",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 21:25:00 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuemRuZXQuY29tL2FydGljbGUvaGlzZW5zZS11Ni1wcm8tYW1hem9uLWRlYWwv",
      "source": "ZDNet",
      "title": "Amazon is selling this 75-inch Hisense TV for over $500 off - and I highly recommend it",
      "dek": "The Hisense U6 Pro is a solid mid-range Mini LED TV, and an even better buy at this price.",
      "url": "https://www.zdnet.com/article/hisense-u6-pro-amazon-deal/",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 20:32:00 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly90aGVuZXh0d2ViLmNvbS9uZXdzL2NoYXJnZXBvaW50LXBhcnRuZXJzLXdpdGgtcG93ZXJzLXBhcnRzLXRvLWZpeC10aGUtY2hhcmdpbmctYW5kLXN1cHBvcnQtZ2FwLWhpdHRpbmctZWxlY3RyaWMtdHJhbnNpdC1mbGVldHM",
      "source": "The Next Web",
      "title": "ChargePoint partners with Powers Parts to fix the charging and support gap hitting electric transit fleets",
      "dek": "ChargePoint and Powers Parts, a national distributor of electric vehicle components and fleet replacement parts, have announced a partnership to sell ChargePoint charging hardware, software, and fleet management services directly to transit",
      "url": "https://thenextweb.com/news/chargepoint-partners-with-powers-parts-to-fix-the-charging-and-support-gap-hitting-electric-transit-fleets",
      "imageUrl": "https://media.thenextweb.com/2026/05/chargepoint-powers-parts-transit-ev-bus-charging.avif",
      "author": "Alina Maria Stan",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 15:35:56 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cDovL2h5cGVyY3JpdGljYWwuY28vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS9ldi1zdHVwaWRpdHktY2hlY2tsaXN0",
      "source": "Hacker News",
      "title": "EV Stupidity Checklist",
      "dek": "Article URL: http://hypercritical.co/2026/05/29/ev-stupidity-checklist Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48329549 Points: 34 # Comments: 17",
      "url": "http://hypercritical.co/2026/05/29/ev-stupidity-checklist",
      "author": "pchristensen",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 21:29:51 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly90aGVoYWNrZXJuZXdzLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1L2NoYXRncGhpc2gtdnVsbmVyYWJpbGl0eS10dXJucy1jaGF0Z3B0Lmh0bWw",
      "source": "The Hacker News",
      "title": "ChatGPhish Vulnerability Turns ChatGPT Web Summaries Into a Phishing Surface",
      "dek": "Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a vulnerability in OpenAI ChatGPT that leverages the artificial intelligence (AI) assistant's implicit trust in Markdown links and images to trigger prompt injections and open the door to ",
      "url": "https://thehackernews.com/2026/05/chatgphish-vulnerability-turns-chatgpt.html",
      "imageUrl": "https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikkk-MbHPjc5UpAORUC9pUfe-LntIu7A2tsg3EBFPXh3b6WXoiv8HtxvSakdqICfwN1YGSY452zIdjuyafscYfbf7yKnzbE_SxWxmPeX9uBLkTWY7aNyzLK903ts83ThlQGKOPYKNCW6UHg2c7ia4O7cVIwV5p24c-POfHYTJak6tRmL03rbjOWxCfpPYb/s1600/chatgpt-phishing.jpg",
      "author": "info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News)",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 23:37:12 +0530"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmxlZXBpbmdjb21wdXRlci5jb20vbmV3cy9zZWN1cml0eS9jaGF0Z3B0LXNoYXJlLWxpbmtzLWFidXNlZC10by1ob3N0LWZha2Utb3V0YWdlLXBhZ2VzLXRvLWRlbGl2ZXItbWFsd2FyZS8",
      "source": "BleepingComputer",
      "title": "ChatGPT share links abused to host fake outage pages to deliver malware",
      "dek": "Threat actors are abusing ChatGPT's content-sharing feature to display fake OpenAI outage pages that direct users to download malware disguised as the ChatGPT desktop application. [...]",
      "url": "https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/chatgpt-share-links-abused-to-host-fake-outage-pages-to-deliver-malware/",
      "author": "Lawrence Abrams",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 14:21:36 -0400"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly9rcmVic29uc2VjdXJpdHkuY29tLzIwMjYvMDUvbmV0aGVybGFuZHMtc2VpemVzLTgwMC1zZXJ2ZXJzLWFycmVzdHMtMi1mb3ItYWlkaW5nLWN5YmVyYXR0YWNrcy8",
      "source": "Krebs on Security",
      "title": "Netherlands Seizes 800 Servers, Arrests 2 for Aiding Cyberattacks",
      "dek": "Authorities in the Netherlands have arrested the co-owners of two related Internet hosting companies for operating IT infrastructure used by Russia to carry out cyberattacks, influence operations and disinformation campaigns inside the Euro",
      "url": "https://krebsonsecurity.com/2026/05/netherlands-seizes-800-servers-arrests-2-for-aiding-cyberattacks/",
      "author": "BrianKrebs",
      "pubDate": "Mon, 25 May 2026 13:21:49 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZGFya3JlYWRpbmcuY29tL2Nsb3VkLXNlY3VyaXR5L25hbWUtdGhhdC10b29uLW1hcmstb2YtY3liZXJzZWN1cml0eS1wcm9ncmVzcw",
      "source": "Dark Reading",
      "title": "Name That Toon: Mark of (Cybersecurity) Progress",
      "dek": "As part of Dark Reading's 20th anniversary package, we asked readers for a cybersecurity-related caption that captures their thoughts about the industry's last two decades.",
      "url": "https://www.darkreading.com/cloud-security/name-that-toon-mark-of-cybersecurity-progress",
      "imageUrl": "https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt6d90778a997de1cd/bltcecddc9a9b77560b/6a19f878719ad34f2440c903/dr20-toon-may26-final.jpg?width=1280&amp;auto=webp&amp;quality=80&amp;disable=upscale",
      "author": "John Klossner",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 20:22:04 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25iYy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS9qaW0tY3JhbWVyLXNheXMtZGVsbHMtYmxvd291dC1xdWFydGVyLXNldHMtdXAtYS1jcnVjaWFsLXdlZWstZm9yLWFpLXN0b2Nrcy5odG1s",
      "source": "CNBC Tech",
      "title": "Jim Cramer says Dell’s blowout quarter sets up a crucial week for AI stocks",
      "dek": "CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Dell Technologies’ blockbuster quarter reignited enthusiasm around AI and data center stocks.",
      "url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/29/jim-cramer-says-dells-blowout-quarter-sets-up-a-crucial-week-for-ai-stocks.html",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 22:18:08 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BhY2UuY29tL2VudGVydGFpbm1lbnQvc3BhY2UtbW92aWVzLXNob3dzL3N0YXItY2l0eS1yZWxlYXNlLWRhdGUtYW5kLWhvdy10by13YXRjaC1hcHBsZS10dnMtc3VwZXJiLXNvdmlldC1zZXQtc3BhY2Utc2VyaWVz",
      "source": "Space.com",
      "title": "'Star City': Release date & how to watch Apple TV's superb Soviet space series",
      "dek": "Bundle up for our frigid trek behind the Iron Curtain in this new 'For All Mankind' spinoff",
      "url": "https://www.space.com/entertainment/space-movies-shows/star-city-release-date-and-how-to-watch-apple-tvs-superb-soviet-set-space-series",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/PXx2LMSY7Wo2dzWGgsXLtH-1280-80.jpg",
      "author": "Jeff Spry",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 19:00:00 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vc2NpZW5jZS8yMDI2LzA1L3NldmVyZWQtc2VhLWN1Y3VtYmVyLWFwcGVuZGFnZXMtZG9udC1zZWVtLXRvLWRpZS8",
      "source": "Ars Science",
      "title": "Severed sea cucumber appendages don't seem to die",
      "dek": "They seem to reorganize their tissues and then just keep living.",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/05/severed-sea-cucumber-appendages-dont-seem-to-die/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-2240137437-1152x648.jpg",
      "author": "Jacek Krywko",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 15:10:29 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cucmV0YWlsZGl2ZS5jb20vbmV3cy9vbGQtbmF2eS1mYXNoaW9uLW1pc3Nlcy1zcGVsbC10cm91YmxlLWdhcC1pbmMtcTEtZWFybmluZ3MvODIxNDU5Lw",
      "source": "Retail Dive",
      "title": "Fashion misses at Old Navy spell trouble for Gap Inc.",
      "dek": "Internal flubs, not customer malaise, were the cause and have been addressed, Gap Inc. CEO Richard Dickson said Thursday. But is competition from off price a growing problem for the value brand?",
      "url": "https://www.retaildive.com/news/old-navy-fashion-misses-spell-trouble-gap-inc-q1-earnings/821459/",
      "author": "Daphne Howland",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 12:13:00 -0400"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly90ZWNoY3J1bmNoLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1LzI5L2NvZGVycy1hcmUtcmVmdXNpbmctdG8td29yay13aXRob3V0LWFpLWFuZC10aGF0LWNvdWxkLWNvbWUtYmFjay10by1iaXRlLXRoZW0v",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "title": "Coders are refusing to work without AI — and that could come back to bite them",
      "dek": "While AI is helping coders produce code faster, it may not be producing better code, researchers warn. And that could cause problems down the road for them.",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/coders-are-refusing-to-work-without-ai-and-that-could-come-back-to-bite-them/",
      "author": "Julie Bort",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 22:14:22 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud2lyZWQuY29tL3N0b3J5L3doaXRlLWhvdXNlLWFsaWVucy1nb3YtdXMtY2l0aXplbnMtYXJyZXN0ZWQv",
      "source": "Wired",
      "title": "The White House’s Aliens.gov Site Brags That ICE Arrested More Than 700 US Citizens",
      "dek": "The website, which compares human beings to extraterrestrials, touts arrest numbers from the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration crackdown. But some of its details are really out there.",
      "url": "https://www.wired.com/story/white-house-aliens-gov-us-citizens-arrested/",
      "imageUrl": "https://media.wired.com/photos/6a19d5686c603cc052203420/master/pass/pol_alien_GettyImages-2277150138.jpg",
      "author": "Maddy Varner, Dell Cameron",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 20:53:09 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nYWRnZXQuY29tLzIxODM2MzEvMDA3LWZpcnN0LWxpZ2h0LXJldmlldy8",
      "source": "Engadget",
      "title": "007 First Light is the stealthy James Bond game I've dreamed of",
      "dek": "Of course the Hitman devs made a great James Bond game.",
      "url": "https://www.engadget.com/2183631/007-first-light-review/",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.engadget.com/img/gallery/007-first-light-is-the-stealthy-james-bond-game-ive-dreamed-of/l-intro-1780066099.jpg",
      "author": "staff@engadget.com (Devindra Hardawar)",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 14:51:45 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaG5vbG9neXJldmlldy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS8xMTM4MDkzL3RoZS1kZWFkbHktZWJvbGEtb3V0YnJlYWstaXMtcHJvdmluZy1kaWZmaWN1bHQtdG8tY29udHJvbC8",
      "source": "MIT Tech Review",
      "title": "The deadly Ebola outbreak is proving difficult to control",
      "dek": "The alert was raised on May 5. Four health-care workers in the Ituri Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo had died from an unknown illness within four days. Rapid response teams were sent to investigate, and tests at a research ",
      "url": "https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/29/1138093/the-deadly-ebola-outbreak-is-proving-difficult-to-control/",
      "author": "Jessica Hamzelou",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 11:19:52 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly92ZW50dXJlYmVhdC5jb20vb3JjaGVzdHJhdGlvbi9tZW1vLW1lbW9yeS1tb2RlbC10ZWFtcy11cGdyYWRlLWxsbS13aXRob3V0LXJldHJhaW5pbmc",
      "source": "VentureBeat",
      "title": "MeMo's memory model lets teams upgrade their LLM without retraining it — and performance jumps 26%",
      "dek": "Enabling LLMs to acquire new knowledge after training remains a major hurdle for enterprise AI — current solutions are either too expensive, too slow, or constrained by context window limits. MeMo , a framework from researchers at multiple ",
      "url": "https://venturebeat.com/orchestration/memo-memory-model-teams-upgrade-llm-without-retraining",
      "imageUrl": "https://images.ctfassets.net/jdtwqhzvc2n1/uNG5np6loL4mLiU9LKH0s/7525aad6eda1c42caffcb84af89bce26/LLM_memory_module.jpg?w=300&amp;q=30",
      "author": "bendee983@gmail.com (Ben Dickson)",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 19:28:17 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaHJhZGFyLmNvbS9wcm8vanVzdC1pbWFnaW5lLXdoYXQtY291bGQtZ2V0LWRvbmUtaG93LXRoaXMtdXMtc3RhcnR1cC1pcy1idWlsZGluZy1hLWNoZWFwLWZhYi1pbi1hLWJveC10by1kby1mb3ItbWljcm9jaGlwcy13aGF0LWlibS1kaWQtZm9yLXBjcw",
      "source": "TechRadar",
      "title": "'Just imagine what could get done' — How this US startup is building a 'cheap' fab-in-a-box to do for microchips what IBM did for PCs",
      "dek": "InchFab developed compact semiconductor fabrication systems using smaller wafers to reduce manufacturing costs, simplify workforce training, and support specialized industries.",
      "url": "https://www.techradar.com/pro/just-imagine-what-could-get-done-how-this-us-startup-is-building-a-cheap-fab-in-a-box-to-do-for-microchips-what-ibm-did-for-pcs",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/PwM8wPUfrSmymr5xhqLxcS-1280-80.png",
      "author": "Efosa Udinmwen",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 21:15:00 +0000"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuemRuZXQuY29tL2FydGljbGUvbXNpLXJhaWRlci0xNi1tYXgtaHgtcmV2aWV3Lw",
      "source": "ZDNet",
      "title": "After using this Windows laptop for work and play, I'm wondering why I still need my PC tower",
      "dek": "The MSI Raider 16 Max HX combines powerful current-gen hardware with a revamped cooling system and a stunning 240Hz OLED screen.",
      "url": "https://www.zdnet.com/article/msi-raider-16-max-hx-review/",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 16:26:00 GMT"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly90aGVoYWNrZXJuZXdzLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1L2F0dGFja2Vycy11c2UtbGxtLWFnZW50LWZvci1wb3N0Lmh0bWw",
      "source": "The Hacker News",
      "title": "Attackers Use LLM Agent for Post-Exploitation After Marimo CVE-2026-39987 Exploit",
      "dek": "An unknown threat actor has been observed using a large language model (LLM) agent to conduct post-compromise actions after obtaining initial access following the exploitation of a publicly-accessible Marimo network using a recently disclos",
      "url": "https://thehackernews.com/2026/05/attackers-use-llm-agent-for-post.html",
      "imageUrl": "https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi20dgnD8cZh6NCcPM9Xa3fzLgNygU4O6AmBUmN1w6KwsDMJ8_jkpZPk77r8phf3MX-cXOlVxke-ypIuj2xh3AB3dy1HSuIa4YYFlgH8Odm1jCRVESBGqxgiDoRbQEG4L_QrKOoH8TSvLLKZxnBfPEemz4kaqWto4t_3cZCmWW44NX-Q1aWakBWVDhAza7T/s1600/marimo.png",
      "author": "info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News)",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 20:09:56 +0530"
    },
    {
      "id": "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmxlZXBpbmdjb21wdXRlci5jb20vbmV3cy9zZWN1cml0eS9jYWxpZm9ybmlhLWFnLXN1ZXMtMjNhbmRtZS1vdmVyLTIwMjMtYnJlYWNoLWV4cG9zaW5nLWhlYWx0aC1kYXRhLw",
      "source": "BleepingComputer",
      "title": "California AG sues 23andMe over 2023 breach exposing health data",
      "dek": "California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit against 23andMe, now Chrome Holding Co., over the company's failure to protect sensitive customer genetic and personal information. [...]",
      "url": "https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/california-ag-sues-23andme-over-2023-breach-exposing-health-data/",
      "author": "Bill Toulas",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 14:08:47 -0400"
    },
    {
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      "source": "Krebs on Security",
      "title": "Lawmakers Demand Answers as CISA Tries to Contain Data Leak",
      "dek": "Lawmakers in both houses of Congress are demanding answers from the U.S. Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) after KrebsOnSecurity reported this week that a CISA contractor intentionally published AWS GovCloud keys and a v",
      "url": "https://krebsonsecurity.com/2026/05/lawmakers-demand-answers-as-cisa-tries-to-contain-data-leak/",
      "author": "BrianKrebs",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 22 May 2026 16:34:24 +0000"
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      "source": "Dark Reading",
      "title": "Asia's Cyber Insurance Market Shows Signs of Life",
      "dek": "The cyber insurance industry has made relatively weak inroads into Asia due to a a variety of factors, but that could be changing.",
      "url": "https://www.darkreading.com/cybersecurity-operations/asias-cyber-insurance-market-signs-of-life",
      "imageUrl": "https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt6d90778a997de1cd/bltb9e3fbe8c75eb597/6a19745b69143b73c43502c5/Blue_globe_Asia_Jimmie_Tolliver_Alamy.jpg?width=1280&amp;auto=webp&amp;quality=80&amp;disable=upscale",
      "author": "Alexander Culafi",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 14:35:33 GMT"
    },
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      "source": "TechCrunch Startups",
      "title": "Cognition’s Scott Wu says AI coding agents shouldn’t replace humans",
      "dek": "Cognition makes Devin, the first and arguably most successful AI coding agent. But famed coder Wu says it isn't designed to supplant human programmers.",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/cognitions-scott-wu-says-ai-coding-agents-shouldnt-replace-humans/",
      "author": "Julie Bort",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 16:13:47 +0000"
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      "source": "CNBC Tech",
      "title": "Software stocks wrap up best month since 2001 as talk of 'SaaSpocalypse' subsides",
      "dek": "Snowflake and Okta both saw record stock pops this week as investors found favor in their AI software strategies.",
      "url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/29/software-stocks-wrap-best-month-since-2001-as-talk-of-saaspocalypse-.html",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 21:14:04 GMT"
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      "source": "SpaceNews",
      "title": "Space Force’s commercial gatekeeper offers a playbook for startups seeking defense business",
      "dek": "COMSO chief Col. Tim Trimailo says transparency, patience and a clear military value proposition matter as much as technical innovation The post Space Force’s commercial gatekeeper offers a playbook for startups seeking defense business app",
      "url": "https://spacenews.com/space-forces-commercial-gatekeeper-offers-a-playbook-for-startups-seeking-defense-business/",
      "author": "Sandra Erwin",
      "pubDate": "Fri, 29 May 2026 14:53:49 +0000"
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      "source": "Space.com",
      "title": "China's Shenzhou 21 astronauts return to Earth after being briefly 'stranded', wrapping up record-breaking mission (video)",
      "dek": "China's Shenzhou 21 astronauts returned to Earth on Friday (May 29), wrapping up a record-breaking, and very eventful, space mission.",
      "url": "https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/chinas-shenzhou-21-astronauts-return-to-earth-in-borrowed-spacecraft-video",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Mph77DJiA8YyPKRgpUWoVM-1280-80.jpg",
      "author": "Mike Wall",
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      "source": "Ars Science",
      "title": "Researchers develop a new process to get lithium out of rocks",
      "dek": "If it scales up, it can help us diversify our sources of a key element.",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/05/researchers-develop-a-new-process-to-get-lithium-out-of-rocks/",
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      "author": "John Timmer",
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      "source": "Retail Dive",
      "title": "Consumer sentiment falls to new low; cost of living ‘first-order’ worry",
      "dek": "A sustained rise in long-run inflation expectations would likely increase the odds that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates.",
      "url": "https://www.retaildive.com/news/consumer-sentiment-falls-cost-living-inflation-Fed/821066/",
      "author": "Jim Tyson",
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      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "title": "So you’ve heard these AI terms and nodded along; let’s fix that",
      "dek": "The rise of AI has brought an avalanche of new terms and slang. Here is a glossary with definitions of some of the most important words and phrases you might encounter.",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/artificial-intelligence-definition-glossary-hallucinations-guide-to-common-ai-terms/",
      "author": "Natasha Lomas, Romain Dillet, Kyle Wiggers, Lucas Ropek",
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      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "title": "Analysis of Texas measles outbreak shows just how dangerous virus is",
      "dek": "About 1 in 5 cases were hospitalized and most of those developed complications.",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/05/analysis-of-texas-measles-outbreak-shows-just-how-dangerous-virus-is/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2053751760-1152x648.jpg",
      "author": "Beth Mole",
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    "aHR0cHM6Ly90ZWNoY3J1bmNoLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1LzI5L3NwYWNleC1hd2FyZGVkLTYtNDViLWluLXNwYWNlLWZvcmNlLWNvbnRyYWN0cy1haGVhZC1vZi1pcG8v": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "SpaceX awarded $6.45B in Space Force contracts ahead of IPO | TechCrunch",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/spacex-awarded-6-45b-in-space-force-contracts-ahead-of-ipo/",
      "byline": "Sean O&#039;Kane",
      "imageUrl": "https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/crs-28.jpeg?resize=1200,800",
      "paragraphs": [
        "SpaceX is headed toward what’s expected to be the largest IPO ever next month, and now it has received a major boost from the Trump administration.",
        "On Friday, the U.S. Space Force announced it’s giving SpaceX $4.16 billion as part of a contract to build satellites that will be part of a missile and air defense system that President Trump is calling the “Golden Dome.”",
        "The announcement follows a separate contract the Space Force awarded to Elon Musk’s company earlier this week worth $2.29 billion. That contract involves SpaceX building a communications network in low-Earth orbit.",
        "The contracts reinforce a disclosure that was detailed in SpaceX’s IPO filing made public last week: the company is heavily dependent on government contracts. One fifth of SpaceX’s revenue in 2025 came from government agencies.",
        "Musk poured around $300 million into helping elect Trump, and has remained close with the president. But SpaceX has also dominated the launch market over the last decade; it’s not surprising the federal government keeps turning towards SpaceX for contracts like these. Still, the company warned investors in its IPO filing that its “business with governmental entities is subject to changes in policies, priorities, regulations, mandates, andfunding levels.”",
        "Topics",
        "Early Bird ticket savings of up to $410 end May 29, 11:59 p.m. PT. Connect with 10,000+ tech leaders in unparalleled networking, 200+ hands-on sessions led by 250+ industry leaders, and discover 300+ showcasing startups.",
        "Newsletters",
        "Subscribe for the industry’s biggest tech news",
        "Related",
        "AI Coders are refusing to work without AI — and that could come back to bite them Julie Bort",
        "AI So you’ve heard these AI terms and nodded along; let’s fix that Natasha Lomas"
      ],
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    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vaGVhbHRoLzIwMjYvMDUva2VueWFuLWNvdXJ0LWJsb2Nrcy10cnVtcC1hZG1pbi1mcm9tLWR1bXBpbmctZWJvbGEtZXhwb3NlZC1hbWVyaWNhbnMtdGhlcmUv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Kenyan court blocks Trump admin from dumping Ebola-exposed Americans there",
      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/05/kenyan-court-blocks-trump-admin-from-dumping-ebola-exposed-americans-there/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-2278036477-1024x648.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "The Trump administration is refusing to repatriate Americans exposed to Ebola amid the outbreak still raging in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But the plan to send US citizens to Kenya has hit a snag, and officials are still scrambling to find other countries that might take them.",
        "Earlier this week, it was revealed that the administration had devised a plan to establish a makeshift quarantine and treatment facility in Kenya—instead of bringing its citizens home for high-quality care at specialized facilities built for this purpose. According to the initial plans, the US facility would be in Laikipia, about 120 miles north of Nairobi, where the US has an air base. Initially, the plan was to set up a 50-bed quarantine facility that was expected to be operational today, May 29. Then, in a second state, officials would set up isolation and biocontainment units to house Americans infected with the virus.",
        "But after a series of events on Thursday and Friday, that plan has now been stalled. The Katiba Institute, which advocates for Kenyans’ constitutional rights, filed the petition on Thursday to challenge the establishment of the quarantine and treatment facility.",
        "“The secretive, unilateral establishment of an Ebola quarantine facility raises grave constitutional concerns regarding the rights to life, health, fair administrative action, public participation, and parliamentary oversight,” Katiba said in a statement posted on social media.",
        "Katiba is seeking the government’s preparedness plan to prevent or respond to the potential spread of the Ebola virus, which is not present in Kenya. The institute is also seeking disclosure of the terms of any agreement between Kenya and the US regarding the facility. “At its core, the case is about preserving constitutional accountability, protecting public health, and ensuring that no government may place expediency above the lives and safety of the people of Kenya,” Katiba said.",
        "“Appalling” response",
        "Friday morning, a high court in Kenya ordered a halt to the Trump administration’s plans, citing an “imminent threat to life,” until the full case is heard on June 2. Otherwise, Trump officials have said that Americans infected with Ebola needing high-level care would be evacuated to somewhere in Europe, but that they had not determined where in Europe.",
        "In the past, the US has treated 11 Ebola patients in the country, most of whom were repatriated from outbreaks, according to Stat News. No repatriated cases led to secondary transmission within the US. There was a case of a Texas resident who returned from Liberia with the virus. His infection was not immediately detected, and two nurses who cared for him in the US fell ill. Both were treated in the national facilities set up for handling Ebola patients—where the other cases were treated—and both survived.",
        "Daniel Bausch, a physician-scientist who has responded to several Ebola outbreaks in the past, told Stat that the Trump administration’s response has been “appalling,” but not surprising.",
        "“No one is surprised to see the maximum selfishness of US government policy these days. Because it’s just one thing after another. They’ve already withdrawn from WHO … and they’ve already destroyed USAID. … So, no one is really expecting a lot of them right now.”",
        "On Friday, the World Health Organization reported 1,041 cases (135 confirmed, 906 suspected) and 241 deaths (18 confirmed, 223 suspected) in the outbreak."
      ],
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "Fable dodges GTA VI with another delay - Engadget",
      "source": "engadget.com",
      "url": "https://www.engadget.com/2183963/fable-dodges-gta-vi-with-another-delay/",
      "byline": "Ian Carlos Campbell",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.engadget.com/img/gallery/fable-dodges-gta-vi-with-another-delay/l-intro-1780084008.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "The reboot of the classic Xbox series is now coming out in February 2027.",
        "Fable, a reboot of the Xbox fantasy RPG series developed by Playground Games, has been delayed. The game's release date is shifting from fall 2026 to February 2027 \"so it can have the dedicated moment it deserves,\" according to a post from Xbox on X. The new release date will give developers more time to polish the game before it comes out, while also moving it out of the blast radius of Grand Theft Auto VI, which is scheduled for release on November 19.",
        "This isn't the first time the reboot has been delayed, and as Microsoft notes in its announcement post, the back half of the year is particularly stacked with big releases like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4, Control Resonant and the aforementioned Grand Theft Auto VI. Moving to 2027 rather than duking it out with those more hotly anticipated titles could give Fable more time to shine. It does make a long development cycle even longer than it was before, though. The Fable reboot was originally announced in 2020, and Microsoft didn't share proper gameplay footage of the game until January of this year. That means from announcement to release, Fable will have taken seven years to make, and that's likely not taking into account work that went into the project ahead of its original announcement.",
        "This is year is packed with incredible games for XBOX players to enjoy, from Halo: Campaign Evolved, Gears of War: E-Day and Call of Duty Modern Warfare 4 to Control Resonant, Star Wars: Galactic Racer and Grand Theft Auto VI. In order to plan our game launches through the... pic.twitter.com/eNXiA9ebn4 — XBOX (@XBOX) May 29, 2026",
        "During its earlier 2026 showcase, Microsoft demoed Fable's detailed character creator and ambitious approach to simulating NPCs. The company also shared that the game would be available on PlayStation 5, alongside Xbox Series X/S, PC via Steam and Xbox and Game Pass Ultimate. While Fable won't be available this year, Microsoft says it will show off \"a major new look\" at the game during its Xbox Games Showcase on June 7."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:29.918Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaG5vbG9neXJldmlldy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS8xMTM4MTEwL3RoZS1kb3dubG9hZC1saXRoaXVtLWV4dHJhY3Rpb24tZWJvbGEtYWktcG9wZS8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The Download: unlocking lithium and controlling Ebola | MIT Technology Review",
      "source": "technologyreview.com",
      "url": "https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/29/1138110/the-download-lithium-extraction-ebola-ai-pope/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology.",
        "How a new extraction process could unlock the world’s lithium",
        "A new method for extracting lithium could cut costs and emissions from one of the world’s most important materials for EVs and energy storage.",
        "The technique uses a weak acid to dissolve silicate minerals. That frees not only the lithium but also other useful materials, including alumina and silica.",
        "“At scale, we believe this will be the lowest-cost way of sourcing lithium in the world,” says Yet-Ming Chiang, an MIT professor who co-authored a study of the process published yesterday in Science.",
        "Startup Rock Zero is already working to commercialize the research. Read the full story on a new way to unlock the world’s lithium.",
        "—Casey Crownhart",
        "The deadly Ebola outbreak is proving difficult to control",
        "The alert was raised on May 5. Four health-care workers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo had died from an unknown illness within four days. Tests in Kinshasa revealed the culprit: the Bundibugyo virus, one of the causes of Ebola.",
        "A couple of weeks ago, an outbreak of hantavirus erupted aboard a cruise ship. Three people died, but the outbreak was kept under control. The picture for Ebola is bleaker for several reasons, including the disease itself, the available treatments, and the local environment.",
        "Find out why the outbreak is causing alarm.",
        "—Jessica Hamzelou"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:30.207Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly92ZW50dXJlYmVhdC5jb20vb3JjaGVzdHJhdGlvbi90aGUtYWktYWdlbnQtYm90dGxlbmVjay1pc250LW1vZGVsLXBlcmZvcm1hbmNlLWl0cy1wZXJtaXNzaW9ucw": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The AI agent bottleneck isn't model performance — it's permissions",
      "source": "venturebeat.com",
      "url": "https://venturebeat.com/orchestration/the-ai-agent-bottleneck-isnt-model-performance-its-permissions",
      "imageUrl": "https://images.ctfassets.net/jdtwqhzvc2n1/3GJ8TdHpeKmb0m17vGERe4/9a0fe35f71e28ad43037babeb1b0e333/crimedy7_illustration_of_a_robot_bouncer_or_security_guard_in_8d52b895-08ce-40f4-9580-8d6048a64abb_1.png?w=800&amp;q=75",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Enterprise AI agents are stalling — not because of model performance, but because of permissioning. Every agentic workflow eventually hits the same wall: what is this agent allowed to touch, on whose behalf, and how does the system know?",
        "Workday's answer is to make its existing system of record the governance layer for agents. Gerrit Kazmaier, the company's president for product and technology, told VentureBeat in an interview that customers often struggle when they cobble together solutions for their agents.",
        "“Sana makes sure the integrity of the approvals and security model is always adhered to,” Kazmaier said. “Frankly, that’s where we see customers struggling when they try to build do-it–yourself AI by just accessing raw data, so the richness of the security model gets lost, and the results become overly broad.”",
        "Workday, which launched Sana in March, expanded its partnership with Google to bring its Sana agent system of record to the Gemini Enterprise — so agents built on Sana are also discoverable there.",
        "Architecting accuracy",
        "Kazmaier said the biggest hurdle they faced was ensuring agent accuracy, especially for HR and finance users.",
        "“Almost right is not acceptable,” Kazmaier said. “Think about paying people correctly, closing the books or managing work schedules reliably.”",
        "Accuracy is harder to evaluate here than in most AI contexts. Policy configurations, role-based security, and organizational hierarchies are deeply interrelated — a small error compounds. And unlike most generative AI outputs, HR and finance queries often lack a correction loop. By the time a paycheck processes incorrectly or an interview is scheduled wrong, the damage is done.",
        "Workday addressed this by building Gemini in as its base reasoning layer, then adding its context engine and business process logic on top. Workday also added verification and classification models that “interrogate” outputs before execution.",
        "Accuracy and identity, it turns out, are the same question: does the system know enough about the agent, the authorizing human, and the current state of the record to act correctly?",
        "Workday’s advantage is that it can infer its customers' organizational structures from the data they provide. Already, third-party identity providers like Okta verify their information by checking Workday, so its context is the system of record for many enterprises. Kazmaier said the Sana Self-Service Agent uses Gemini as the conversational surface to trigger the workflow. The user is then authenticated and authorized through Workday’s identity and security model. Sana agents will only act on behalf of that user and work within their current permissions.",
        "Audit trails follow the same logic: Gemini retains only interaction logs, while the main audit remains within Workday and its customer."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:30.516Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaHJhZGFyLmNvbS9wcm8vY291bGQtbWljcm9zb2Z0LWtpbGwtdGhlLXdlYi1icm93c2VyLWF0LWJ1aWxkLWV2ZXJ5dGhpbmctZGV2ZWxvcGVycy1uZWVkLXRvLWtub3ctYWJvdXQtdGhlLW5sd2ViLXByb3RvY29s": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Could Microsoft kill the web browser at Build? Everything developers need to know about the NLWeb Protocol",
      "source": "techradar.com",
      "url": "https://www.techradar.com/pro/could-microsoft-kill-the-web-browser-at-build-everything-developers-need-to-know-about-the-nlweb-protocol",
      "byline": "https://www.techradar.com/author/ritoban-mukherjee",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/tVyTVz5oGCDes5nsdQqpCo-1253-80.png",
      "paragraphs": [
        "The web browser has been the default interface for accessing online information for decades, but AI search is starting to change that assumption. Tools like Microsoft Copilot already let users ask plain-language questions and receive direct answers, bypassing the traditional results page entirely.",
        "NLWeb is Microsoft's attempt to extend that shift down to the website level itself. Announced at Build 2025, it's an open protocol that lets any web property respond to natural language queries without a search engine acting as an intermediary.",
        "Whether Build 2026 marks a meaningful step forward for NLWeb's adoption, or confirms that it's still an experiment in search of a standard, is worth paying close attention to. Here's what we know so far.",
        "Register for Microsoft Build here",
        "What is the NLWeb Protocol?",
        "NLWeb stands for Natural Language Web. It's an open-source project from Microsoft that allows any website to accept and respond to natural language queries, turning a standard web property into what Microsoft describes as an AI-powered app.",
        "The project was conceived and built by R.V. Guha, who joined Microsoft as CVP and Technical Fellow. Guha's background in web infrastructure matters here: he created RSS, RDF, and Schema.org, three formats that now underpin how structured content is shared and indexed across much of the web.",
        "Microsoft introduced NLWeb at Build 2025 in May 2025 and drew a direct comparison to HTML's role in making website creation accessible. That framing is ambitious, and worth holding lightly. HTML solved the problem of publishing content; NLWeb is attempting to solve how both humans and AI agents query that content once it's published.",
        "What distinguishes NLWeb from a standard chatbot widget is that every NLWeb endpoint also runs as a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. MCP is an open standard that Anthropic originally developed in November 2024 for connecting AI systems to external data sources, and it has since gained widespread industry adoption. By building NLWeb on top of MCP, Microsoft is wiring website content directly into the broader ecosystem of AI agents.",
        "Early adopters include Shopify, TripAdvisor, Eventbrite, O'Reilly Media, Hearst properties like Delish, Chicago Public Media, and Common Sense Media. The pattern across those names is clear: well-organized sites with structured catalogs of content, the kind that maps cleanly onto the web formats NLWeb depends on.",
        "How does the NLWeb Protocol work?",
        "NLWeb sits on top of structured data that most websites already publish. It reads formats like Schema.org and RSS, which are in use across more than 100 million websites according to the project's documentation, and adds a natural language layer on top of them using a large language model of the developer's choice."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:30.821Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuemRuZXQuY29tL2FydGljbGUvaGlzZW5zZS11Ni1wcm8tYW1hem9uLWRlYWwv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Amazon is selling this 75-inch Hisense TV for over $500 off - and I highly recommend it | ZDNET",
      "source": "zdnet.com",
      "url": "https://www.zdnet.com/article/hisense-u6-pro-amazon-deal/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "'ZDNET Recommends': What exactly does it mean?",
        "ZDNET's recommendations are based on many hours of testing, research, and comparison shopping. We gather data from the best available sources, including vendor and retailer listings as well as other relevant and independent reviews sites. And we pore over customer reviews to find out what matters to real people who already own and use the products and services we’re assessing.",
        "When you click through from our site to a retailer and buy a product or service, we may earn affiliate commissions. This helps support our work, but does not affect what we cover or how, and it does not affect the price you pay. Neither ZDNET nor the author are compensated for these independent reviews. Indeed, we follow strict guidelines that ensure our editorial content is never influenced by advertisers.",
        "ZDNET's editorial team writes on behalf of you, our reader. Our goal is to deliver the most accurate information and the most knowledgeable advice possible in order to help you make smarter buying decisions on tech gear and a wide array of products and services. Our editors thoroughly review and fact-check every article to ensure that our content meets the highest standards. If we have made an error or published misleading information, we will correct or clarify the article. If you see inaccuracies in our content, please report the mistake via this form.",
        "Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.",
        "Whether you're looking to upgrade your main TV to set up the ultimate home theater, or you're just looking for a high-quality second screen for your home, you'd be hard-pressed to find a better option than the Hisense U6 Pro. And just in time for the FIFA World Cup, you can pick up the 75-inch Hisense U6 Pro for just under $850 at Amazon -- a nearly 40% discount.",
        "Also: TCL vs. Hisense",
        "The Mini LED panel is Pantone Validated for color accuracy, which means you'll get some of the best picture quality outside of ultra-premium OLED and Micro RGB models. It's also backed up by a 144Hz refresh rate, making it perfect for smoother motion while watching live sports, streaming, and console gaming.",
        "Speaking of gaming, the dedicated picture mode supports AMD FreeSync Premium Pro VRR to help prevent screen tearing. There's also an AI Sports mode that automatically detects when you're watching a live match and adjusts the refresh rate, sound, and picture settings for the best experience, making it a fitting choice for soccer fans ahead of the World Cup.",
        "Also: The best Hisense TVs of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed",
        "You'll get audio to match with support for Dolby Atmos virtual surround sound and a built-in subwoofer for deep bass tones that make movie soundtracks and your favorite music more impactful. If you prefer to have more control over your sound, you can set up home audio equipment with either the HDMI eARC connection for near-perfect video and audio syncing or via Bluetooth for a fully wireless setup. And if you've set up a security camera system, you can show feeds from up to four cameras at once on your Hisense U6 Pro to keep an eye on your home.",
        "How I rated this deal"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:31.221Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly90aGVuZXh0d2ViLmNvbS9uZXdzL2NoYXJnZXBvaW50LXBhcnRuZXJzLXdpdGgtcG93ZXJzLXBhcnRzLXRvLWZpeC10aGUtY2hhcmdpbmctYW5kLXN1cHBvcnQtZ2FwLWhpdHRpbmctZWxlY3RyaWMtdHJhbnNpdC1mbGVldHM": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "ChargePoint, Powers Parts partner on transit EV bus charging",
      "source": "thenextweb.com",
      "url": "https://thenextweb.com/news/chargepoint-partners-with-powers-parts-to-fix-the-charging-and-support-gap-hitting-electric-transit-fleets",
      "byline": "Alina Maria Stan",
      "paragraphs": [
        "TL;DRChargePoint and Powers Parts have partnered to sell charging hardware, software, and fleet telematics to transit agencies running PhoenixEV electric buses. The deal targets operators struggling with service gaps after Proterra’s 2023 bankruptcy, routing ChargePoint’s platform through Powers Parts’ existing distribution network.",
        "ChargePoint and Powers Parts, a national distributor of electric vehicle components and fleet replacement parts, have announced a partnership to sell ChargePoint charging hardware, software, and fleet management services directly to transit agencies across North America. The deal targets operators running E2 and ZX5 electric buses built by PhoenixEV, the company that acquired Proterra’s transit bus assets out of bankruptcy in early 2024 for $3.5 million.",
        "The partnership addresses a specific problem. Many transit agencies that bought Proterra’s E2 and ZX5 electric buses before the company’s 2023 bankruptcy are now operating those vehicles without adequate service, charging support, or fleet management tools. Powers Parts built its business around supplying replacement components to exactly these operators. Adding ChargePoint’s DC fast charging infrastructure and telematics platform to that distribution channel gives transit agencies a single procurement path for both parts and charging.",
        "What the deal includes",
        "Through the partnership, transit operators can purchase ChargePoint’s charging stations, fleet management software, and telematics services through Powers Parts’ existing distribution network. ChargePoint’s telematics platform integrates with all vehicle types and charging stations regardless of manufacturer, providing real-time visibility into battery health, route efficiency, and total cost of ownership. The software is OCPP compliant, meaning it can manage third-party charging hardware as well as ChargePoint’s own stations.",
        "TNW City Coworking space - Where your best work happens",
        "A workspace designed for growth, collaboration, and endless networking opportunities in the heart of tech.",
        "The telematics system also works with mixed-fuel fleets, which matters because most transit agencies are electrifying gradually rather than replacing entire fleets at once. An agency running a mix of diesel, compressed natural gas, and electric buses can manage all three through a single interface.",
        "The Proterra aftermath",
        "Proterra filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2023 after years of losses despite being one of the most prominent US electric bus manufacturers. Its transit bus division was sold to Phoenix Motorcars, now PhoenixEV, for just $3.5 million. Volvo acquired Proterra’s battery and powertrain division for approximately $223 million. The charging infrastructure business was sold separately.",
        "The bankruptcy left transit agencies that had invested in Proterra buses in a difficult position. Replacement parts, software updates, and charging infrastructure support, previously handled by a single integrated provider, were suddenly fragmented across multiple companies or simply unavailable. PhoenixEV inherited the bus platform and manufacturing rights, but the broader service ecosystem had to be rebuilt from scratch.",
        "Transit electrification under pressure"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:31.626Z"
    },
    "aHR0cDovL2h5cGVyY3JpdGljYWwuY28vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS9ldi1zdHVwaWRpdHktY2hlY2tsaXN0": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "EV Stupidity Checklist",
      "source": "hypercritical.co",
      "url": "http://hypercritical.co/2026/05/29/ev-stupidity-checklist",
      "imageUrl": "https://hypercritical.co/2026/05/29/images/ev-door-handle.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Automobiles have been around for well over a century. During that time, we’ve gotten pretty good at designing and building their basic components and controls: seats, doors, pedals, steering wheels, mirrors, etc. But when today’s automakers decide to make an electric vehicle (EV), they seemingly forget much of what they once knew, creating new versions of features that are objectively, obviously worse than the time-tested designs they replace.",
        "When Tesla ushered in the modern EV era in the early 2000s, some of these changes made sense, at least from a marketing perspective. To convince a cautious public to consider an EV, the vehicles had to appear “futuristic.” Flush door handles that automatically extend when you approach the car are definitely cool and fancy! But electronic door mechanisms like these have also proven to be unreliable, and possibly dangerous.",
        "On the interior, Tesla settled on a minimal design dominated by a large touch screen. Touch screens provide a lot of flexibility. This is why our phones no longer have physical keyboards on them. Touch screens are also, perhaps surprisingly, less expensive than the array of physical buttons and switches that they replace in car interiors. This savings is especially important on EVs, where the cost of the vehicle is dominated by the battery (yes, to an even larger degree than an internal-combustion car’s cost is dominated by its engine). But despite their cost savings, the over-use of touch screens in cars has proven unpopular. They’re also not great for safety.",
        "In 2026, we’re well past the time when EVs need to compromise safety and functionality in order to appear futuristic. As for the cost savings, well, that’ll be harder to shake. Once automakers got a taste for cheap touchscreens, they spread to all cars, not just EVs.",
        "To help the industry get back on the right track, I’ve created a checklist for car designers. Make sure your new car—EV or otherwise—checks all these boxes to avoid making the same stupid mistakes that have plagued modern cars for years.",
        "Accessible exterior door handles.1 When approaching a car, the door-opening mechanism should be obvious and immediately usable. You should not have to wait for a sensor to detect your presence and then activate some mechanism before the door is able to be opened.",
        "Physical door opening mechanisms. The thing you pull to open the door should be physically connected to the door-opening mechanism. It’s fine to have the door handle activate an electronic door opener, but pulling that same handle farther and harder should activate the physical mechanism. This applies to both… Interior",
        "Exterior",
        "Door handle affordances. In design, “affordance” refers to the possible actions that can be readily perceived. When approaching a door, it should be readily apparent what you must do to open it. You should be able to see the door-opening mechanism, and it should be obvious how to use it. So many modern cars—and especially EVs—fail this test! There’s even a Saturday Night Live sketch about it. And, again, this applies to both… Interior",
        "Exterior",
        "Physical charge-port door mechanism. For decades, cars have had small doors covering the place where fuel is added. We’ve gotten pretty good at making cheap, reliable fuel-filler doors. When carmakers design EVs, they all-too-frequently decide that the door that covers the charge port should be entirely electronic, opening and closing under its own power in response to a touch-screen input or a finger-swipe somewhere on the exterior of the car. We are currently not very good at making these electronic charge-port doors work reliably. They add nothing to the car beyond extra cost and “pizazz.” This is a poor trade-off for even the tiniest decrease in reliability of such an important function.",
        "Turn signal stalk. While there are arguments to be made for including various controls on the steering wheel itself, especially in sporty or race-inspired cars where removing your hands from the steering wheel for even a moment might be unwise, a stalk on the steering column is still the best overall choice for activating (and de-activating) turn signals. No experienced driver during normal driving has ever had to spend even a moment searching for the turn signal stalk to activate it, but this happens all too often when using turn-signal buttons on a steering wheel, especially when the wheel is rotated some arbitrary amount at the time the turn signal is needed. Stalks are great. Use them."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:31.939Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly90aGVoYWNrZXJuZXdzLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1L2NoYXRncGhpc2gtdnVsbmVyYWJpbGl0eS10dXJucy1jaGF0Z3B0Lmh0bWw": {
      "ok": false,
      "title": "ChatGPhish Vulnerability Turns ChatGPT Web Summaries Into a Phishing Surface",
      "source": "thehackernews.com",
      "url": "https://thehackernews.com/2026/05/chatgphish-vulnerability-turns-chatgpt.html",
      "paragraphs": [],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:32.268Z",
      "error": "Could not extract article body"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmxlZXBpbmdjb21wdXRlci5jb20vbmV3cy9zZWN1cml0eS9jaGF0Z3B0LXNoYXJlLWxpbmtzLWFidXNlZC10by1ob3N0LWZha2Utb3V0YWdlLXBhZ2VzLXRvLWRlbGl2ZXItbWFsd2FyZS8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "ChatGPT share links abused to host fake outage pages to deliver malware",
      "source": "bleepingcomputer.com",
      "url": "https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/chatgpt-share-links-abused-to-host-fake-outage-pages-to-deliver-malware/",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.bleepstatic.com/content/hl-images/2023/03/24/ChatGPT__headpic.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Threat actors are abusing ChatGPT's content-sharing feature to display fake OpenAI outage pages that direct users to download malware disguised as the ChatGPT desktop application.",
        "The \"LLMShare\" campaign, discovered by Push Security, uses Google ads to direct users searching for ChatGPT to a malicious shared ChatGPT page hosted on chatgpt.com, allowing the attack to be delivered through a legitimate OpenAI domain.",
        "Users who click the advertisement are taken to a legitimate ChatGPT shared page, but instead of seeing a chat conversation, they are presented with a rendered outage notice claiming the web version is unavailable and that they should download the desktop application instead.",
        "\"We're experiencing high traffic right now,\" reads the fake outage message.",
        "\"Our website is temporarily unavailable due to a large number of users. Download our desktop app to continue.\"",
        "Unlike traditional phishing pages hosted on attacker-controlled infrastructure, the fake outage notice is rendered through ChatGPT itself.",
        "The attackers created a custom HTML page using ChatGPT's rendering capabilities and published it through a shared chatgpt.com/s/ link, allowing the fake outage notice to be displayed from a legitimate ChatGPT URL.",
        "Push Security noted that the page includes \"Show code\" and \"Remix with ChatGPT\" controls, revealing that the fake outage notice is actually generated from custom HTML and CSS rendered by a ChatGPT prompt.",
        "If the visitor clicks on the download button, they are brought to a website at openew[.]app that impersonates OpenAI's desktop application download portal.",
        "The researchers say the site uses cloaking to display content only to targeted victims. When security platforms like URLScan visited the URL, they were shown a harmless AR/VR company website instead.",
        "The website offers both macOS [VirusTotal] and Windows [VirusTotal] downloads that install malware on devices. While it is unclear what payloads are ultimately deployed, earlier campaigns abusing AI platform sharing features have distributed infostealers.",
        "BleepingComputer's test of the Windows version on Any.Run found that it executes various commands to determine whether the device is a legitimate computer or a virtual machine."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:32.763Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9rcmVic29uc2VjdXJpdHkuY29tLzIwMjYvMDUvbmV0aGVybGFuZHMtc2VpemVzLTgwMC1zZXJ2ZXJzLWFycmVzdHMtMi1mb3ItYWlkaW5nLWN5YmVyYXR0YWNrcy8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Netherlands Seizes 800 Servers, Arrests 2 for Aiding Cyberattacks",
      "source": "krebsonsecurity.com",
      "url": "https://krebsonsecurity.com/2026/05/netherlands-seizes-800-servers-arrests-2-for-aiding-cyberattacks/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Authorities in the Netherlands have arrested the co-owners of two related Internet hosting companies for operating IT infrastructure used by Russia to carry out cyberattacks, influence operations and disinformation campaigns inside the European Union. The two men were the focus of a 2025 KrebsOnSecurity story about how their hosting companies had assumed control over the technical infrastructure of Stark Industries Solutions, an Internet service provider sanctioned last year by the EU as a frequent staging ground for cyber mischief from Russia’s intelligence agencies.",
        "An investigator with the Tax Intelligence and Investigation Service (FIOD), the Dutch financial crimes agency, during the raid. Image: FIOD.",
        "The Dutch daily news outlet de Volkskrant reports that the Dutch financial crime agency FIOD on May 18 arrested a 57-year-old from Amsterdam and a 39-year-old from The Hague, charging them with violating sanctions law by directly or indirectly making economic resources available to EU-sanctioned entities.",
        "The Dutch investigation focuses on Stark Industries, a sprawling hosting provider that materialized just two weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine. As detailed in this May 2024 deep-dive, Stark quickly became the source of massive distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against European targets, and emerged as a top supplier of proxy and anonymity services that showed up time and again in cyberattacks linked to Russia-backed hacking groups.",
        "That report identified two Moldovan brothers — Ivan and Yuri Neculiti and their company PQHosting — who were providing one of Stark’s two main conduits to the larger Internet. In May 2025, the EU sanctioned PQHosting and the Neculiti brothers for aiding Russia’s hybrid warfare efforts. But as KrebsOnSecurity observed in September 2025, those sanctions failed to target Stark’s remaining connection to the Internet — an Internet service provider based in the Netherlands called MIRhosting.",
        "MIRhosting is operated by Andrey Nesterenko, a 39-year-old Russian native who runs the business out of the Netherlands. News that PQHosting and the Neculiti brothers were about to be sanctioned by the EU leaked in the media nearly two weeks before the sanctions were announced last year. During that time, the Stark network assets were transferred from PQHosting to a new entity called the[.]hosting, under the control of the Dutch entity WorkTitans BV.",
        "And as our September 2025 report showed, WorkTitans was controlled by Nesterenko and a 57-year-old from Amsterdam named Youssef Zinad. On top of that, WorkTitans was getting connectivity to the larger Internet solely through MIRhosting, where Zinad had worked previously.",
        "On May 18, Dutch financial crime investigators arrested Nesterenko and Zinad, and searched three businesses in Enschede and Almere and two data centers in Dronten and Schiphol-Rijk. A statement from the Dutch authorities said they also seized laptops, telephones and more than 800 servers.",
        "A message to the-hosting customers immediately after 800 of its servers were seized by Dutch authorities. The message says that unfortunately data stored on the server has been lost and cannot be recovered.",
        "De Volkskrant said it reviewed data showing WorkTitans and MIRhosting were the most-used networks in pro-Russian attacks on Danish government bodies between November 13 and 19, 2025, the week of Denmark’s municipal elections.",
        "The publication wrote that prior to Nesterenko’s arrest, the MIRhosting founder denied that he knew his servers had been misused by pro-Russian cybercriminals. “He said he had ended all services with the Neculiti brothers when the EU sanctions came into force in May 2025,” and the he “reserved all rights to take action against ‘harmful and incorrect publications,” de Volkskrant wrote.",
        "MIRhosting released a statement saying it has initiated an internal investigation into the alleged facts concerning the elections in Denmark, and that it has temporarily paused services to WorkTitans as a precautionary measure while the matter is being reviewed further."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:33.237Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZGFya3JlYWRpbmcuY29tL2Nsb3VkLXNlY3VyaXR5L25hbWUtdGhhdC10b29uLW1hcmstb2YtY3liZXJzZWN1cml0eS1wcm9ncmVzcw": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Name That Toon: Mark of (Cybersecurity) Progress",
      "source": "darkreading.com",
      "url": "https://www.darkreading.com/cloud-security/name-that-toon-mark-of-cybersecurity-progress",
      "imageUrl": "https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt6d90778a997de1cd/bltcecddc9a9b77560b/6a19f878719ad34f2440c903/dr20-toon-may26-final.jpg?disable=upscale&width=1200&height=630&fit=crop",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Since 2006, Dark Reading has been at the forefront of covering cybersecurity, providing deep insights and analysis beyond the headlines. All those major news events? We were there. Shifts in technology trends? We wrote about them. Enjoy this special anniversary coverage celebrating where we've been and what's next.",
        "As part of Dark Reading's 20th anniversary package, we asked readers for a cybersecurity-related caption that captures their thoughts about the industry's last two decades.",
        "May 29, 2026",
        "The cybersecurity industry has undergone seismic shifts driven by wave after wave of technological transformation — from the early days of signature-based antivirus and perimeter firewalls protecting on-premises networks, through the cloud migration that dissolved those perimeters entirely, to the mobile revolution that put corporate data on devices in employees' pockets and coffee shops worldwide.",
        "And now, defenders are gearing up for the AI transformation.",
        "The Internet of Things expanded the attack surface with billions of connected devices, many with laughably weak security controls. Remote work, turbocharged by the pandemic, shattered whatever remained of the network perimeter, forcing enterprises to embrace zero-trust models where every access request is verified regardless of origin.",
        "Through it all, threat actors evolved from lone hackers to sophisticated criminal enterprises and nation-state operations, wielding zero-days and supply-chain attacks with surgical precision.",
        "Dark Reading turned 20 on May 1, and to celebrate, we brought back the Name That Toon contest. We asked readers to send us their most creative cybersecurity-related caption that describes what is happening in the cartoon. The winning caption, \"Look, I know, but this was the best AI stack we could afford,\" comes to us by way of Prasen Shelar, co-founder and CEO of AI-startup Axari via LinkedIn. Thanks to all the readers who participated!",
        "Click here for all our DR20 content.",
        "About the Author",
        "John Klossner",
        "Cartoonist"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:33.603Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25iYy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS9qaW0tY3JhbWVyLXNheXMtZGVsbHMtYmxvd291dC1xdWFydGVyLXNldHMtdXAtYS1jcnVjaWFsLXdlZWstZm9yLWFpLXN0b2Nrcy5odG1s": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Jim Cramer says Dell’s blowout quarter sets up a crucial week for AI stocks",
      "source": "cnbc.com",
      "url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/29/jim-cramer-says-dells-blowout-quarter-sets-up-a-crucial-week-for-ai-stocks.html",
      "byline": "Alexa LoMonaco",
      "paragraphs": [
        "CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Dell Technologies’ blockbuster quarter reignited enthusiasm around AI and data center stocks, while next week could bring fresh clarity for lagging Nvidia.",
        "He highlighted upcoming reports from Palo Alto, Broadcom and CrowdStrike, while warning that Lululemon could face a difficult “reset quarter.”",
        "CNBC's Jim Cramer said next week could bring key answers for technology stocks after a blockbuster quarter from Dell Technologies added to the enthusiasm around the data center trade.",
        "\"When we look back, I wonder if we'll say this was that moment when Dell simply took over the computer space\" the \"Mad Money\" host said Friday, calling the company's latest earnings one of the biggest \"blowouts\" he can recall.",
        "Tech has dominated the market this year, particularly companies tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure. But he said that one notable laggard has emerged: Nvidia.",
        "That could begin to change next week when CEO Jensen Huang delivers a keynote at Computex in Taiwan. Cramer said the event has historically been a \"stake in the ground moment\" for Nvidia and could include new announcements, particularly about PCs. Executives from other key tech players such as Arm Holdings, Marvell Technology, Intel and Qualcomm will also be at Computex.",
        "Cramer then turned to the week ahead.",
        "Monday",
        "Other than Huang's presentation, Merck is set to host a meeting reviewing its cancer portfolio following the annual ASCO conference, offering investors a closer look at the drugmaker's pipeline.",
        "Tuesday",
        "Dollar General reports after rival Dollar Tree posted stronger-than-expected results on Thursday. Cramer expects Dollar General shares could rebound.",
        "After the bell, Palo Alto Networks, which is a holding in Cramer's Charitable Trust, the portfolio run by the CNBC Investing Club, reports. While the stock often rallies into earnings before profit-taking sets in, Cramer said rising AI-driven cyber threats could support results."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:41.180Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BhY2UuY29tL2VudGVydGFpbm1lbnQvc3BhY2UtbW92aWVzLXNob3dzL3N0YXItY2l0eS1yZWxlYXNlLWRhdGUtYW5kLWhvdy10by13YXRjaC1hcHBsZS10dnMtc3VwZXJiLXNvdmlldC1zZXQtc3BhY2Utc2VyaWVz": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "'Star City': Release date & how to watch Apple TV's superb Soviet space series",
      "source": "space.com",
      "url": "https://www.space.com/entertainment/space-movies-shows/star-city-release-date-and-how-to-watch-apple-tvs-superb-soviet-set-space-series",
      "byline": "https://www.space.com/author/jeff-spry",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/PXx2LMSY7Wo2dzWGgsXLtH-1960-80.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Get ready to watch 'Star City' and see the alternative-history space race from behind the Iron Curtain.",
        "Everyone is familiar with NASA's Apollo Program and its endeavor to land the first person on the lunar surface when Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong took one small step for a man on July 20, 1969. But Apple TV's \"For All Mankind\" gave us a look into an alternative history version of the historic mission, one where Russia landed on the moon first, and the Space Race accelerated further than true-life events transpired.",
        "Now we're headed over to Star City, the Soviet Union's secret cosmonaut training city located just an hour outside Moscow, to see how this fictional feat was accomplished by the forbidden city's population of cosmonauts, security thugs, scientists, engineers, aerospace aces, KGB operatives, and double-agent spies.",
        "With \"For All Mankind\" season 5's finale airing this week, it's time to switch sides to \"Star City\" and learn how the USSR beat the Americans at their own game despite oppression, near-disasters, sabotage, love triangles, paranoia, and some really bland food.",
        "Let's brave the Cold War chill, comrades, and march right into Apple TV's \"Star City!\"",
        "When does \"Star City\" come out?",
        "The debut season of \"Star City\" starts on May 29, 2026 for its first 8-episode outing at 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time (ET), with the initial two chapters titled \"The Eyes\" and \"A Bear on a Chain\" kicking things off.",
        "Subsequent weekly episodes will arrive each Friday until the season finale is broadcast on July 10, 2026.",
        "How To Watch \"Star City's\" Inaugural Season?",
        "\"Star City\" and its dark espionage saga, paired with harsh life inside the Soviet space program's clandestine headquarters encircled by concrete and razor wire, can be seen exclusively on the Apple TV streaming platform, along with all five seasons of the original \"For All Mankind\" flagship series from which it was spawned.",
        "If you're going to be out of the country when the show debuts, you can still watch it on your streaming service of choice using a VPN. You'll be able to connect to your streaming services, no matter where you are on Earth (though it won't work on Mars, sorry).",
        "Watch Star City on Apple TV+:Apple TV+: $12.99/month (7-day free trial)Apple TV & Peacock Premium: $14.99/month"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:41.495Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vc2NpZW5jZS8yMDI2LzA1L3NldmVyZWQtc2VhLWN1Y3VtYmVyLWFwcGVuZGFnZXMtZG9udC1zZWVtLXRvLWRpZS8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Severed sea cucumber appendages don't seem to die",
      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/05/severed-sea-cucumber-appendages-dont-seem-to-die/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-2240137437-1152x648.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Organs, arms, appendages, and other complex tissues usually decay rapidly when they’re separated from their host. Over the years, biologists have seen some success with keeping them alive outside of the body—organ transplants depend on it—but it has always required germ-free environments and nutrient-rich mediums filled with growth factors. Now, though, scientists have discovered bits of tissue removed from a species of sea cucumber called Psolus fabricii can keep on living indefinitely if they’re left in ordinary seawater.",
        "“This is naturally occurring tissue immortality,” said Sara Jobson, a researcher at Memorial University of Newfoundland and lead author of the study. “Having tissues that survive that easily is unheard of. We’ve never seen anything like this.”",
        "The beginning of LiPfe",
        "Psolus fabricii is a species of sea cucumber that lives in the cold waters of the Atlantic and Arctic oceans. Its bottom side, known as a sole, is soft and ringed by a band of tube feet that it uses to grip rocks. Once on a rock, it extends soft, branching tentacles into the water to feed on suspended particles. Because these sea cucumbers inhabit harsh environments, their feet and tentacles experience high rates of injury and loss. Evolution has therefore endowed these sites with an incredibly high capacity for regeneration.",
        "While sea cucumbers can easily regrow these parts, they don’t have whole-body regeneration like flatworms and some starfish do. Their severed bits don’t grow into new sea cucumbers. But it turns out they don’t die, either.",
        "“We didn’t set out to find immortal tissues,” Jobson said. “Our lab focuses on sea cucumbers, and this sea cucumber has been used in other studies. One of my collaborators happened to notice that its amputated tissue just kept living, and it seemed to be healing and surviving and she didn’t do anything special to keep it. It was a fortuitous discovery.”",
        "This fortuitous discovery quickly turned into an organized long-term experiment. The researchers took excised tube feet, groups of tube feet called ambulacra, and tentacles from P. fabricii and found all of them survived when placed in natural, non-sterile seawater.",
        "“We examined all of them, but we primarily focused on tube feet,” Jobson said. When tube feet were severed, the wound margin was a mess of missing or fragmented epidermal and connective tissue. Within two days, the explants began shedding this damaged tissue. Internally, a large influx of coelomocytes, the sea cucumber’s immune cells, rushed from the inner connective tissues toward the damaged spot, apparently to facilitate organismal defense and regeneration.",
        "By day six, the healthy tissue had curled inward, completely sealing the wound site; the severed organ was more or less restored to working order.",
        "It turned out LiPfe explants weren’t just surviving; they were actively reorganizing their architecture to adapt to the new, severed state. First came the shrinking. During the first week, the tissue shrank by about 23 percent in diameter. Given more time, it stabilized and reversed this trend. Between 60 and 120 days post-excision, LiPfe grew back to their initial size, and after a year, they were 12 percent larger than when they were first cut from the host.",
        "The researchers have introduced these tissues as a completely new class of living material they called LiPfe—living immortal P. fabricii explants. And as time went by, LiPfe put on quite a show.",
        "The metamorphosis"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:41.901Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly90ZWNoY3J1bmNoLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1LzI5L2NvZGVycy1hcmUtcmVmdXNpbmctdG8td29yay13aXRob3V0LWFpLWFuZC10aGF0LWNvdWxkLWNvbWUtYmFjay10by1iaXRlLXRoZW0v": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Coders are refusing to work without AI — and that could come back to bite them  | TechCrunch",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/coders-are-refusing-to-work-without-ai-and-that-could-come-back-to-bite-them/",
      "byline": "Julie Bort",
      "imageUrl": "https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/tc-backlight-e1689786273147.png?w=1200",
      "paragraphs": [
        "In 2026, you cannot snatch AI coding tools out of developers’ vice-grip hands, researchers have discovered.",
        "But while AI is undoubtedly helping coders produce code faster, it may not be producing better code, other researchers warn. And that could cause problems down the road for them.",
        "Specifically, in February 2026, respected AI research lab METR published a surprising revelation: most developers won’t work, even on a limited number of tasks, without AI anymore.",
        "METR had hoped to provide an update to some groundbreaking research published a few months earlier, in 2025, on AI coding productivity. In it, researchers measured how much time open source developers took to do tasks by hand versus with AI.",
        "While developers in that study reported that AI was making them more productive, they were shocked to learn it actually slowed them down. Sure, it generated code faster, but then they spent extra time finding and fixing errors, steering the AI and waiting on it to complete tasks.",
        "When METR set out to repeat the experiment to measure advances in AI and coder proficiency, they couldn’t.",
        "Devs weren’t willing to participate “because they do not wish to work without AI” even just for the study, the researchers confessed.",
        "Instead, METR published a survey in May that allowed technical employees to self-report their AI productivity gains. Not surprisingly, they perceived that AI made them twice as valuable to their organizations.",
        "But recent headlines about the wild expense of so-called tokenmaxxing, coupled with a smattering of recent research, make such self-perceptions dubious.",
        "Tokenmaxxing, or using the number of tokens a person uses as a proxy for productivity with AI, has been the trend of 2026 so far. And it may already be over.",
        "Amazon shut down its internal token-tracking leaderboard called Kirorank after employees were gaming it by using AI agents excessively, and running up costs, the Financial Times reported this week. The employees proved that AI use does not automatically translate to increased productivity.",
        "Uber blew through its 2026 AI budget within the first four months of the year, The Information reported. COO Andrew Macdonald recently said on a podcast that such spending hadn’t led to a measurable increase in projects or productivity."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:42.530Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud2lyZWQuY29tL3N0b3J5L3doaXRlLWhvdXNlLWFsaWVucy1nb3YtdXMtY2l0aXplbnMtYXJyZXN0ZWQv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The White House’s Aliens.gov Site Brags That ICE Arrested More Than 700 US Citizens",
      "source": "wired.com",
      "url": "https://www.wired.com/story/white-house-aliens-gov-us-citizens-arrested/",
      "byline": "Maddy Varner",
      "imageUrl": "https://media.wired.com/photos/6a19d5686c603cc052203420/191:100/w_1280,c_limit/pol_alien_GettyImages-2277150138.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "A space-themed White House website that mocks immigrants and compares them to extraterrestrials claims Immigration and Customs Enforcement has arrested almost half a million people in nearly 12,000 cities and towns in the United States. In 715 of the locations listed, the site identifies at least one of the people arrested as being born in the United States. In 83 of the locations, every single arrestee is reported to be an American.",
        "The White House unveiled the website, Aliens.gov, on Thursday after teasing the launch on X with a 10-second video captioned “They walk among us,” leading many users to suspect an announcement about UFOs—the subject of an ongoing Trump administration disclosure effort that produced two releases of declassified files earlier in May. The site turned out instead to be a piece of political theater aimed at dehumanizing immigrants and casting those the Trump administration has arrested as the secret extraterrestrial visitors of UFO conspiracy lore.",
        "The site includes information about arrestees’ alleged criminal offenses for each location. People in 3,159 locations are accused of “Immigration.” In 1,082 locations—including Chicago and Minneapolis—at least one of the crimes supposedly committed by the arrestees is “Public Peace,” a category of convictions that includes unlawful assembly and disorderly conduct.",
        "In more than one-fifth of the locations the site flags as the site of an arrest, no criminal charges are recorded. Puerto Rico, a US territory whose residents are American citizens, is mapped on the site as a separate jurisdiction; in one row, the site lists Puerto Rico itself among the foreign countries the arrestees came from.",
        "In a statement provided post-publication, the White House said aliens.gov “pulls data directly from DHS, which initially included a handful of non-immigration HSI arrests,” adding that “this has been updated.” HSI, or Homeland Security Investigations, is a part of ICE. WIRED reviewed the updated data and found there were 270,214 fewer arrests listed.",
        "The Trump administration has repeatedly claimed that ICE is going after the “worst of the worst,” but that framing has collapsed under the weight of ICE’s own data, pried loose by a range of government watchdog organizations, such as TRAC and the Deportation Data Project. An April report from the Deportation Data Project found that ICE arrests of people without any criminal convictions has skyrocketed compared to the six months prior to the start of the Trump administration. In October, ProPublica reported that immigration agents have held or detained more than 170 US citizens.",
        "Some of the locations listed on Aliens.gov don’t appear to be cities or towns at all. One “neighborhood” in the dataset is an address in Ohio that corresponds to that of a state-run prison.",
        "The website was originally registered by the Executive Office of the President in March, according to 404 Media. At the time, there was speculation that the website would host records about extraterrestrial life and UFOs, since President Trump had promised to release new information in a February Truth Social post. In anticipation, WIRED set up a script to monitor when the site went live.",
        "One of the first things visitors to the site see is a counter labeled “encounters,” ostensibly indicating how many undocumented immigrants federal agents have arrested since Trump took office. The counter is fake. The starting number—3,129,580—is hand-typed into the website, and its upward motion is generated by a timer initiated by the visitor’s own browser, according to a WIRED analysis of the site’s code. The figure does not correspond to any enforcement total published by immigration authorities and is roughly seven times larger than the actual ICE arrest count since January 2025.",
        "Visitors to the site are meant to be greeted by the opening notes of the X-Files theme song, WIRED discovered, set to play beneath a stylized “TOP SECRET” stamp and a warning that immigrants have “shopped in the same stores, attended the same classes as our children, and lived seemingly normal human existences.” The music has gone unnoticed because nearly every browser in the past 10 years has blocked autoplay audio by default.",
        "The music track contains metadata indicating the file was created using late-2000s-era CD-ripping software. Disney Music Group, which has owned the rights to the music since its parent company’s acquisition and merger with Twentieth Century Fox in 2019, did not immediately respond to questions about whether it had given the White House permission to use the recording. The White House did not answer questions about how it obtained the files and whether it had permission to use it.",
        "Ripping a copyrighted track from a CD to score a website is, on its face, precisely the kind of unauthorized reproduction the FBI’s notorious Anti-Piracy Warning Seal program exists to deter."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:42.918Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nYWRnZXQuY29tLzIxODM2MzEvMDA3LWZpcnN0LWxpZ2h0LXJldmlldy8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "007 First Light is the stealthy James Bond game I've dreamed of - Engadget",
      "source": "engadget.com",
      "url": "https://www.engadget.com/2183631/007-first-light-review/",
      "byline": "Devindra Hardawar",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.engadget.com/img/gallery/007-first-light-is-the-stealthy-james-bond-game-ive-dreamed-of/l-intro-1780066099.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Leave it up to the Hitman developers to get Bond right.",
        "007 First Light is the perfect way to reboot James Bond. This younger version of the character isn't a misogynistic brute like he is in the novels, but he's still a cocky crusader who can kick ass with flair. And, thanks to Hitman developer IO Interactive's extensive experience making stealthy assassin games, First Light excels by letting you actually play James Bond as a spy, and not just a guy who shoots everyone in sight. The result is a thrilling espionage adventure that's only marred by a few annoying extended shootouts.",
        "While I loved Goldeneye on the Nintendo 64, I also can't deny that its single-player campaign is nowhere near as fondly remembered as its main draw: a way to murder your friends on the same TV. The games that followed never quite captured the magic of the character — they almost always tried to boil the cinematic experience of Bond with shooting and car chases. IOI's ingenious choice was to build a Bond game around Hitman's rock solid stealth gameplay and large, NPC-filled environments, then make it as immersive as possible. The focus is on interactivity, instead of chasing the specter of cinema.",
        "Welcome to spy school",
        "You start the game when Bond is a lowly airman with no connection to MI:6. After your plane is shot down by a mysterious private military group you have to quietly avoid soldiers while learning the game's basic stealth routine. It works like you'd expect: You can hide in or behind cover to avoid enemies, and there's a subtle awareness gauge as they see you. I appreciated the ability to run to cover, since it made Bond feel a bit more nimble than someone like Uncharted's Nathan Drake. (The game also delivers a subtle jab at Drake, joking that Bond is starting to resemble an archaeologist adventurer.)",
        "IOI doesn't rush anything in 007: First Light. There's a large chunk of time before you're able to take down enemies from stealth, and it takes even longer to get unrestricted access to guns. There's around three hours before you're on your first genuine assignment. In between, you're attending MI:6's training camp, where Bond makes a few close friends (and potential enemies).",
        "IOI spices up the obligatory tutorial with unusually cinematic flair. At one point, the game compresses the martial arts, shooting and parkour trainings into a single fluid sequence, exactly like a montage in film. I barely had time to process that I was jumping between completely different actions and locations. Before I knew it, Bond was field-ready (and I knew which buttons to press.)",
        "As you step into the world of MI:6, you also get equipped with a variety of hardware from Q, the character who typically outfits Bond with high-tech gadgets. The Q-Watch lets you hack into nearby electronics, similar to the hacking mechanic in Ubisoft's Watch Dogs. The dart phone can instantly poison people; a laser strap can cut through locks and blind baddies; the missile pen is what you think it is. They're not all useful — I never found a reason to equip the Shockwave Camera or Flash Mine – but at least they let you tune the game to your liking.",
        "Beyond Bond's hardware, technology also plays an enormous role in 007: First Light. It turns out that MI:6 has also partnered with a tech billionaire for — say it with me now — an AI supercomputer that sorts through all of the world's available information. THEAI, a reference to the Greek goddess of foresight (and oh so close to just being \"the AI\"), has apparently been a smashing success for Britain, but the dystopian implications are clear from the start. How can we tell if an all-powerful AI makes mistakes? And wouldn't it be possible for a technology giant to manipulate the AI's discoveries for its own gain?",
        "Bond by way of Hitman",
        "IOI's Hitman roots are clear from the very beginning of First Light, but they become even more apparent once you reach the end of spy school. First you have to infiltrate a crowded night club to track down a suspect, which hearkens back to a handful of classic Hitman levels. The game's scale becomes truly apparent in the second mission, where you're looking for a former MI:6 agent in a boutique hotel (which also happens to be holding a chess tournament). The hotel itself is massive, immaculately designed and filled with dozens of guests and attendees, many of which are involved in scripted routines or conversations. This one portion of First Light's clockwork pocket universe feels more alive than many soulless open world games.",
        "It's not quite an immersive sim like the Dishonored games, but in true Hitman fashion, you can accomplish your objectives in multiple ways. Just don't expect to go in guns blazing. In most scenarios, First Light's \"License to Kill\" feature prohibits you from firing on enemies unless they pull their guns first. It's really just a reminder that you're not playing a cold-blooded assassin, and it encourages you to spend your time stealthily moving around environments and taking down enemies silently."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:43.235Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGVjaG5vbG9neXJldmlldy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS8xMTM4MDkzL3RoZS1kZWFkbHktZWJvbGEtb3V0YnJlYWstaXMtcHJvdmluZy1kaWZmaWN1bHQtdG8tY29udHJvbC8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The deadly Ebola outbreak is proving difficult to control | MIT Technology Review",
      "source": "technologyreview.com",
      "url": "https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/29/1138093/the-deadly-ebola-outbreak-is-proving-difficult-to-control/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "The alert was raised on May 5. Four health-care workers in the Ituri Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo had died from an unknown illness within four days.",
        "Rapid response teams were sent to investigate, and tests at a research center in Kinshasa revealed the culprit: the Bundibugyo virus, one of the viruses that cause Ebola. Suspected cases of the disease have snowballed in the last few weeks. By May 24, the WHO had estimated that 223 people had died from the disease. There were over 900 suspected cases. Today’s figures are likely to be higher.",
        "A couple of weeks ago, I covered the hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship. Three people sadly died, but the outbreak itself was kept under control. There have been no further deaths, and passengers have been safely repatriated. The picture for Ebola is far bleaker. And there are several reasons why.",
        "The most obvious is the disease itself. Ebola is a severe disease with an average 50% fatality rate. Previous outbreaks have resulted in thousands of deaths. (Hantavirus also has a high fatality rate, but it doesn’t usually spread as easily between humans.)",
        "Between 2014 and 2016, an Ebola outbreak in West Africa caused more than 11,000 deaths. A more recent outbreak, which took place between 2018 and 2020, caused 2,299 deaths before being brought under control with a vaccination campaign.",
        "But those outbreaks were caused by the Zaire virus, which has a different genetic sequence. There is no vaccine for the Bundibugyo virus. We don’t know if the two vaccines approved for Zaire might also work for Bundibugyo. There’s a concern they might even make things worse by interfering with a person’s immune response to the virus.",
        "Scientists are working on potential Bundibugyo vaccines. But the most advanced efforts are still months away from clinical trials. There are no specific antiviral treatments for the virus, either.",
        "So to control the outbreak, health-care workers are trying to stop the spread of the disease. Ebolaviruses can be transmitted to humans by animals including fruit bats, chimpanzees, and gorillas. They can then spread between people via contact with bodily fluids such as blood or vomit.",
        "That’s why the virus is often spread among family members, to health-care workers, and during some burial services. The WHO advises isolating people who have the virus in treatment centers. It also recommends safe burial measures that limit physical contact with the deceased, for example. Communities need to be informed about the virus and how it spreads, and health professionals should be on hand to diagnose cases and track them.",
        "That’s all easier said than done in an era of misinformation. Some members of the community even doubt whether the disease is real. There have been three attacks on health-care facilities in the region in recent weeks.",
        "Last week, two treatment centers were burned down. The first incident occurred after relatives of a deceased man were prohibited from retrieving his (infectious) body. As a result of the second incident, 18 suspected cases reentered the community.",
        "A couple of days later, a group of men unleashed gunfire at Mongbwalu General Hospital, which was also treating people with Ebola. They were demanding the bodies of their deceased relatives."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:43.578Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly92ZW50dXJlYmVhdC5jb20vb3JjaGVzdHJhdGlvbi9tZW1vLW1lbW9yeS1tb2RlbC10ZWFtcy11cGdyYWRlLWxsbS13aXRob3V0LXJldHJhaW5pbmc": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "AI memory framework MeMo skips LLM retraining",
      "source": "venturebeat.com",
      "url": "https://venturebeat.com/orchestration/memo-memory-model-teams-upgrade-llm-without-retraining",
      "imageUrl": "https://images.ctfassets.net/jdtwqhzvc2n1/uNG5np6loL4mLiU9LKH0s/7525aad6eda1c42caffcb84af89bce26/LLM_memory_module.jpg?w=800&amp;q=75",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Enabling LLMs to acquire new knowledge after training remains a major hurdle for enterprise AI — current solutions are either too expensive, too slow, or constrained by context window limits.",
        "MeMo, a framework from researchers at multiple universities, encodes new knowledge into a dedicated smaller memory model that operates separately from the main LLM.",
        "The modular architecture works with both open- and closed-source models and sidesteps the complexity of RAG pipelines and full model retraining.",
        "Experiments show that MeMo handles complex queries reliably even when retrieval pipelines are noisy. It avoids the catastrophic forgetting associated with direct fine-tuning and provides a cost-effective pathway for continuous knowledge updates.",
        "The challenge of updating LLM memory",
        "Large language models are frozen after training and their internal knowledge remains static until they undergo subsequent, computationally massive updates.",
        "Currently, developers rely on three main approaches to integrate external knowledge into an LLM, each with distinct drawbacks:",
        "Non-parametric methods, such as retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) and in-context learning, retrieve relevant documents from an external database and insert them directly into the model's prompt. While popular, these methods are limited by context window sizes.",
        "As Armando Solar-Lezama, a co-author of the paper, told VentureBeat, “Vector databases have a fundamentally difficult job of encoding the full semantics of a chunk of text in a single vector, and then match that vector to a query, even when the relevance of the chunk... may only be apparent in the context of other chunks.”",
        "The researchers note that the semantic similarity of embeddings often does not correspond to what a user's query actually requires. Processing thousands of retrieved tokens also creates substantial computational overhead and inference latency. Most problematically, RAG systems are highly sensitive to noise. Irrelevant or poorly retrieved passages often degrade the model's final response.",
        "Parametric methods, like continual pretraining or supervised fine-tuning, attempt to internalize new knowledge directly into the LLM's weights. Updating modern, massive LLMs is prohibitively expensive and typically impossible for proprietary, closed-source models hidden behind APIs. Fine-tuning is also prone to causing catastrophic forgetting. Forcing the model to adapt to new corporate data often erodes its previously acquired reasoning capabilities and safety guardrails.",
        "Latent memory methods, such as context compression, offer a middle ground. They compress knowledge into compact \"soft tokens\" or representations that are added to the model’s context during inference. The fatal flaw here is \"representation coupling.\" The compressed memory is strictly bound to the model architecture that produced it; you can't transfer a latent memory trained on an open-source model to a closed-source one."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:43.929Z"
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "American startup thinks small wafers could break the semiconductor industry",
      "source": "techradar.com",
      "url": "https://www.techradar.com/pro/just-imagine-what-could-get-done-how-this-us-startup-is-building-a-cheap-fab-in-a-box-to-do-for-microchips-what-ibm-did-for-pcs",
      "byline": "https://www.techradar.com/author/efosa-udinmwen",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/PwM8wPUfrSmymr5xhqLxcS-1920-80.png",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Small wafer fabs could dramatically reduce semiconductor manufacturing startup costs worldwide",
        "Compact chip factories may accelerate semiconductor workforce training across developing industries",
        "InchFab believes utilization matters more than wafer size in semiconductor economics",
        "The semiconductor industry traditionally depends upon gigantic fabrication plants costing billions of dollars and requiring years before meaningful chip production even begins.",
        "A United States startup called InchFab believes much smaller facilities could dramatically reduce those barriers by shrinking semiconductor manufacturing equipment itself.",
        "Founded by MIT graduate Mitchell Hsing alongside several collaborators, the company builds compact clean-room fabrication systems designed around smaller silicon wafers.",
        "Smaller wafers reduce manufacturing costs",
        "Instead of constructing sprawling industrial campuses processing massive wafer volumes, InchFab compresses fabrication capability into modular systems roughly matching shipping container dimensions.",
        "The company claims those systems cost between $5 million and $15 million dollars, far below conventional semiconductor fabrication facilities requiring multibillion-dollar investments.",
        "Hsing explained that the company initially experimented with one-inch wafers because standard photolithography fields naturally aligned with those physical dimensions.",
        "That approach quickly encountered practical complications because one-inch wafers are difficult to source commercially and require manual cutting from larger substrates.",
        "It later shifted toward two-inch wafers before ultimately settling around four-inch formats that balanced practicality with equipment miniaturisation advantages."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:44.234Z"
    },
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "After using this Windows laptop for work and play, I'm wondering why I still need my PC tower | ZDNET",
      "source": "zdnet.com",
      "url": "https://www.zdnet.com/article/msi-raider-16-max-hx-review/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "'ZDNET Recommends': What exactly does it mean?",
        "ZDNET's recommendations are based on many hours of testing, research, and comparison shopping. We gather data from the best available sources, including vendor and retailer listings as well as other relevant and independent reviews sites. And we pore over customer reviews to find out what matters to real people who already own and use the products and services we’re assessing.",
        "When you click through from our site to a retailer and buy a product or service, we may earn affiliate commissions. This helps support our work, but does not affect what we cover or how, and it does not affect the price you pay. Neither ZDNET nor the author are compensated for these independent reviews. Indeed, we follow strict guidelines that ensure our editorial content is never influenced by advertisers.",
        "ZDNET's editorial team writes on behalf of you, our reader. Our goal is to deliver the most accurate information and the most knowledgeable advice possible in order to help you make smarter buying decisions on tech gear and a wide array of products and services. Our editors thoroughly review and fact-check every article to ensure that our content meets the highest standards. If we have made an error or published misleading information, we will correct or clarify the article. If you see inaccuracies in our content, please report the mistake via this form.",
        "MSI Raider 16 Max HX",
        "pros and cons",
        "Exceptional performance",
        "Easy to upgrade",
        "Strong speakers",
        "Expensive",
        "Average battery",
        "Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:44.583Z"
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      "ok": false,
      "title": "Attackers Use LLM Agent for Post-Exploitation After Marimo CVE-2026-39987 Exploit",
      "source": "thehackernews.com",
      "url": "https://thehackernews.com/2026/05/attackers-use-llm-agent-for-post.html",
      "paragraphs": [],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:44.928Z",
      "error": "Could not extract article body"
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    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmxlZXBpbmdjb21wdXRlci5jb20vbmV3cy9zZWN1cml0eS9jYWxpZm9ybmlhLWFnLXN1ZXMtMjNhbmRtZS1vdmVyLTIwMjMtYnJlYWNoLWV4cG9zaW5nLWhlYWx0aC1kYXRhLw": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "California AG sues 23andMe over 2023 breach exposing health data",
      "source": "bleepingcomputer.com",
      "url": "https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/california-ag-sues-23andme-over-2023-breach-exposing-health-data/",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.bleepstatic.com/content/hl-images/2024/01/25/23andMe.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit against 23andMe, now Chrome Holding Co., over the company's failure to protect sensitive customer genetic and personal information.",
        "Improper security led to a high-profile data breach in 2023 that exposed the sensitive information of nearly 7 million customers, including 855,541 Californians.",
        "The incident came to light that year in October, after threat actors offered to sell a large number of records stolen from 23andMe, and leaked data samples (and later larger parts of the dataset) to prove the authenticity of the information.",
        "The California-based company confirmed that the leaked data was genuine and claimed that it had been extracted following a credential-stuffing attack targeting accounts with weak credentials.",
        "Soon, it became clear that the attackers had exfiltrated data from users opting into the platform's 'DNA Relatives' feature, and then accessed a second, much larger set of accounts that didn't use the feature.",
        "In total, the incident exposed data of roughly 6.9 million customers, including genetic data, health predisposition information, ancestry and ethnicity information, biological relatives, and DNA matches.",
        "By the end of 2023, the company was already facing multiple lawsuits. In early 2024, national data protection authorities launched investigations that ultimately resulted in multi-million-dollar fines, leading the company to file for bankruptcy.",
        "The latest lawsuit filed by AG R. Bonta claims that 23andMe failed to implement reasonable safeguards against credential-stuffing attacks, missed multiple opportunities to detect the intrusion, and failed to catch the coding error in DNA Relatives that led to the widespread breach.",
        "In addition to the data protection failures, Bonta also underlines the misleading public statements 23andMe made before and after the incident.",
        "Specifically, the firm claimed before the incident that its security met high standards. After the breach, it attempted to downplay the incident's severity, suggesting that the exposed data was largely public, and blamed customers for password reuse, stating that its systems had not been breached.",
        "Overall, the Attorney General argues that these actions violated several state laws, including the California Genetic Information Privacy Act, the California Reasonable Data Security Law, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), the False Advertising Law, and the Unfair Competition Law.",
        "The complaint seeks an injunction to prevent any further violations of the above, including the imposition of statutory penalties of $1,000-$7,500 per violation, depending on the case."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:45.465Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9rcmVic29uc2VjdXJpdHkuY29tLzIwMjYvMDUvbGF3bWFrZXJzLWRlbWFuZC1hbnN3ZXJzLWFzLWNpc2EtdHJpZXMtdG8tY29udGFpbi1kYXRhLWxlYWsv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Lawmakers Demand Answers as CISA Tries to Contain Data Leak",
      "source": "krebsonsecurity.com",
      "url": "https://krebsonsecurity.com/2026/05/lawmakers-demand-answers-as-cisa-tries-to-contain-data-leak/",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Lawmakers in both houses of Congress are demanding answers from the U.S. Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) after KrebsOnSecurity reported this week that a CISA contractor intentionally published AWS GovCloud keys and a vast trove of other agency secrets on a public GitHub account. The inquiry comes as CISA is still struggling to contain the breach and invalidate the leaked credentials.",
        "On May 18, KrebsOnSecurity reported that a CISA contractor with administrative access to the agency’s code development platform had created a public GitHub profile called “Private-CISA” that included plaintext credentials to dozens of internal CISA systems. Experts who reviewed the exposed secrets said the commit logs for the code repository showed the CISA contractor disabled GitHub’s built-in protection against publishing sensitive credentials in public repos.",
        "CISA acknowledged the leak but has not responded to questions about the duration of the data exposure. However, experts who reviewed the now-defunct Private-CISA archive said it was originally created in November 2025, and that it exhibits a pattern consistent with an individual operator using the repository as a working scratchpad or synchronization mechanism rather than a curated project repository.",
        "In a written statement, CISA said “there is no indication that any sensitive data was compromised as a result of the incident.” But in a May 19 a letter (PDF) to CISA’s Acting Director Nick Andersen, Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-NH) said the credential leak raises serious questions about how such a security lapse could occur at the very agency charged with helping to prevent cyber breaches.",
        "“This reporting raises serious concerns regarding CISA’s internal policies and procedures at a time of significant cybersecurity threats against U.S. critical infrastructure,” Sen. Hassan wrote.",
        "A May 19 letter from Sen. Margaret Hassan (D-NH) to the acting director of CISA demanded answers to a dozen questions about the breach.",
        "Sen. Hassan noted that the incident occurred against the backdrop of major disruptions internally at CISA, which lost more than a third of it workforce and almost all of its senior leaders after the Trump administration forced a series of early retirements, buyouts, and resignations across the agency’s various divisions.",
        "Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), the ranking member on the House Homeland Security Committee, echoed the senator’s concerns.",
        "“We are concerned that this incident reflects a diminished security culture and/or an inability for CISA to adequately manage its contract support,” Thompson wrote in a May 19 letter to the acting CISA chief that was co-signed by Rep. Delia Ramirez (D-Ill), the ranking member of the panel’s Subcommittee on Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Protection. “It’s no secret that our adversaries — like China, Russia, and Iran — seek to gain access to and persistence on federal networks. The files contained in the ‘Private-CISA’ repository provided the information, access, and roadmap to do just that.”",
        "KrebsOnSecurity has learned that more a week after CISA was first notified of the data leak by the security firm GitGuardian, the agency is still working to invalidate and replace many of the exposed keys and secrets.",
        "On May 20, KrebsOnSecurity heard from Dylan Ayrey, the creator of TruffleHog, an open-source tool for discovering private keys and other secrets buried in code hosted at GitHub and other public platforms. Ayrey said CISA still hadn’t invalidated an RSA private key exposed in the Private-CISA repo that granted access to a GitHub app which is owned by the CISA enterprise account and installed on the CISA-IT GitHub organization with full access to all code repositories.",
        "“An attacker with this key can read source code from every repository in the CISA-IT organization, including private repos, register rogue self-hosted runners to hijack CI/CD pipelines and access repository secrets, and modify repository admin settings including branch protection rules, webhooks, and deploy keys,” Ayrey told KrebsOnSecurity. CI/CD stands for Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery, and it refers to a set of practices used to automate the building, testing and deployment of software."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:46.275Z"
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "Asia's Cyber Insurance Market Shows Signs of Life",
      "source": "darkreading.com",
      "url": "https://www.darkreading.com/cybersecurity-operations/asias-cyber-insurance-market-signs-of-life",
      "imageUrl": "https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt6d90778a997de1cd/bltb9e3fbe8c75eb597/6a19745b69143b73c43502c5/Blue_globe_Asia_Jimmie_Tolliver_Alamy.jpg?disable=upscale&width=1200&height=630&fit=crop",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Breaking cybersecurity news, news analysis, commentary, and other content from around the world, with an initial focus on the Middle East & Africa and the Asia Pacific",
        "The cyber insurance industry has made relatively weak inroads into Asia due to a a variety of factors, but that could be changing.",
        "May 29, 2026",
        "Relatively few organizations in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region use cyber insurance, but there is reason to believe that is slowly changing.",
        "Cyber insurance is a subset of insurance that has gained popularity in recent years as ransomware attacks became an ever-present threat. Cyber insurance is intended to offset the losses incurred by cyberattacks, including, in some cases, policy holders paying ransoms to cybercriminals.",
        "Insurance broker UIB and cyber-risk analytics vendor CyberCube this week published a report detailing the state of cyber insurance in Asia. The report, titled \"Unlocking Asia’s Cyber Insurance Opportunity: The Broker's Role in Growth,\" claims that, despite the billions of people and countless organizations that reside in the region, market penetration remains low, even in developed economies like Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and Singapore.",
        "In these economies, \"larger entities with multi-billion-dollar revenues often purchase only modest cyber limits relative to their exposures,\" the report states, and in many markets fewer than 5% of small businesses purchase standalone cyber insurance. Risk management firm Aon said in a report last year that cyber insurance had reached only about 6% of Asia's addressable market.",
        "Related:Interpol's 'Operation Ramz' Pioneers Cross-Region Collabs in Middle East",
        "Why Cyber Insurance Adoption Lags in Asia",
        "Organizations in Asia lagged behind on getting cyber insurance for a variety of reasons, namely the mixed quality of cybersecurity postures, recent rapid digitalization, and a threat landscape that ramped up in tandem with said digitization, according to UIB and CyberCube's report.",
        "As threat actors got more aggressive and smarter about how much money to demand from victims, underwriting requirements for elements like customer security postures got more stringent. But this isn't necessarily true in all cases, as the report notes.",
        "\"In a soft market, with cyber (re)insurers navigating a world of rising, increasingly complex threats, the underpenetration of the APAC market presents an opportunity. Growing competition has pushed cyber globally into its third consecutive year of rate reductions, as insurance supply continues to outpace demand,\" the report reads. \"This dynamic is offsetting recent exposure growth due to negative rate changes, and driving further concessions on premiums, coverage and security controls.\""
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:46.587Z"
    },
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "Cognition's Scott Wu says AI coding agents shouldn't replace humans | TechCrunch",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/cognitions-scott-wu-says-ai-coding-agents-shouldnt-replace-humans/",
      "byline": "Julie Bort",
      "imageUrl": "https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Scott-wu-headshot-e1780070238342.png?resize=1200,1004",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Cognition CEO Scott Wu made headlines again this week when his two-year-old AI coding agent startup raised $1 billion at a $26 billion valuation. Cognition is the maker of Devin, one of the first and, arguably, most successful AI coding agents. Devin, the CEO says, “naturally owns tasks end to end.”",
        "In fact, in the blog post announcing that raise, Cognition laid out a vision where “we are shifting to a world of self-driving software development.”",
        "So, could Devin replace, say, a mid-level L4 programmer? Yes, and no, Wu told TechCrunch. “We’ve never thought about it as replacing humans. I know it’s like a scenario, folks have said these things. It has never been our view.”",
        "In this wild year of 2026 when every day another tech CEO announces layoffs in the name of supplanting workers with AI, Wu says he especially doesn’t want coders to lose their jobs. “We are all programmers ourselves,” he explained. “I started coding when I was nine.”",
        "In fact, Wu has been called one of the most accomplished child competitive programmers of all time, according to a recent profile in Colossus. As a second-grader, Wu won a nationwide math competition for seventh-graders, which launched a childhood filled with math and programming tournaments. It also introduced him to other wunderkinds who went on to launch other AI tech startups, like Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang.",
        "So, he tells TechCrunch, the idea was never to make human programmers obsolete.",
        "“When we started building Devin, it’s kind of a funny thing,” he mused, “but we really just thought of it as: this is your buddy who helps you build more.” In fact, he showed off a little stuffed animal holding a computer, his own Devin teddy bear of sorts, that he keeps on his desk. He thinks of it as a physical symbol of the Devin AI coder “This is my buddy that helps you build more.”",
        "Wu doesn’t want AI agents to take the joy of programming away from people.",
        "“It’s not a secret, most software engineers love building software, right?” he said. “If you ask them why, what they’ll basically tell you is, ‘Well, it’s like I get to build things from nothing. I can make my whole idea that I have, and turn it into a product. I can turn it into an experience.’”",
        "Just like visual development environments abstracted software creation away from machine instructions, he views agents as another layer of abstraction between envisioning a software product and producing it.",
        "Yet, Cognition says that Devin’s role in its own company is to ship nearly all the software. The company says that 89% of code committed by its engineers was committed by Devin, and the rest by local agents in Windsurf, the AI coding competitor it acquired last year.",
        "Wu explains that his agent’s role is largely to do the kinds of long-tail maintenance tasks that many programmers don’t like to do anyway: bringing old software up to date; moving applications off one platform and onto another. Agents will free programmers “from a lot of the toil, and so they can do much more of the creation side,” he promises."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:46.914Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25iYy5jb20vMjAyNi8wNS8yOS9zb2Z0d2FyZS1zdG9ja3Mtd3JhcC1iZXN0LW1vbnRoLXNpbmNlLTIwMDEtYXMtdGFsay1vZi1zYWFzcG9jYWx5cHNlLS5odG1s": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Software stocks wrap up best month since 2001 as talk of 'SaaSpocalypse' subsides",
      "source": "cnbc.com",
      "url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/29/software-stocks-wrap-best-month-since-2001-as-talk-of-saaspocalypse-.html",
      "byline": "Samantha Subin",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Software stocks bounced this week on strong results from Snowflake and Okta, which both recorded their best days on record.",
        "The results signal that investors may have been too quick to declare the end of software with the emergence of artificial intelligence.",
        "Even as AI displaces certain tools and job functions, many software companies continue to show growth, assisted by their own AI products.",
        "In this article",
        "IGV",
        "SHOP",
        "SNOW",
        "OKTA",
        "The \"SaaSpocalypse\" may not be over. But for now at least, fears of software's demise have cooled.",
        "Software stocks soared this week, driven by strong results from Snowflake and Okta, signaling that some companies are navigating their way through artificial intelligence disruption better than Wall Street expected.",
        "The iShares Expanded Tech-Software exchange-traded fund rose 8% this week and closed May up 21%, the best monthly performance for the ETF since October 2001. Back then it was a brief rebound during the dot-com bust, while the current rally comes as concerns about the impact of AI ripple across the sector.",
        "Software names have been hit particularly hard over the past year due to the boom in so-called vibe coding, with users able to now build apps and websites in minutes thanks to offerings from Anthropic, OpenAI and others."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:47.409Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9zcGFjZW5ld3MuY29tL3NwYWNlLWZvcmNlcy1jb21tZXJjaWFsLWdhdGVrZWVwZXItb2ZmZXJzLWEtcGxheWJvb2stZm9yLXN0YXJ0dXBzLXNlZWtpbmctZGVmZW5zZS1idXNpbmVzcy8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Space Force’s commercial gatekeeper offers a playbook for startups seeking defense business",
      "source": "spacenews.com",
      "url": "https://spacenews.com/space-forces-commercial-gatekeeper-offers-a-playbook-for-startups-seeking-defense-business/",
      "byline": "Sandra Erwin",
      "imageUrl": "https://spacenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/9676735-scaled-e1780065989126.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "WASHINGTON — As investment pours into defense and space startups, the U.S. Space Force is trying to draw more of those companies into the national security market.",
        "After hundreds of startup pitches, the head of the Space Force’s commercial office offers a candid assessment of what companies get right — and wrong — when approaching government buyers.",
        "Speaking May 27 at the State of the Space Industrial Base conference hosted by NewSpace Nexus in New Mexico, Col. Tim Trimailo shared what he described as personal observations from those interactions. His central message for startups: Build something that solves a real problem. Explain why it matters. Be candid about what has gone wrong. Understand how government buying works. Keep commercial customers in the picture.",
        "“Start with the ‘why’ … Why do we need it? Tell the story,” Trimailo said. “We have some founders who jump in, and they are incredibly intelligent. They understand their technology better than anybody else, but you have to start with the story. Why is your technology important? What capability does it deliver to the warfighter? Start there.”",
        "The advice reflects a broader tension playing out across the defense space sector. Venture funding has poured into companies developing satellites, communications networks, software, sensors and other systems, many of them built around the expectation that military demand will grow. Yet converting technical promise into government contracts remains one of the industry’s biggest challenges.",
        "Trimailo’s comments suggest that the obstacle is not always a lack of innovation. Sometimes it is a failure to connect innovation to military outcomes.",
        "The Space Force, he said, is buying capability, not individual components.",
        "“We buy capability, we don’t buy widgets,” Trimailo said. A propulsion system, communications terminal or other subsystem may be impressive on its own, but companies need to show how it contributes to a larger operational capability. “We have to see the ‘so what.’”",
        "Just as important is transparency.",
        "The commercial space industry has experienced its share of technical setbacks, launch failures and underperforming satellites. Trimailo argued that companies often do themselves a disservice by trying to hide those problems from government customers.",
        "“This is a small ecosystem,” he said. “We all sort of know what’s going on behind the scenes.” If a spacecraft reaches orbit but does not perform as expected, the better approach is to explain what happened and how the company plans to fix it. Setbacks themselves are not disqualifying, he said. The response to those setbacks often matters more.",
        "That desire for openness extends to discussions about proprietary technology."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:47.765Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BhY2UuY29tL3NwYWNlLWV4cGxvcmF0aW9uL2xhdW5jaGVzLXNwYWNlY3JhZnQvY2hpbmFzLXNoZW56aG91LTIxLWFzdHJvbmF1dHMtcmV0dXJuLXRvLWVhcnRoLWluLWJvcnJvd2VkLXNwYWNlY3JhZnQtdmlkZW8": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "China's Shenzhou 21 astronauts return to Earth after being briefly 'stranded', wrapping up record-breaking mission (video)",
      "source": "space.com",
      "url": "https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/chinas-shenzhou-21-astronauts-return-to-earth-in-borrowed-spacecraft-video",
      "byline": "https://www.space.com/author/mike-wall",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Mph77DJiA8YyPKRgpUWoVM-2560-80.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "China's record-breaking, and very eventful, Shenzhou 21 astronaut mission has come to an end.",
        "The Shenzhou 21 trio returned to Earth today (May 29) from China's Tiangong space station, touching down safely at the Dongfeng Landing Site in Inner Mongolia at 8:11 a.m. EDT (1211 GMT; 8:11 p.m. China Standard Time).",
        "The three astronauts had been aloft for 210 days — a new record for a Chinese crewed mission. And they came home in a different spacecraft than the one that carried them up, thanks to a slightly scary orbital event.",
        "The Shenzhou 21 astronauts — mission commander Zhang Lu, Wu Fei and Zhang Hongzhang — launched to Tiangong on Oct. 31 of last year to relieve the Shenzhou 20 crew.",
        "The Shenzhou 20 astronauts were supposed to head back to Earth on Nov. 5, but pre-departure inspections revealed a crack in the window of their capsule, which was presumably caused by a space debris strike.",
        "Chinese space officials deemed it too risky to bring astronauts home in the damaged Shenzhou 20 vehicle. So, on Nov. 14, the Shenzhou 20 crew returned to Earth aboard the Shenzhou 21 vessel, leaving the newly arrived astronauts \"stranded\" on Tiangong.",
        "That vulnerable condition didn't last long, however. China fast-tracked Shenzhou 22's trip to the pad, launching the spacecraft to Tiangong without anyone on board on Nov. 24. And that's the vehicle that carried Zhang Lu, Wu Fei and Zhang Hongzhang home today.",
        "The damaged Shenzhou 20 capsule, meanwhile, came back to Earth on Jan. 21, without any astronauts on board. The spacecraft survived the trip in one piece.",
        "Shenzhou 21 was the second spaceflight for Zhang Lu, who previously flew on the Shenzhou 15 mission to Tiangong in 2022-2023. It was the first mission for both Zhang Hongzhang and the 32-year-old Wu Fei, the youngest Chinese astronaut ever to fly to space.",
        "\"This mission has taught me that the most beautiful form of youth is to answer the call of one's country,\" Wu said shortly after touchdown on Friday, according to CGTN.",
        "The Shenzhou 21 astronauts conducted three spacewalks during their extra-long space stay. (Missions to Tiangong generally last about six months, or 180 days.) The trio \"also completed numerous scientific experiments in fields such as microgravity fundamental physics, space materials science, space life science, aerospace medicine and space technology,\" CGTN wrote.",
        "The Shenzhou 21 crewmates were relieved by the three astronauts of the Shenzhou 23 mission, which launched to Tiangong on May 24. (Shenzhou 22 was changed to an uncrewed flight, thanks to the Shenzhou 20 debris strike.)"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:48.016Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vc2NpZW5jZS8yMDI2LzA1L3Jlc2VhcmNoZXJzLWRldmVsb3AtYS1uZXctcHJvY2Vzcy10by1nZXQtbGl0aGl1bS1vdXQtb2Ytcm9ja3Mv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Researchers develop a new process to get lithium out of rocks",
      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/05/researchers-develop-a-new-process-to-get-lithium-out-of-rocks/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-1272885374-1152x648.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "While we make batteries based on many different chemistries, nothing has approached the massive scale at which we can produce lithium batteries. That scale makes the economics of lithium-ion batteries hard to compete with. Even if we develop a superior battery technology, it’s unclear whether we can get manufacturing costs down quickly enough to compete with the efficiency of the lithium supply chain and manufacturing.",
        "The one thing that could change the dynamics is a supply crunch. While lithium is extremely widespread, lithium that can be extracted economically is a different matter. It’s cheapest to extract it from brines, and lithium-rich brines are largely limited to South America. We do obtain some lithium from other sources, but it’s considerably more expensive.",
        "In today’s issue of Science, however, a research team has identified an energy-efficient means of extracting lithium from rocks. The process they’ve designed uses far less energy than existing ones, regenerates all its starting chemicals, and produces byproducts that could also be sold.",
        "Reacting rocks",
        "Like other metals, lithium shows up in various minerals. For example, the US Geological Survey recently took an inventory of all the lithium oxide deposits in the Northeast (they are extensive), which are found in a type of rock called pegmatite. Globally, however, the new paper indicates that the most abundant lithium ore is called spodumene, a lithium-aluminum silicate (LiAl(SiO3)2). And there is some processing of this material going on—it’s just energy-intensive and leaves behind a lot of waste.",
        "That’s because the process starts by heating the mineral to roughly 1,000° C to disrupt its compact structure, after which sulfuric acid is used to leach out the lithium. The resulting lithium sulfate solution is then converted into something useful for battery manufacturing (typically lithium carbonate), leaving behind sulfur-containing waste.",
        "The new work was done by a collaboration between MIT researchers and a couple of Boston-area companies. Their goal was a process that was far more energy-efficient and didn’t produce as much waste. What they came up with is a process where the key chemical used at the start of the process gets regenerated at a later step, and both the silicon and aluminum in the mineral end up in a form that we’re already using in commercial applications.",
        "The key chemical in the process is ammonium fluoride (NH4F). It’s possible to use the salt directly in a molten form, but heating it invariably leads to some production of hydrogen fluoride, which is extremely dangerous stuff (although they end up using some later). So instead, they used it dissolved in water, which apparently keeps these reactions from occurring. In this process, heating the solution to about 70° C results in the formation of NH4F2 ions, releasing ammonia gas that’s used later in the process.",
        "This ion donates a fluorine to the lithium, leaving a water-based solution of lithium fluoride. The silicon also forms a soluble ion, (NH4)2SiF6), while the aluminum forms a similar ion that remains behind as a solid, (NH4)3AlF6). Each of these is processed separately.",
        "Using everything",
        "We’ll start with the aluminum chemistry, which is one of the simpler pathways. Initially, heating the (NH4)3AlF6 to about 300° C produces aluminum trifluoride and releases ammonia and hydrogen fluoride. Then, raising the temperature to 700° C causes the aluminum trifluoride to react with water, leaving behind aluminum oxide and releasing yet more hydrogen fluoride.",
        "Again, hydrogen fluoride is dangerous stuff and needs to be handled carefully. But it’s also easy to react it with the ammonia (which is produced during two different reactions here) and reform the ammonium fluoride that was used to start the whole process. So, aside from minor losses due to inefficiencies, the process regenerates one of the key ingredients. Meanwhile, aluminum oxide is one of the key starting materials for the production of aluminum metal, and so can be fed into that, given that the purity of the end product here was over 98 percent."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:48.409Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly90ZWNoY3J1bmNoLmNvbS8yMDI2LzA1LzI5L2FydGlmaWNpYWwtaW50ZWxsaWdlbmNlLWRlZmluaXRpb24tZ2xvc3NhcnktaGFsbHVjaW5hdGlvbnMtZ3VpZGUtdG8tY29tbW9uLWFpLXRlcm1zLw": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "So you've heard these AI terms and nodded along; let's fix that | TechCrunch",
      "source": "TechCrunch",
      "url": "https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/29/artificial-intelligence-definition-glossary-hallucinations-guide-to-common-ai-terms/",
      "byline": "Natasha Lomas, Romain Dillet, Kyle Wiggers, Lucas Ropek",
      "imageUrl": "https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/GettyImages-ai-generated-eb728837-4a65-4ce4-b814-abd0c140d20c.jpg?w=1024",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Artificial intelligence is changing the world, and simultaneously inventing a whole new language to describe how it’s doing it. Spend five minutes reading about AI and you’ll run into LLMs, RAG, RLHF, and a dozen other terms that can make even very smart people in the tech world feel insecure. This glossary is our attempt to fix that. We update it regularly as the field evolves, so consider it a living document, much like the AI systems it describes.",
        "AGI",
        "Artificial general intelligence, or AGI, is a nebulous term. But it generally refers to AI that’s more capable than the average human at many, if not most, tasks. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman once described AGI as the “equivalent of a median human that you could hire as a co-worker.” Meanwhile, OpenAI’s charter defines AGI as “highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work.” Google DeepMind’s understanding differs slightly from these two definitions; the lab views AGI as “AI that’s at least as capable as humans at most cognitive tasks.” Confused? Not to worry — so are experts at the forefront of AI research.",
        "AI agent",
        "An AI agent refers to a tool that uses AI technologies to perform a series of tasks on your behalf — beyond what a more basic AI chatbot could do — such as filing expenses, booking tickets or a table at a restaurant, or even writing and maintaining code. However, as we’ve explained before, there are lots of moving pieces in this emergent space, so “AI agent” might mean different things to different people. Infrastructure is also still being built out to deliver on its envisaged capabilities. But the basic concept implies an autonomous system that may draw on multiple AI systems to carry out multistep tasks.",
        "API endpoints",
        "Think of API endpoints as “buttons” on the back of a piece of software that other programs can press to make it do things. Developers use these interfaces to build integrations — for example, allowing one application to pull data from another, or enabling an AI agent to control third-party services directly without a human manually operating each interface. Most smart home devices and connected platforms have these hidden buttons available, even if ordinary users never see or interact with them. As AI agents grow more capable, they are increasingly able to find and use these endpoints on their own, opening up powerful — and sometimes unexpected — possibilities for automation.",
        "Chain of thought",
        "Given a simple question, a human brain can answer without even thinking too much about it — things like “which animal is taller, a giraffe or a cat?” But in many cases, you often need a pen and paper to come up with the right answer because there are intermediary steps. For instance, if a farmer has chickens and cows, and together they have 40 heads and 120 legs, you might need to write down a simple equation to come up with the answer (20 chickens and 20 cows).",
        "In an AI context, chain-of-thought reasoning for large language models means breaking down a problem into smaller, intermediate steps to improve the quality of the end result. It usually takes longer to get an answer, but the answer is more likely to be correct, especially in a logic or coding context. Reasoning models are developed from traditional large language models and optimized for chain-of-thought thinking thanks to reinforcement learning.",
        "(See: Large language model)",
        "Coding agents"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:49.066Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9hcnN0ZWNobmljYS5jb20vaGVhbHRoLzIwMjYvMDUvYW5hbHlzaXMtb2YtdGV4YXMtbWVhc2xlcy1vdXRicmVhay1zaG93cy1qdXN0LWhvdy1kYW5nZXJvdXMtdmlydXMtaXMv": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "Analysis of Texas measles outbreak shows just how dangerous virus is",
      "source": "Ars Technica",
      "url": "https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/05/analysis-of-texas-measles-outbreak-shows-just-how-dangerous-virus-is/",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2053751760-1152x648.jpg",
      "paragraphs": [
        "For years, anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his zealous followers have downplayed measles as “just a rash” and falsely claimed that “Measles outbreaks have been fabricated to create fear.”",
        "In 2021, when Kennedy wrote those words, the US recorded just 49 measles cases. Yearly case counts have generally been low since 2000, when the US declared measles eliminated thanks to a decades-long vaccination campaign. But with the rise of Kennedy and his ilk in the past few decades, that public health triumph is being undone. Vaccination rates have slipped, and large, multistate outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases have inevitably come roaring back. Now it’s becoming painfully clear once again how wrong Kennedy and his cohorts are about infectious diseases and vaccines.",
        "In a study published yesterday in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, state and federal researchers provided a detailed postmortem of last year’s massive multi-state measles outbreak that mushroomed out of West Texas. The data reveals a disease that’s far from just a rash, with about 20 percent of people—mostly younger children—being hospitalized.",
        "“The outcomes experienced by patients hospitalized during this outbreak underscore the seriousness of measles infection and highlight that measles can cause life-threatening complications affecting multiple organ systems and place significant stress on patients and health care systems,” the authors conclude.",
        "By the end of the outbreak, there were 762 outbreak-related measles cases in Texas alone. The new analysis focused on 325 cases in the outbreak’s first three months (January 20 to March 18, 2025). Of those, at least 60 were hospitalized (18.5 percent). The researchers collected medical and case information from 54 of the hospitalized patients. All of them had no record of being vaccinated.",
        "Thirty of the 54 (56 percent) were young children between the ages of newborn and 4 years old. Nineteen (35 percent) were children ages 5 to 17. The five remaining cases were in adults, four of whom were pregnant women in their third trimester.",
        "Outcomes",
        "Only six of the 54 hospitalized patients had an underlying medical condition that may have put them at higher risk. None of the 54 hospitalized patients were immunocompromised.",
        "Of the 54 hospitalized, 47 (87 percent) developed a complication of measles, including 39 (72 percent) who developed pneumonia, 25 (46 percent) had dehydration, and 21 (39 percent) developed diarrhea. Seventeen (31.5 percent) patients developed co-infections with other pathogens, a known risk with measles, and 28 (52 percent) were treated with antibiotics.",
        "Thirty-eight (70.4 percent) patients required supplemental oxygen to breathe. Thirty-seven (68.5 percent) experienced hypoxia, which is insufficient oxygen levels to support the body. Four of the hospitalized patients, all children, required treatment in an intensive care unit. Three had dehydration. Two required intubation and mechanical ventilation. One child died.",
        "(There was a second child death in the Texas outbreak, but it occurred after the timeframe of the study and was not included.)",
        "Of the five adults, four were pregnant women. Two of them gave birth during their hospitalizations and their two infants were diagnosed with active measles cases. One infant went on to experience symptoms suggestive of acute measles meningoencephalitis and was hospitalized weeks later, outside the timeframe of the study."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:49.465Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9tZWRpdW0uY29tL0BsdWlzcm9kcmlndWV6d2ViMy9mcm9tLXJlYWQtb25seS10by1pbnRlbGxpZ2VudC1uZXR3b3Jrcy11bmRlcnN0YW5kaW5nLXdlYjEtd2ViMi13ZWIzLXdlYjQtYW5kLXdlYjUtNzBiZjE4MGJlMzVhP3NvdXJjZT1yc3MtM2I4MjMxMGVmMmM0LS0tLS0tMg": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "From Read-Only to Intelligent Networks: Understanding Web1, Web2, Web3, Web4, and Web5",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/from-read-only-to-intelligent-networks-understanding-web1-web2-web3-web4-and-web5-70bf180be35a?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*2EQ_IYEk9QypwueM",
      "paragraphs": [
        "If you have spent any time in tech or finance circles over the last few years, you have undoubtedly heard the term “Web3.” Soon after, tech visionaries started throwing around “Web4” and “Web5,” leaving the average professional wondering if we are just multiplying numbers for the sake of marketing hype.",
        "To understand where the internet is going, we have to understand the architectural paradigms of where it has been. The evolution of the World Wide Web is not just a story of faster speeds or prettier interfaces; it is a fundamental shift in ownership, data control, and system architecture.",
        "Here is the breakdown of the entire web evolution theory, stripped of the marketing noise.",
        "Web1: The Read-Only Web (1990–2004)",
        "The earliest iteration of the internet, often referred to as the static web, was decentralized but incredibly limited.",
        "The Paradigm: Read-Only.",
        "The Architecture: The internet consisted of static HTML pages hosted on servers. Users were passive consumers of information. There were no algorithms, no social media feeds, and no user-generated content.",
        "The Tech: Built on open, foundational protocols like HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) and email standards.",
        "The Analogy: Web1 was like a massive, digital global library. You could read the books, but you couldn’t write in them or change the text.",
        "Web2: The Read-Write Web (2004–Present)",
        "The mid-2000s marked the rise of the social and interactive web, driven by the proliferation of mobile infrastructure, cloud computing, and databases.",
        "The Paradigm: Read-Write."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:49.858Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9tZWRpdW0uY29tL0BsdWlzcm9kcmlndWV6d2ViMy90aGUtbmV3LWVyYS1nbG9zc2FyeS1jdXR0aW5nLXRocm91Z2gtdGhlLXRlY2gtYnV6endvcmRzLW9mLTIwMjYtODk0MTJjNWRhNWNkP3NvdXJjZT1yc3MtM2I4MjMxMGVmMmM0LS0tLS0tMg": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The New Era Glossary: Cutting Through the Tech Buzzwords of 2026",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/the-new-era-glossary-cutting-through-the-tech-buzzwords-of-2026-89412c5da5cd?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*BT4L8D6OwS9GwWeX",
      "paragraphs": [
        "If you’ve been reading tech news lately and felt like people are speaking a completely different language, you are not alone. The convergence of Artificial Intelligence, Quantum Computing, Cyberdefense, and Space Tech has created a massive wave of new terminology.",
        "It’s easy to feel like you’ve arrived late to the party. But here is the secret: most people are just throwing these words around without fully understanding them.",
        "This categorized, no-nonsense glossary is your cheat sheet to cut through the hype and understand the fundamental infrastructure of the new tech era.",
        "1. Artificial Intelligence & Automation",
        "Model (AI Model): A mathematical program trained on vast amounts of data to recognize patterns and make predictions or decisions. Think of it as the “brain” that resulted from studying a massive library.",
        "LLM (Large Language Model): A specific type of AI model trained on text to understand, generate, and predict human language (e.g., GPT-4, Claude, Qwen). They don’t think; they predict the next most logical word.",
        "AGI (Artificial General Intelligence): The theoretical tipping point where an AI becomes capable of understanding, learning, and applying knowledge across any intellectual task at least as well as a human. We aren’t there yet.",
        "Autonomous Agent: An AI system designed to achieve a specific goal without constant human step-by-step intervention. You give it an objective (e.g., “Find and sort 100 business leads”), and it plans and executes the steps on its own.",
        "Multi-Agent System: An architectural framework where multiple autonomous agents — each with a specialized role (like a “Researcher agent” and a “Writer agent”) — cooperate in a loop to solve complex tasks.",
        "2. Cyberdefense & Infrastructure",
        "Red Team: The offensive security team. They act as ethical hackers, simulating real-world cyberattacks against an organization’s infrastructure to find vulnerabilities before malicious actors do.",
        "Blue Team: The defensive security team. Their job is to maintain active infrastructure shields, monitor logs, detect anomalies, and mitigate attacks initiated by the Red Team or external adversaries."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:50.257Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9tZWRpdW0uY29tL0BsdWlzcm9kcmlndWV6d2ViMy90aGUtb3JiaXRhbC12dWxuZXJhYmlsaXR5LXdoeS1zcGFjZS1jb21tdW5pY2F0aW9ucy1hcmUtdGhlLW5leHQtZnJvbnRpZXItZm9yLWN5YmVyZGVmZW5zZS1iNDY3NWI2ZjRiOTU_c291cmNlPXJzcy0zYjgyMzEwZWYyYzQtLS0tLS0y": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The Orbital Vulnerability: Why Space Communications Are the Next Frontier for Cyberdefense",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/the-orbital-vulnerability-why-space-communications-are-the-next-frontier-for-cyberdefense-b4675b6f4b95?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*jQ1-zZEnVXDRxyzl",
      "paragraphs": [
        "For decades, space defense was a matter of kinetic warfare — missiles, physical tracking, and anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons. If you wanted to disrupt an enemy’s space assets, you had to physically target a massive, multi-million-dollar satellite orbiting thousands of kilometers above the Earth.",
        "Not anymore. In 2026, the weapon of choice for space warfare isn’t a missile; it’s a line of code.",
        "As we transition into an era dominated by mega-constellations of low-Earth orbit (LEO) satélites, cloud-connected orbital infrastructure, and automated deep-space communications, the attack surface has expanded exponentially. Space is no longer just a scientific frontier — it is a critical infrastructure domain that is fundamentally exposed.",
        "If we don’t secure the digital pipelines connecting Earth to the stars, the next major cyberdefense crisis won’t happen on our terrestrial networks. It will happen in orbit.",
        "The New Orbital Attack Surface",
        "The modernization of space communications has introduced a paradox: the same commercial, off-the-shelf technologies and software-defined networks that made space accessible have also made it highly vulnerable to cyber exploitation.",
        "Unlike the isolated, monolithic military satellites of the Cold War, modern space infrastructure relies on heavily interconnected ecosystems. Cyberdefenders are now forced to protect three distinct, interdependent segments:",
        "1. The Ground Segment (The Root of Trust)",
        "Satellite control centers, telemetry stations, and ground gateways are running on standard terrestrial operating systems, cloud environments, and web interfaces. If an adversary penetrates a ground station via a sophisticated supply chain attack or software vulnerability, they don’t just steal data — they can hijack the entire command and control (C2) pipeline of an orbital fleet.",
        "2. The Link Segment (Jamming and Spoofing)",
        "The radio frequency (RF) and optical laser links connecting ground stations to satellites are vulnerable to electronic warfare.",
        "GPS/GNSS Spoofing: Altering location data to blind civilian or military navigation."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:50.580Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9tZWRpdW0uY29tL0BsdWlzcm9kcmlndWV6d2ViMy90aGUtYWktZnJhZ21lbnRhdGlvbi1jcmlzaXMtd2h5LWRpc2pvaW50ZWQtZW52aXJvbm1lbnRzLWFyZS1raWxsaW5nLXRoZS1mdXR1cmUtb2Ytc29mdHdhcmUtYmM1OWM4MDA2MWE5P3NvdXJjZT1yc3MtM2I4MjMxMGVmMmM0LS0tLS0tMg": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The AI Fragmentation Crisis: Why Disjointed Environments Are Killing the Future of Software…",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/the-ai-fragmentation-crisis-why-disjointed-environments-are-killing-the-future-of-software-bc59c80061a9?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*tgA3S_ILET6EdYbr",
      "paragraphs": [
        "The AI Fragmentation Crisis: Why Disjointed Environments Are Killing the Future of Software Architecture",
        "We were promised an era of frictionless, hyper-accelerated software creation. The narrative was beautiful: developers would seamlessly orchestrate AI coding assistants, autonomous agents, and next-generation databases to deploy complex systems at a fraction of the traditional cost and time.",
        "Instead, we are drowning in a new kind of technical debt: AI Infrastructure Fragmentation.",
        "As teams rapidly adopt a mosaic of disjointed AI tools — varying from local LLM setups on Termux or CLI environments to cloud-based multi-agent frameworks, different code-generation plugins, and siloed automation pipelines — we aren’t building faster. We are building a fragmented maze.",
        "This technological tribalism is creating silent systemic failures, tanking operational efficiency, and completely blocking teams from leveraging the true potential of their data structures and platform features.",
        "The Illusion of Productivity: Local Velocity vs. Deployment Friction",
        "The fragmentation crisis usually starts with a false positive. A developer configures a localized setup — perhaps running a local Qwen instance through a CLI, integrating a specific IDE extension, or triggering lightweight scraping scripts. On a local machine, the velocity feels unmatched. Syntax flows, boilerplate code is generated in seconds, and micro-features are built in isolation.",
        "The breakdown happens during integration and deployment.",
        "Because these various AI assistants and autonomous workflows operate in disjointed environments with zero shared context, they lack a unified understanding of the broader system architecture. They generate code that works in a vacuum but fails to handle real-world complexities:",
        "Context Blindness: An AI assistant fine-tuned for frontend component generation has no awareness of the real-time telemetry layers or database constraints running on the backend.",
        "The Glue Code Nightmare: Developers spend more time writing “glue code” to connect mismatched AI-generated modules than they would have spent designing the architecture holistically from scratch.",
        "1. The Database Strangulation"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:51.043Z"
    },
    "aHR0cHM6Ly9tZWRpdW0uY29tL0BsdWlzcm9kcmlndWV6d2ViMy90aGUtZm9yZ290dGVuLXVzZS1jYXNlLXdoeS10aGUtZ2FtaW5nLWluZHVzdHJ5LW1pc3NlZC10aGUtdHJ1ZS1wb3dlci1vZi13ZWIzLWxpY2VuY2VzLTlmMDUxODZlODhjNj9zb3VyY2U9cnNzLTNiODIzMTBlZjJjNC0tLS0tLTI": {
      "ok": true,
      "title": "The Forgotten Use Case: Why the Gaming Industry Missed the True Power of Web3 Licences",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/the-forgotten-use-case-why-the-gaming-industry-missed-the-true-power-of-web3-licences-9f05186e88c6?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*xTahNzPH8Hjs7QVb",
      "paragraphs": [
        "When the gaming industry first collided with Web3, the results were overwhelmingly superficial. Publishers and studios rushed to integrate tokens into their ecosystems to sell cosmetic weapon skins, pixelated land plots, or highly speculative play-to-earn economies.",
        "The backlash from the global gaming community was swift and justified. It felt like a corporate cash grab that added zero value to the actual gameplay experience.",
        "But in that chaotic rush, the tech sector completely overlooked the most disruptive architectural feature of decentralized ledgers: true digital ownership of the software itself.",
        "While companies spend millions of dollars deploying invasive Digital Rights Management (DRM) software to fight piracy — often destroying game performance in the process — they are ignoring a infrastructure blueprint that could completely solve software piracy, establish a thriving secondary market, and guarantee perpetual revenue for developers.",
        "It is time to talk about the tokenization of software licenses.",
        "The Illusion of Digital Ownership",
        "When you buy a digital game today on platforms like Steam, the PlayStation Network, or the Nintendo eShop, you do not own that game. If you read the terms of service, you are merely purchasing a non-transferable, revocable license to access that software for as long as the platform decides to keep its servers alive.",
        "You cannot borrow it to a friend. You cannot resell it when you are finished. Your capital is permanently locked inside a centralized corporate silo.",
        "If software licenses were architectures as NFTs, the entire paradigm flips.",
        "A software license as an NFT means your right to execute that application is tied directly to a cryptographic key pair in your decentralized wallet. The software itself can be downloaded from any standard server or decentralized storage node, but during boot-up, the executable runs a quick, zero-latency cryptographic check. If the matching token is in your wallet, the software decrypts and runs.",
        "If you decide you are finished with the game, you don’t delete it. You list the token on a secondary marketplace, transfer it to another user, and your access is instantly revoked while theirs is granted.",
        "Solving the Piracy and DRM Crisis with Economics"
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:51.506Z"
    },
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      "ok": true,
      "title": "Bitcoin vs. The Quantum Threat: Myths, Realities, and the Math of Post-Quantum Cryptography",
      "source": "Medium",
      "url": "https://medium.com/@luisrodriguezweb3/bitcoin-vs-the-quantum-threat-myths-realities-and-the-math-of-post-quantum-cryptography-ff81b3f0876a?source=rss-3b82310ef2c4------2",
      "byline": "Laroweb3",
      "imageUrl": "https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1024/0*jSOEIcakBOTnuNY7",
      "paragraphs": [
        "Every few months, a sensationalist headline makes the rounds in both tech forums and financial news: “Quantum computers will destroy Bitcoin.” The narrative is terrifyingly simple: a rogue actor boots up a massive quantum processor, cracks the ECDSA private keys of every wallet in existence, drains Satoshi’s millions, and crashes the global decentralized economy overnight.",
        "It makes for a great sci-fi thriller plot. But how much of it is actual cryptographic reality, and how much is just clickbait?",
        "To understand whether Bitcoin is genuinely vulnerable to the quantum threat, we need to move past the hype and look at the actual math, the timeline, and the inherent governance of decentralized networks.",
        "Myth 1: “Quantum Computers Can Reverse Bitcoin Hashes”",
        "Let’s start with Bitcoin mining and the blockchain’s core security, which relies heavily on the SHA-256 hashing algorithm.",
        "The Myth: Quantum computers will be able to instantly guess hashes, allowing a single actor to control 100% of the network’s hashrate.",
        "The Reality: Quantum computers attack different cryptographic primitives in vastly different ways. Against hashing algorithms like SHA-256, a quantum computer uses Grover’s Algorithm.",
        "The Math: Grover’s Algorithm doesn’t break the encryption; it merely provides a quadratic speedup. This effectively cuts the security bit-length in half. In other words, a 256-bit hash becomes as secure as a 128-bit hash.",
        "Can a quantum computer crack a 128-bit symmetric encryption level? No. The energy required to brute-force $2^{128}$ combinations still exceeds the thermodynamic limits of our solar system. For Bitcoin mining, ASICs (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits) will remain vastly more efficient than quantum computers for the foreseeable future.",
        "Myth 2: “All Bitcoin Wallets are Vulnerable Today”",
        "This is where the threat gets more nuanced. Bitcoin uses asymmetric cryptography — specifically ECDSA (Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm) on the secp256k1 curve — to generate public/private key pairs.",
        "The Myth: Anyone with a quantum computer can instantly find your private key just by knowing your public address."
      ],
      "fetchedAt": "2026-05-29T22:36:51.855Z"
    }
  }
}